Women's squad seeks its share of Saudi football boom
As Cristiano
Ronaldo and Neymar pack Saudi stadiums, a quieter but equally dramatic
transformation is unfolding for women's professional football, which did not
even exist in the kingdom five years ago.
On a recent
evening in the mountain city of Taif, the Saudi women's national team ran
through a one-touch passing drill ahead of a game against Pakistan, the latest
in a series of friendlies intended to give the players some much-needed match
experience.
The squad
only formed two years ago and entered the FIFA rankings in March, at 171st
place.
That
milestone followed a string of firsts last year, from an inaugural
international match against the Seychelles - a 2-0 win - to the establishment
of a domestic women's premier league and a formal bid to host the 2026 AFC
Women's Asian Cup.
All told, it
has been a head-spinning few years for Saudi women who weren't even allowed to
attend football matches until January 2018, let alone play at the professional
level.
Yet
22-year-old midfielder Layan Jouhari told AFP she and her teammates were
measuring their progress "one step at a time", even as they nurture
ambitious long-term goals like playing at the World Cup one day.
"I
watched the previous World Cup before this just out of curiosity and interest,
but this year's World Cup was different," Jouhari said.
"I
watched it with a different perspective, like these are now my opponents."
Reforms and
scepticism
The eager Saudi
players are standard-bearers for broader changes afoot in Saudi Arabia, a
conservative petro-state trying to open up to the world while shifting away
from fossil fuels.
In recent
years, key restrictions that made the kingdom a magnet for criticism from
women's rights activists have been lifted, although critics argue that legal
discrimination remains in place in areas like divorce and child custody, and
that women are frequently ensnared in an ongoing crackdown on dissent.
A FIFA+
documentary released last month tracks how the national team has seized on new
freedoms, contrasting the hostility its members once received for pursuing a
"masculine" sport with today's new era of deep-pocketed government
support.
A press
release for the film also highlights fans of the team outside Saudi Arabia,
notably a social media post from the Pele Foundation describing its first FIFA
match as "a historic day not only for you, but for everyone who loves
football".
But not
everyone is keen to fully embrace the Saudi football project.
Talks this
year about the Saudi tourism board sponsoring the World Cup drew criticism from
co-hosts New Zealand and Australia as well as US star Alex Morgan before FIFA
announced in March no deal had been reached.
Monika
Staab, the first coach of the Saudi national team who is now technical
director, told AFP that critics would benefit from seeing the changes in Saudi
Arabia up close.
"Someone
who is not knowing what is happening here, I always recommend, come here to
Saudi, have a look - witness yourself what is happening," she said.
On a mission
For many
national team players, football was a fact of life well before Saudi Arabia
began championing women's sports under Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's
Vision 2030 reform agenda.
"Football
has been around in my family for as long as I remember. My older sisters used
to play football and they made me fall in love with the game," said Bayan
Sadagah, the 28-year-old team captain.
The new
opportunities, however, have led her to consider quitting her day job as a
nurse so she can focus on "one path".
The influx
of international stars to the men's game gives added inspiration.
Jouhari
described obsessing over videos of French star N'Golo Kante as a girl.
Now they are
both midfielders for the club team Ittihad - Kante on the men's side, Jouhari
on the women's - and Jouhari can't wait to meet him, though she says she
"might lose my words" when it actually happens.
For Staab,
who has worked with women's programmes in more than 90 countries, the focus is
squarely on what her own players might achieve.
"I'm
only interested in women's football because I want women's football to grow, I
want women's football to develop - that is my mission," she said.
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