My quest to raise the profile of girls’ football in the UK brought me to Wembley stadium on Sunday afternoon. It was an eerily foggy day – the famous Wembley arch nearly invisible though I could sense it towering overhead.
The stadium was filled with about 200 youths, there for an once-in-a-lifetime afternoon of celeb coaching sponsored by McDonalds. Pat Jennings was teaching a group of boys in green striped jerseys how to use their body to be more effective goalies. Oh, look there’s Geoff Hurst (yes, he’s still around). Andrew Cole was helping a group perfect passing. Gareth Southgate (ooh, he’s cute) strode by and stopped to instruct a group of girls.
Impressive as it was to be surrounded by all that talent, that’s not who my three girls and I were there to meet. We wanted to see one of England’s greatest women’s footballers, Marieanne Spacey. She’s represented England Ladies 91 times, played for Arsenal and Fulham and is a member of the English Football Hall of Fame. I can see you, reader, looking quizzically at your screen. That proves my point. You’ve never heard of her.
As I looked through the list of coaches for the McDonald’s masterclass, Marieanne was the only female amongst a long list of male legends. Disappointed, yes, but not surprised. The attitude towards girls and football in this country is appalling. Most people in the UK did not even know that the Women’s World Cup took place last June (and when you point this out to them, they don’t even seem embarrassed.)
I took out my list of questions for Marieanne. Do you have any suggestions for parents combatting the blasé attitude towards girls and football? How can we arm our girls to do well? It must have been hard for you to succeed in a male dominated sport.
Marieanne shrugged, she was lucky. Growing up in the ’70s, she found a group of girls at her local youth club in Wimbledon and formed a 5-a-side team. There were only a few girls’ teams for them to play, but she kept it up and, encouraged by her parents, she went on to play professionally (by the way, two others from her team, including Brenda Sempare did too).
But my daughter’s experience this decade was different. After joining in an Under 6s mixed team she and the only other girl on the team were out-shadowed by the boys (who by the way all seem to have a football velocroed to their foot since birth). My daughter ended up quitting football when she was 8 because “football is for boys, mummy“.
When I asked Marieanne how to combat the stigma attached to girls and football, she automatically deflected it. I could tell she had been asked this before. Many, many times I would guess.
Don’t see it as a barrier. Use it as an opportunity.
She’s right. And oh what an opportunity it is. Football’s popularity amongst girls is at an all-time high (as reported by the FA). The sport offers our girls so much. Exercise. Lifelong friends. The skills to work effectively in a team. What they learn on the pitch they will use again and again in life.
As we left Wembley, the sun breaking through the mist, and the white arch towering overhead, I wondered where my quest to raise the profile of girls and football would take me next. Canada perhaps? (The location of the 2015 Women’s World Cup, in case you didn’t know.)
Marieanne Spacey was speaking at the McDonald’s Coaching Masterclass at Wembley, where a number of grassroots coaches and their teams were given the once in a lifetime opportunity to be coached by legends of the game after winning one of 500 x £100 vouchers encouraging parents to gain coaching qualifications. To date, McDonald’s has helped train over 20,000 qualified coaches and will create 10,000 more by 2014. For more information on the McDonald’s Football Programme and how you can help young footballers shine, visit www.thefa.com/yourgame.
Alice Langley (@AnEssexWife) | 11th Jan 12
I used to be involved with the McDonald’s football scheme – I think they even funded my FA level 1 course many years ago. I ended up on Sky Sports news once also promoting the scheme and have got to meet Sven and Ashley Cole.
This post bought back may happy memories and has made me want to put my boots back on – these days I can be found in the stands watching more than playing or coaching.
Good luck with your quest to raise the profile of woman in football – if these is ever a way I could get involved then please let me know!!
Jody Brettkelly | 28th Nov 11
Its so frustrating to see how long it takes for women’s sports to be legitimised. It somehow seems connected with whether men want to watch it on the telly (groan…) in New Zealand netball is now huge and when I left New Zealand 25 years ago, people scoffed at it as a spectator sport. But of course it didn’t take long for beach volleyball to become HUGE!
seasiderinthecity | 22nd Nov 11
I started playing competitively when I was 14 and went on to play at county level and got my coaching badges. I ran a girls under 10 team that played in an all boys league and they found it tough even at that age.
Things have come on a long way, but unfortunately it’s never going to get the same level of publicity as the men’s game and so will not gain the sponsorship to help grow the game further.
All we can hope is that a more accepting attitude is built in children (mainly boys) now so that they will grow up to be recognise that someone can be a footballer regardless of gender.
Susanna | 22nd Nov 11
Exactly. I think I’m just asking for us to re-examine on an individual basis. No stereo-typing.
gemma | 22nd Nov 11
I took my 3 year old boy to football coaching, my 18 month old obviously had to come and she got more involved than my son – I think some adults have to stereotype – no boys doing ballet and no girls playing football/rugby and its a shame – We should see everything as an opportunity to learn and not to have such a strict type of thing depending on your sex.
Susanna | 22nd Nov 11
Yes get out there and kick the ball around! I still need to see Bend It Like Beckham.
Honest Mum | 21st Nov 11
I worked for the company who made Bend it Like Beckham when the movie came out and there was a huge uprising in girls wanting to play football and being accepted into the sport. I personally love footie and enjoyed playing it at university. Years later I worked for TalkSport Radio and luckily didn’t experience any sexism about my interest in the game. Moreso I was respected & I genuinely loved watching the games. I moved into filmmaking myself and haven’t had a chance to play in a while but this post has made me determined to get out and kick about again! Thanks