WNL is a badly needed platform for women’s football – Carroll

The College View: Aidan Geraghty on the Women’s National League (WNL).

DCU alumnus Sarah Rowe (right) celebrates winning the WFAI Cup with Shelbourne. Photograph: Sarah Rowe
DCU alumnus Sarah Rowe (right) celebrates winning the WFAI Cup with Shelbourne. Photograph: Sarah Rowe

Football, for more than a century-and-a-half, has been the game of the masses. The working man’s leisure. That, though, is precisely the biggest institutional problem the game faces and has always faced. It has been considered a man’s game.

Since the turn of the century, the women’s game all over the world has taken huge strides towards disproving the outdated notion that football is a game for men to play and for men to watch, but until recently Ireland had been left behind. DCU alumnus and Shelbourne player Caolán Carroll feels the Women’s National League (WNL), which was founded in 2011, has helped to rectify this.

“There was no platform for women’s football at a high senior level before the WNL was introduced,” she said.

“It allows women’s football to compete at a level deemed to be the equivalent to the men’s national league.

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“The WNL has had significant promotion which is developing more each season, particularly on social media. This is a great way to showcase the league, the players, the facilities and to extend the reach to a wider audience.

Despite the indisputable improvement in the women’s game, Carroll feels that a lack of funding is still a major difficulty.

“Funding will always be an issue for the women’s game in comparison to the men’s game.

“As a player it will always infuriate me to hear some of the comments about how the women’s game is nothing compared to the lads’, in whichever sport that may be. But from a financial perspective, it’s a fact that that men’s games attract more attention.

“There is more demand for places on teams, more demand for tickets and bigger turnouts to games thus giving them the ability to perform in better facilities in front of a wider audience, promoting more sponsorship and general interest.

Although public interest in the women’s game does pale when compared to the men’s game, there is definitely a positive trend. The Women’s Football Association of Ireland (WFAI) Cup final, which Caolán’s club Shelbourne won 5-0 against Wexford Youths, was played in the national football stadium in front of several thousand people and was nationally televised.

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