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Female footballers and commentators on the challenges and progress within their fields.

Women’s football is on an incredible high around the world after a month of five international tournaments with record breaking crowds. Those tournaments have delivered new champions, new interest and new hope. The new champions are Papua New Guinea, South Africa and England. Perhaps more predictably there have also been trophies for the USA and Brazil.

The success has created a discussion about how this is a significant moment in the development of the game. But the journey to this point has been challenging. Fifty years ago, women’s football was banned in England. Now they have won the country’s first major football trophy since the men's World Cup in 1966.

We bring together three women who have also played for England: Stacey Copeland was in England Under-18s before becoming a Commonwealth champion boxer. She recalls the first time being allowed onto a boys’ football team at the age of eight. β€œIt was just amazing and then, during the game, a parent or a coach on the other team realised that I was girl,” says Copeland, β€œand shouted across the pitch and insisted that I leave.”

Together with former England defender Fern Whelan and ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ World Service Digital and Sport Editor, Anna Doble, they discuss with host James Reynolds how Euro 2022 can change the course of women’s sports.

Three sports commentators based in Rwanda, the Netherlands and the Philippines also discuss why women’s football is not just inspirational, it’s also enabling social change.

(Photo: Marielle Benitez-Javellana)

Available now

23 minutes

Last on

Sun 7 Aug 2022 00:06GMT

Broadcasts

  • Sat 6 Aug 2022 08:06GMT
  • Sat 6 Aug 2022 23:06GMT
  • Sun 7 Aug 2022 00:06GMT