News | Soccer
28 Jun 2025 1:54
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > Sports > Soccer

    Watching women's sport not just for women: Experts talk on levelling the playing field

    There is a male audience for women's sport, but football experts believe there is still a long way to go when it comes to universal respect for sporting talent.


    In 2023, a nation held its breath as the Matildas took on England in the FIFA Women's World Cup semifinal. 

    What followed wasn't just a gripping match, it became the most-watched television broadcast in Australian history.

    A post-tournament social impact report from Football Australia revealed that 44 per cent of the audience comprised men and boys. 

    For the first time, a women's football game outperformed every other program ever aired in the country, breaking the myth that women's sport only appeals to women.

    Former Matilda and lawyer Moya Dodd says we have come a long way in the past decade. 

    "Ten years ago, no one would have believed it," she told ABC International Development's Women in News and Sport, at the recent RCB Innovation Lab Sports Summit in India.

    Women's sport has been marketed primarily to women, and that marketing often focuses on empowerment rather than excellence.

    But Dodd said the skill, determination, and passion on display deserves universal respect, regardless of the gender of those on the field.

    She said boys were already growing up idolising athletes like Sam Kerr, the same way they do male stars.

    "When young boys see professionalised women's sport, they accept it as normal," Dodd said.

    "They'll happily wear a jersey with Sam Kerr's name on it.

    "There is no social stigma."

    WPL tapping in, change still needed

    In India, the Women's Premier League (WPL) is emerging as a game-changer. 

    The second season in 2024 reached more than 103 million TV viewers, with digital platforms like JioCinema drawing millions more. Brands are investing big: Viacom18 signed a $117 million deal for WPL rights, one of the most lucrative ever for a women's league.

    But framing isn't the only challenge. Dodd said structural barriers persisted across leadership, infrastructure, and media.

    "Sport was built by men, for men, and run by men," Dodd said.

    "You can't just retrofit women into those systems. You need to redesign them."

    Sarah Walsh, head of women's football at Football Australia, and a former Matildas player, said the Matildas' rise was made possible by constitutional changes in 2018 that brought more women into decision-making roles.

    "We wouldn't have had the success we did, equal pay deals, post-World Cup legacy funding, without women in the room deciding where the money goes," she told WINS.

    Dodd said although there had been ground made, there were other areas that needed to evolve.

    "Storytelling is still skewed toward men's sport," Dodd said.

    "We need commentary and coverage that welcomes new audiences, not one that constantly compares women's sport to men's."

    She stressed that female voices in broadcast and journalism played a vital role in shaping public perception.

    Growth on field translates to growth off it

    Both Dodd and Walsh indicated that with the right leadership, inclusive policies, and a reframing of how women's sport was presented, there was significant opportunity for growth and equity.

    They both believe growth on the field translates to growing the game off it.

    Walsh said infrastructure remained a silent but critical barrier to participation, with a number of community football facilities still not female friendly.

    "You're not going to retain girls if they simply can't get dressed," Walsh said.

    Meanwhile, teenage dropout rates among girls are high due to issues ranging from lack of safety to body image concerns.

    Major events like the Women's World Cup helped boost participation by 20 per cent, but retention is still a hurdle.

    Recent trends in viewership and sponsorship suggest that interest in women's sport is not limited by gender. It delivers economic, cultural, and social returns.

    With the Matildas' semi-final appearance in 2023 and the growing viewership of WPL, sponsorships have increased, new demographics are being reached, and male audiences are growing across markets.

    "Women's sport brings audiences that have come to celebrate inclusion and a sense of social purpose. And this audience includes people of all genders and ages," Dodd said.

    Dodd and Walsh believe these developments raise a broader question — no longer whether women's sport has a place, but whether existing structures are prepared to meet the growing potential.

    Veechika Durga Pingali is a freelance journalist based in Bengaluru, India, with experience in both journalism and public relations. She has a degree in Journalism and Mass Communication and enjoys writing about gender, media and sports.

    Veechika is part of ABC International Development’s Women in News and Sport Initiative, funded by the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade through the Team Up program.


    ABC




    © 2025 ABC Australian Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved

     Other Soccer News
     26 Jun: German side Borussia Dortmund and Brazilian club Fluminense have secured their passage to the knock-out rounds of football's Club World Cup
     25 Jun: The Oceania Football Confederation believe the Pro League scheduled to start next January will boost professionalism across the Pacific
     25 Jun: Auckland City's amateurs have held Argentina's professional Boca Juniors to a 1-all Club World Cup draw in Nashville, despite shipping 16 goals from their previous two matches
     25 Jun: Auckland City hope they've earned some respect back after a shock result at football's Club World Cup
     25 Jun: Auckland City has stunned the footballing world at the Club World Cup - Christian Gray scored a goal as the team of amateurs drew 1-all with their Argentinian professional opponents Boca Juniors in Nashville
     25 Jun: Auckland City's final football match at the Club World Cup is still suspended due to adverse weather in Nashville
     24 Jun: Lionel Messi will face his old team Paris Saint Germain in the round of 16 at the Club World Cup
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    Israel Adesanya has been honoured by the UFC More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Hamilton ratepayers have been hit with a double digit rate increase for the second year in a row More...



     Today's News

    Auckland:
    Four people have been seriously and critically injured after a car crashed into a house in Auckland's Kumeu 21:57

    Environment:
    Fire and Emergency says a number of households on Moteuka River West Bank Rd in Tasman have been impacted by floods 21:17

    International:
    Drinking less alcohol is hard. But there are ways to get started 21:07

    International:
    What we don't know about the Israel-Iran war 19:27

    Basketball:
    Last year's New Zealand NBL Most Valuable Player Lachlan Olbrich has been taken in the NBA Draft as the 55th overall pick by the Chicago Bulls 18:57

    Law and Order:
    Fishery Officers have confiscated one of the biggest recent hauls of illegally harvested paua - 180-times the limit 18:37

    Entertainment:
    Charlize Theron's daughter was reduced to tears by her mullet 18:35

    Motoring:
    New Zealand Formula One driver Liam Lawson is hoping small margins will make a big difference in this weekend's Austrian Grand Prix  18:17

    International:
    How Mossad worked inside Iran to launch Operation Rising Lion and the questions that remain 18:17

    Business:
    Hamilton ratepayers have been hit with a double digit rate increase for the second year in a row 18:07


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd