Introduction to Women’s Football Boom
The football of women experiences an increase, speaks the visitor records, hits new investments and inspires a new generation of players and fans. World Sevens Football (W7F), a new series with seven seven, aims to use this boom. It brings fans faster and more dynamic games worldwide and offers players the opportunity to get a significant financial reward.
Created to Redefine the Women’s Game
The idea for world football in the series comes from the co-founders of the series, the entrepreneur Justin Fishkin and Jennifer Mackesy, with the latter committed to an investment of $100 million over five years. The games are said to contain two 15-minute halves on a pitch with half of the size of a standard field 11-A-side field.
Place Players in the First Place
One of the defining functions of the series is its player-centered approach. The Council Council consists of current and former players. The purpose of the advice council was to create the care and well-being of the players and the competitive strategy and to have a long-term impact on the players and clubs.
Financial Rewards Considerably
Clubs can bring a squad of 25 at 14 to play per game. The tournament price is $5 million, including $2.5 million for the winners. This is significantly more than the $1.4 million euros that the Champions League winners will earn. The prize money for the four best teams is divided between clubs and their players and employees.
Swedish Liga Plan Clash
The financial rewards aroused immediate interest of the first eight teams, including Bayern Munich, Manchester United, Ajax, and Roma. However, since World Sevens Football is a series that was neither sanctioned by FIFA nor by the UEFA and is therefore outside the world football calendar, decisions about participation are based exclusively at the discretion of the clubs.
The Future of Women’s Football
While questions remain, including ticket sales and how much interest in fans have awakened in an already bloated football calendar, the organizers hope to hold a second tournament at the end of this year. The greatest draw for players to deal with World Sevens Football is the feeling of working with "allies" to promote women’s football. The tables have turned and they don’t have to fight so hard. Even if there is still a long way to go, it is much easier today than 20 years ago.