AUCKLAND ā New Zealand striker Hannah Wilkinson has helped create two milestones at the Womenās World Cup.
With her 48th-minute goal in the tournament opener against Norway, she led the co-host Football Ferns to their first win in six trips to the Womenās World Cup. Sheās also one of at least 95 out members of the LGBTQ+ community competing in this yearās tournament, according to a count being kept by Outsports, a website that covers the LGBTQ+ sports.
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The Ferns were greeted with a fan-made sign at their next match in Wellington: āGay for soccer, gay for Wilkie,ā it read.
The 95 out participants make up roughly 13% of the 736 total players at the Womenās World Cup, more than doubling the 40 players and coaches Outsports counted in 2019.
The 2023 tournament also is hosting the first openly trans and non-binary player in either a menās or Womenās World Cup, Quinn of Canada.
āLast World Cup was so big, especially with the visibility of the U.S. womenās national team winning and (Megan Rapinoe) fighting with (Donald) Trump. So I think that was a huge year for LGBTQ+ visibility,ā said Lindsey Freeman, a professor of sociology and anthropology at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia.
āItās just the ad hoc, fun culture of womenās soccer that youāre seeing in this World Cup,ā said Freeman, who is in New Zealand conducting research on the topic.
Jim Buzinski, co-founder of Outsports, agreed. āIn the Western world, itās such a non-issue that it really just doesnāt get talked about,ā he said. āAnd I think thatās in a good way.ā
VISIBILITY
Prior to the start of the tournament, FIFA designated eight socially conscious armbands team captains could wear throughout the Womenās World Cup. The decision came after āOne Loveā armbands were denied to menās teams in Qatar in 2022.
The armbands being used this year include anti-discriminatory sayings and multiple colors, but the rainbow version Germany wanted to use is not allowed. None of the available options explicitly mention LGBTQ+ rights.
The decision has led many players to express their support in more creative ways across Australia and New Zealand.
New Zealand midfielder Ali Riley was interviewed on the official Womenās World Cup broadcast after her teamās upset of Norway. Her painted fingernails, left hand in the colors of the pride flag and right hand as the trans flag, were clearly visible as she held her head and fought back tears.
āSheās such an advocate and sheās definitely someone who uses her platform in such a positive way. We are all so proud of her and the way she represents the LGBTQ+ community,ā teammate CJ Bott said. āGood on her. Weāre all backing her, and we all back the community as well.ā
The Philippines, making its Womenās World Cup debut, took home its own historic win over New Zealand 1-0 thanks to the foot of Sarina Bolden. Boldenās Instagram bio reads, āi just wanna have fun n b gay.ā
Irish star Katie McCabe wowed fans with a goal directly from a corner kick. Sheās also made tabloid news for her relationships with other players.
Thembi Kgatlana, who has scored in the tournament for South Africa, has a patch of her hair dyed rainbow colors.
āMy personality is very big for me, and my hair has become a part of my personality,ā Kgatlana said. āAnd I did this rainbow because I want to represent all the people that are part of the LGBTQ and cannot talk while in countries where theyāre oppressed.ā
FAN EXPERIENCE
Kristen Pariseau and her wife started a U.S. womenās national team supporters group on Facebook ahead of traveling to this yearās Womenās World Cup. Aside from some hateful users she blocked, itās been āsuper LGBT friendly.ā
She and her wife did not go to Qatar for the 2022 menās World Cup to avoid referencing each other as friends and receiving questions on their sexuality. In New Zealand, she said sheās met many same-sex couples at games and while traveling around the country.
āEverywhere you turn, itās like, āOh, my wife, my girlfriend.ā Itās been so welcoming and open,ā Pariseau said. āIn a way, it is kind of cool to be where thereās a lot of other people like you.ā
Kelsie Bozart took her own pride flag armband to the United States' second match in Wellington, along with a pride scarf.
āIf you look back a couple years, I feel like it just wasnāt really talked about or there just wasnāt much of a presence,ā Bozart said. āBut moving forward I feel like, especially for the U.S., theyāve done an amazing job of just incorporating pride and LGBTQ.ā
NOT UNIVERSAL
Though this yearās tournament has highlighted vast gains for the LGBTQ+ community in womenās soccer, advocates feel there is still work to be done.
According to Buzinski and Outsports, there were at least 186 LGBTQ+ athletes at the Tokyo Olympics. Women outnumbered men by a 9:1 ratio. There also were no confirmed out players at the 2022 menās World Cup.
āI think womenās sports have always been open,ā Denmark striker Pernille Harder said, adding that there are many role models for women who want to come out.
Freeman said it would be good to see men feel the same level of comfort.
āWhat can happen in the womenās game, I would love to spill over to the menās game,ā she said. āBecause obviously, thereās way more queer players in the menās game and itās just not safe for them to come out.
āIf you want to say that youāre in an inclusive space, you really have to be an inclusive space,ā Freeman added. āAnd I think that that includes also holding the World Cup in places where itās fine to be a queer person.ā
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Max Ralph is a student in John Curley Center for Sports Journalism at Penn State.
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Contributing reporters included Joe Lister in Wellington and Rafaela Pontes in Auckland, students in the John Curley Center for Sports Journalism at Penn State, and Clay Witt in Sydney, Australia, a student at the University of Georgiaās Carmical Sports Media Institute.
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AP World Cup coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/fifa-womens-world-cup and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports