Euro 2022: Sexism in women’s football still rife, according to report in Germany | DW | 22.07.2022

Lewd remarks, sexist prejudices and the denial of competence are common and widespread social media themes that many female footballers continue to face, with all platforms awash with such comments – peaking during the ongoing Women’s European Championship.

That’s according to new research conducted by German broadcasters ARD and NDR and the broadsheet newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung, which found that many players have reported being ridiculed, objectified and ignored, with discriminatory and derogatory posts continuing to go unpunished or even having been accepted as the norm.

Wendie Renard, France captain and eight-time Champions League winner with Olympique Lyon, said: “An insult is and remains an insult, whether on social media or in everyday life.”

Despite the general positivity and enthusiasm for Euro 2022 in host country England and across the continent, governing body UEFA reported almost 300 offensive posts on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and Twitter during the group stages.

While 70% of the posts reported were insults without reference to a specific group of people or ethnicity, 20% were classified as sexist, 6% as racist and 4% as homophobic. According to the European Football Union, 55% of the posts were deleted, the majority within just over an hour.

Germany's Almuth Schult

Germany’s Almuth Schult has revealed that she has faced prejudice by the media

Discrimination goes beyond social media

While the inhibition threshold is low for many on social media, abuse of female footballers extends to the stadium, the media and even to coaches, the research found.

German national team goalkeeper Almuth Schult, of Frauen-Bundesliga side Wolfsburg, revealed in ARD‘s “Panorama” documentary that she was once asked by a journalist: “How does it feel to be one of the few in the team who loves a man and not a woman?”

“Here I am thinking, here we are again,” Schult said. “The prejudice that only lesbians play football.”

Another female Bundesliga player speaks anonymously in the “Panorama” report of a coach’s transgressions of boundaries: “He kept making comments about a teammate’s butt.”

And in the case of another player, the same coach reportedly remarked on “how sexy she was” – comments confirmed by fellow players and coaches.

Amateur German footballer Franziska Bielfeld told NDR: “We have all learned to listen away— especially in football.”

General Secretary of the German Football Association (DFB), Heike Ullrich, gives a speech

‘Every case of even perceived crossings of boundaries is one too many’ — DFB General Secretary Heike Ullrich

‘Not specific to football’

The General Secretary of the German Football Association (DFB), Heike Ullrich, has called for action, but suggests the problem is societal, rather than specific to football.

“Every case of even perceived crossings of boundaries is one too many – this must be addressed,” Ullrich said.

“It is the task of all of us, not only of football, of sport, but of our society, to draw attention to these transgressions. It doesn’t matter if you’re a boy or a girl, man or woman, you have to say: I didn’t like what you just said.”

In the report, former German international Tabea Kemme reveals that only recently she experienced a conversation about a female teammate in which the sentence was uttered: “She’s really hot, too, isn’t she? I’d want to iron her out, too.”

The struggle for fair conditions and appropriate behavior remains “frustrating” but she still hopes for a more positive future.

“When you yourself have the feeling that you’ve always given everything and yet nothing changes…” Schult said. “It’s about building the momentum to bring about change – it’s simply about equality and equal opportunities.”

mds/mf (SID, dpa)

For all the latest Sports News Click Here 

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! TechAI is an automatic aggregator around the global media. All the content are available free on Internet. We have just arranged it in one platform for educational purpose only. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials on our website, please contact us by email – [email protected]. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.