Football video games make it possible to
take on the role of one’s heroes. But this is generally possible only if your
football heroes are male. FIFA’s Women’s World Cup may start in Canada on June 6 but women have
until very recently remained absent from leading football video games.
It was recently announced that EA Sports’ FIFA 16 game is to include women’s teams. Football Manager, another popular football video game, does not yet feature women but there are plans to include women’s teams in future editions. But don’t let this seeming progression fool you into thinking that the scales are being balanced. This is far from the case.
And Football Manager’s apparent plans
fall behind even this. The game’s creator, Miles Jacobson, said last year that women’s leagues will be
included when there are ten of them globally with comparable average
attendances to the English Championship.
This may sound progressive, but it
isn’t. Football Manager is actually setting the bar quite high when it comes to
including women’s teams. The Championship may be English football’s second tier
but it attracts larger crowds than the top divisions in most European
countries.
It’s not time to celebrate yet. The
creators of Football Manager would do well to take a closer look at attendances
in top division men’s leagues. The average attendance in the US National
Women’s Soccer League (NWSL) last year was more than 4,000. This means that the NWSL
attracts bigger crowds than the majority of top division men’s leagues in Europe.
Football Manager’s creators argue that it is not commercially viable to include
women’s leagues, but how commercially viable are certain men’s leagues that are
included? What about the second tier
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