Our women teams pay must surely be minimum wage, so why would they get paid less than people working in MacDonalds?This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Pretty Boy asked the question around why some men scoff at women's football. I made the point that the standards of the other sports he mentioned have huge gulfs between elite female competitors and club level male competitors, hence why I said that doesn't apply to the women's game (making the well known comparison about how it compares in terms of quality to youth age male football) and why this might be a factor around men might find the idea of so much commercial investment in the women's game quite risible?
I wouldn't want to see our pitch being used more than necessary, why should the women's team play on it and not every other age group team etc.
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Thread: Hibs Women
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08-06-2024 08:58 AM #2191
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08-06-2024 09:06 AM #2192
When is the next woman’s team fixture and where do they play? My daughter hasn’t shown any interest in football, which is fine, but seemed open to trying the ladies team so hoped to take her to a game this summer.
Had a quick Look online but suspect, like the men’s team, there’s no pre season fixtures announced yet.
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08-06-2024 10:01 AM #2193This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-06-2024 10:33 AM #2194This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
'They're not as good as men' seems seems a lazy argument with which to put down women's football. Women's sport is a separate entity to men's.
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08-06-2024 12:11 PM #2195This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteThis quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Seems it was me that was off mateappreciate the info Brightside 😊
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08-06-2024 01:09 PM #2196
'I wouldn't want to see our pitch being used more than necessary, why should the women's team play on it and not every other age group team etc.' QUOTE
Afraid I do think this is lazy - it's the women's team, nothing to do with age group teams etc.
If the SFA hadn't been so determined to ban women's football many years ago it might already be operating at a higher level
in Scotland - that was a decision by stupid men who thought women should be wives and mothers and little else.
We're going to struggle to match the English Women's game, but then our men's game doesn't match the English version either
and that's not been a reason for giving up.
Half the population is female, the idea that the women's game shouldn't be supported is mental.
I see far more women at matches than was the case in the 1970, 1980, 1990, having a viable women's team
isn't just an obvious thing to support, it has an a positive effect generally and means the club feels and is more welcoming.
I remember the 'olden days' of standing on terraces surrounded by drunks pxssing in beer cans (on a good day), bile pouring out too many throats;
I wouldn't want that sad macho environment back again.
Women are (largely, always exceptions) civilising and football is the better for their increasing presence and that has to include properly
funded women's teams.
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08-06-2024 02:33 PM #2197This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
You just need to see how many girls teams are training at weekends these days to understand the potential of the women's game. It's a while since my kids were at primary school but I remember Saturday morning football for girls getting introduced for the first time back then and now they have as many teams playing as the boys.
As you mention earlier in your post the powers that be in Scotland do appear to be especially closed-minded when it comes to embracing the women's game.
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08-06-2024 05:16 PM #2198
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08-06-2024 05:19 PM #2199
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08-06-2024 06:53 PM #2200This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Last edited by WeAreHibs; 08-06-2024 at 08:45 PM.
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09-06-2024 12:38 AM #2201
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Rantic are starting to push ahead now, Glasgow City have been detached for the first time and will fall slowly towards Hearts who are improving season on season but Hibs are floundering after losing 4 good players including the best player in the league outside of Rantic. Beyond those 5 clubs there is nothing.
I have no idea of Hibs womens current annual budget and the levels of their income streams.
However, for me the best way to get Hibs womens team money and larger crowds would be to give them 20 quid from each season ticket sold. That would give them circa 230k plus whatever sponsorship and commercial deals they can do themselves. Each season ticket holder would then be entitled to attend all Hibs womens home games. That would boost crowds and matchday revenue substantially. Larger crowds would also attract more commercial sponsors.Last edited by PHeffernan; 09-06-2024 at 12:48 AM.
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09-06-2024 02:41 AM #2202
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I think it’s only a matter of time in Scotland before women’s football really takes off.
Attitudes are a bit harder to change in Scotland maybe, but once young girls can relate to ‘heroes’ on the park, crowd numbers…at the elite level anyway, will soar.
Just give ‘em something to believe in and aspire to.
Sorry to keep going on about the Matildas, but they really ARE a case study of what to do right, and Scotland could do well to learn from them.
They just played two ‘meaningless’ friendlies……one in Adelaide and one in Sydney 4 days apart and attracted over 130,000 spectators combined.
Their World Cup game against France last year is the most watched tv event EVER in the history of television.
The scenes going to, coming from and attending one of their games come across more like the vibe of a Taylor Swift concert than that of a tribal fitba match.
The societal benefits are enormous too….a huge recent upsurge in participant rates, leading to healthier and happier kids.
Scotland, either on its own or with partners should make a realistic bid to stage the women’s World Cup, Euros etc etc as soon and as often as it can.
