HomeNewsOpinionWomen's football is just starting to roar

Women's football is just starting to roar

The success of the World Cup comes on the back of average attendance for the Women’s Super League rising more than eightfold between 2017 and 2022. Many marketing people and investors are now rubbing their hands in anticipation with exponential growth certain to continue now

August 21, 2023 / 11:31 IST
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Aitana Bonmati of Spain celebrate after the team’s victory in the FIFA Women’s World Cup Australia & New Zealand 2023 Final match between Spain and England at Stadium Australia on August 20, 2023 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

Nothing succeeds like success. Women’s football has already had a series of watershed moments that have drawn exponentially greater audiences and attracted more money and official support into the game. The World Cup that concluded with Spain’s 1-0 victory over England on Sunday may prove to be the biggest of them all.

The tournament hosted by Australia and New Zealand was a pulsating spectacle, packed with high drama; great goals (Sam Kerr’s heart-stopping solo equalizer for Australia in the semi-final against England’s Lionesses is a standout); upsets (Germany’s first-round exit and the US’s second-round defeat to Sweden on penalties); and controversy (the red card for England’s Lauren James against Nigeria, compared by many to David Beckham’s famous dismissal against Argentina in the 1998 men’s World Cup).

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Australia’s semi-final defeat was the country’s most-watched television show on record, with 11.15 million viewers at its peak — astonishing in a nation where rugby union, rugby league, Australian rules football and cricket are all far more popular sports. The tournament has also broken records for ticket sales and attendance. The global audience will surpass 2 billion viewers, potentially double the 1.12 billion who tuned in for the 2019 event held in France, forecasts Euromonitor International.

It would be wrong to suggest that the world has only just woken up to how exciting and enjoyable to watch women’s soccer can be. That happened a while ago. This feels like a major accelerant, though. It will also have many marketing people and investors rubbing their hands in anticipation.