World News

With 100 days to Women’s World Cup, calls for gender equity grow | Football News

With 100 days to Women’s World Cup, calls for gender equity grow | Football News

Australia and New Zealand, the co-hosts of the Women’s World Cup, have marked the 100-day countdown to the global football showpiece with a call for gender equity in sport and a rallying cry for fans to get behind the event.

The 32-team tournament, the first Women’s World Cup in the Southern Hemisphere, will kick off in Sydney and Auckland on July 20 when Australia’s Matildas and New Zealand’s Football Ferns play their opening matches.

“In just 100 days’ time, we will witness the world’s best football players on our shores, right here in Australia and New Zealand,” Women’s World Cup CEO David Beeche said on Tuesday at a launch at the Sydney Football Stadium.

“The two opening matches, the first at Eden Park in Auckland and the second here in Sydney later that day, mean July 20, 2023, will be one of the biggest days in women’s football history,” he said. “But this women’s tournament is not just about football. It’s about celebrating women’s sports and women’s empowerment all over the world.”

However, while Australia has boosted funding for elite women’s programmes in recent years, the country is ill-equipped to handle an expected rise in grassroots participation, officials say.

“Currently, only 40 percent of football facilities nationwide are classified as female-friendly,” Football Australia said in a statement.

“It is imperative that we invest in our 2,400+ community clubs across the country to ensure they are adequately prepared for the expected surge in female participation, and participation in the sport more broadly,” it said.

‘Watershed moment’

FIFA has predicted the tournament will be a “watershed moment” that will propel the game to another level with the target to eventually rival the men’s version of the game.

Women’s football is already enjoying a surge in popularity in some countries, and the tournament looks set to spark further global interest.

FIFA’s chief women’s football officer, Sarai Bareman, told NewsCorp Australia that more than 2 billion viewers were expected to tune in to watch the event, double the previous tournament in France, which was won by the United States.

Record attendance is also predicted with 650,000 tickets already snapped up. The next phase of sales opened on…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Al Jazeera – Breaking News, World News and Video from Al Jazeera…