Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

With All Eyes On Women's World Cup, Soccer Union Wants To Increase Support For Female Players

The Canadian Press, 04 Jul, 2015 11:40 AM
    VANCOUVER — The union for soccer players around the world wants to increase support for female players.
     
    FIFPro announced the initiative on Friday, two days before the Women's World Cup final between the United States and Japan. The key component is the opportunity for female players to become direct members, allowing player representation in countries where there is no other players' union
     
    Former Swedish national player Caroline Jonsson is head of FIFPro's Women's Football Committee. She said the diversity of women's soccer is "huge" and "we have to find a way to reach out" to all the players.
     
    Jonsson said the impetus of FIFPro's new initiative to include women was the outcry about the use of artificial turf instead of grass at the Women's World Cup in Canada. FIFPro Secretary General Theo van Seggelen said FIFPro tried to intervene in the issue, but it was too late.
     
    FIFPro has created an advisory board of current women's players. The group will attempt to establish a "functioning international calendar" for women's soccer.
     
    FIFPro also announced an advisory board of current national team players that includes Spain's Veronica Boquete, Nigeria's Rita Chikwelu, Mexico's Monica Gonzalez, Sweden's Lotta Schelin, Netherland's Kristen van de Ven and Australia's Lydia Williams.
     
    "This is a marathon, and not a sprint," Jonsson said. "But we are taking the important first steps."
     
    Boquete praised FIFPro's involvement in the women's game in light of the situation facing Spain's national team.
     
    Spain, ranked No. 14 in the world, was knocked out of the group stage of the Women's World Cup. Upon the team's arrival back home, the team's 23 players called for the removal of coach Ignacio Quereda, who has led the national team since 1988.
     
    The Spanish women maintain they were not prepared for this summer's World Cup, with few advance games and poor analysis of opponents. Boquete said the team was hopeful a decision about the coach would come soon.
     
    "We have been disrespected so many times — and that has to stop," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Saskatchewan Out Of Firefighting Funds As More Than 3,000 Evacuated From North

    Saskatchewan Out Of Firefighting Funds As More Than 3,000 Evacuated From North
    Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall says the province's firefighting budget has been depleted, but crews will keep working in the north, where flames and smoke have forced at least 3,000 people from their homes.

    Saskatchewan Out Of Firefighting Funds As More Than 3,000 Evacuated From North

    Lawyer Shamsher Kothari Says 2 Men Convicted In Multimillion Dollar Ponzi Scheme May Die In Jail

    Lawyer Shamsher Kothari Says 2 Men Convicted In Multimillion Dollar Ponzi Scheme May Die In Jail
    CALGARY — The lawyer of one of two men convicted in one of the largest Ponzi schemes in Canadian history says his client could end up dying in jail.

    Lawyer Shamsher Kothari Says 2 Men Convicted In Multimillion Dollar Ponzi Scheme May Die In Jail

    Med Student Accused Of Sister Sex Abuse Staves Off Extradition To U.S.

    Med Student Accused Of Sister Sex Abuse Staves Off Extradition To U.S.
    TORONTO — A medical student alleged to have abused two teenaged sisters in a manner a judge once described as close to torture has staved off extradition to the United States to stand trial.

    Med Student Accused Of Sister Sex Abuse Staves Off Extradition To U.S.

    Tickets For Pan Am And Parapan Am Games Cheaper To Buy On Canada Day

    Tickets For Pan Am And Parapan Am Games Cheaper To Buy On Canada Day
    TORONTO — People who have procrastinated in buying tickets for the upcoming Pan Am and Parapan Am Games might want to wait a little longer.

    Tickets For Pan Am And Parapan Am Games Cheaper To Buy On Canada Day

    Government Stays Mostly Mum On Where Celebrate Canada Funding Getting Spent

    Government Stays Mostly Mum On Where Celebrate Canada Funding Getting Spent
    And although the money is meant to help Canadians celebrate the red and white, it appears — based on what little information the government has released — that a lot of it goes to ridings that are Tory blue.

    Government Stays Mostly Mum On Where Celebrate Canada Funding Getting Spent

    TransCanada: Alberta's Tougher CO2 Rules Bolster Case For Keystone XL

    The Calgary-based company makes that argument in a letter to Secretary of State John Kerry and other American officials as the U.S. regulatory process nears its seventh anniversary.

    TransCanada: Alberta's Tougher CO2 Rules Bolster Case For Keystone XL