The Women’s officials should also take a trip to Oz to pick the brains of those down here who run the women’s game.
This love in with the Matildas didn’t just happen by accident…..several of the current squad can recall playing internationals when they played in front of very low crowds.
Now they get bigger crowds than they did back then turning up for their training sessions!
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09-06-2024 05:50 AM #2203This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Saying "the most watched tv event EVER in the history of television." is quite the exaggeration when the final was watched by almost 10x.
"The FIFA Women's World Cup final, which England lost 1-0 to Spain at Stadium Australia, was 2023's most-watched women's sport event on TV with 38.4 million viewing hours. Preliminary television ratings show an average of about 4.17 million people were watching the Matildas take on France in what is understood to be one of the most-watched sporting events across Australia in the past two decades."
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09-06-2024 08:48 AM #2204This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
So at grass roots level there are many girls playing as boys at younger age groups. That suggests to me that the women's game is being well supported? How does that then equate with the powers that be being closed minded about women's football?
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I'm sure we can all agree that participation in sport is good for everyone, but Scotland's game is not comparable to the game in England, where the clubs are trying to create a product that has commercial potential.
Maybe here we need to recognise that the market for women's football is a very different one from that of global brands down south, a bit of a reality check needed.
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09-06-2024 09:40 AM #2205
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09-06-2024 09:56 AM #2206This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I would say that there has obviously been a significant effort to find solutions and the obvious one is that there is no appetite or commercial basis for a professional women's set up in Scotland. My point about most (men's) teams in Scotland struggling to make ends meet financially, that seems to fall on deaf ears in this conversation. If our men's teams are all operating close to loss making, what hope is there for them to run professional women's sides?
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09-06-2024 10:06 AM #2207This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Football.
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09-06-2024 10:26 AM #2208This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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09-06-2024 10:33 AM #2209This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
It would be a good way for those with young families to make the most of their season tickets without the expense of travelling away.
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09-06-2024 10:34 AM #2210
The simple truth is that there is too much football to choose from. Apart from the professional men’s clubs, the women’s game in Scotland has to compete with the Lowland Leagues, Junior football and youth football all of who require sponsorship and spectators. In top of that we are overloaded with televised games, which will also reduce spectator numbers. Personally I don’t watch women’s football, because I already watch Hibs, a lowland league side, kids football (family member is involved) and televised games, I don’t have time for anything else. Unless there is a massive change in what people watch, I think the woman’s game, in this country, will always struggle.
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09-06-2024 11:34 AM #2211
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09-06-2024 12:31 PM #2212This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
It all comes down to what you choose to do and no-one should be criticised for making a different choice.Mature, sensible signature required for responsible position. Good prospects for the right candidate. Apply within.
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09-06-2024 12:35 PM #2213This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I agree with you, nobody should be critical of anyone who wants to watch the womens team.
It's how it is funded that's the talking point.
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09-06-2024 12:45 PM #2214
If someone doesn't want to watch our women's team that's fine, but it's not a reason to treat it as a totally different club to Hibs. We're not Hibernian Men's Football Club
I have no problem if part* of the club budget is used to support our women's team because it needs that investment if we are to be a good team. Without the investment interest will dwindle and our women's team will become irrelevant.
Missed a trick when the women's turned professional in Scotland because we were one of the top two teams in the country at that point and had a good base to build on.
*It would only need to be a small part to make a big difference. Consider the money the club wasted on the vanity project development squad and poor managerial appointments.Mature, sensible signature required for responsible position. Good prospects for the right candidate. Apply within.
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09-06-2024 01:07 PM #2215This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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09-06-2024 01:10 PM #2216This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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09-06-2024 01:16 PM #2217
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I know two people who coach with teams their girls play in. I have a mate who’s girl is doing well playing wise, playing a couple of age groups up. None of them have any interest in going to watch women’s games as spectator beyond that. The participation element is there and it’s good. I just don’t think there is that great an interest in watching it at senior level, unless it’s free or at a hugely reduced price.
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09-06-2024 01:49 PM #2218This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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09-06-2024 04:27 PM #2219This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Yes, in the US where there wasn't an embedded 'culture' of men's football and where more women play than men the game is a different beast, but aside from Australia the women's game is booming in the likes of South America, Japan and Europe. Think Germany and the Netherlands lead the way in terms of player numbers in Europe, while the England team obviously do very well. A lot of those England players will have become household names for aspiring young female players as I imagine the Matildas are in Australia. Unfortunately the best Scottish players end up at English clubs so their impact on young players here is probably diluted.
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09-06-2024 06:24 PM #2220This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I only included that bit in case anyone thought that I was being critical of those who don't watch our women's team.Mature, sensible signature required for responsible position. Good prospects for the right candidate. Apply within.
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