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  1. If Football is like other professional sports it will be cold chips and warm beer…sounds enticing.

    Ignore ball kickers perhaps, whatever their gender unless you are a true fan–are these women footballers old school ones with uteruses or trendy new ones with cocks and balls?

  2. I am weary of women’s sports demanding “equality” with men’s sports, as in “why are the men earning so much more”. I am weary of sports organisations, government, trying to push us and guilt us, into supporting something (women’s sports) that I’m just not excited about. They’re mostly boring, compared to the levels of physicality and skills displayed in the equivalent men’s sports. Let them stand or fall on their own merits, and their appeal to their target audiences. Stop trying to guilt us or manipulate us, into having to like and support them. It’s social engineering which is per se abhorrent. Hate to think how much of our taxes is being shoveled to this women’s FIFA show. And loving that despite all the brouhaha it’s still struggling, going by this post.

  3. Love rugby and don’t give two shits about soccer and women’s sports in general other than watching the Silver Ferns (yes I realise I am ‘supposed’ to call it football but just like the ‘plea’ to attend one of these games not really that responsive to being told what to do especially if is to tick some kind of virtue signaling box).

    1. Correction: Watched some of the NZ vs Norway game last night and it was good watch to be honest.

  4. I am looking forward to getting the political opinions at games of all the Soccer MUMs, as they decide elections.

  5. I watched a Bill Burr special, he made a valid point about women’s sports. Women don’t show up and watch, but expect equal pay. Ladies how about you hold up your end of the couch…

    Anyway I don’t like soccer & I am not spending my average hard earned pay, to subsidise highly paid professional sports men and women.

  6. Some quite negative comments here. I attended some U17 women’s world cup matches in Kirikiriroa Hamilton a number of years back and they were great. The atmosphere was vibrant and the fans from different countries really added to the atmosphere. I love sport – I get that some don’t. I also love the arts, music, writing etc and that’s what makes us a diverse nation. We don’t all enjoy the same things but they all potentially have value and can add to our lives – individually and collectively.

    Sometimes the overall economic benefits to the country – especially for large sporting events can be overstated and the general populace can end up paying for benefits for a few. In hindsight, however, the opening match and unexpected win for NZ last night was perfectly timed as an antidote for the horrific events earlier in the day in Auckland. You can’t put a price on that. We saw the worst and the best.

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