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Fifa Women’s World Cup: lack of female coaches spurs calls for more women in dugouts
- Female coaches are under-represented in the premier football tournament for women, with the proportion unchanged from 2019
- But there are signs that more countries are prepared to have women lead their football teams
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The World Cup in Australia and New Zealand has showcased the strides made in women’s football on the field in recent years – while exposing the lack of women coaches at all levels of the sport.
As the tournament heads into the quarter-finals, England boss Sarina Wiegman is the only woman left on the touchline.
The first 32-team Women’s World Cup began with 12 female coaches.
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That is 37.5 per cent, exactly the same as at the World Cup in 2019, when nine of the 24 teams in France had a woman at the helm.

“It is a problem not only on the international stage but at every level in the women’s game,” said Randy Waldrum, the American coach of the Nigeria team that lost on penalties to Wiegman’s England in the last 16. “We need more women coaching in the sport.”
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