Female referees are to officiate at a men’s World Cup for the first time, Fifa has confirmed, with three female assistant referees joining them.
In a breakthrough for gender equality within football, Stéphanie Frappart of France, Rwanda’s Salima Mukansanga and Yoshimi Yamashita of Japan have been included on the list of 36 referees who will take the field in Qatar in November and December.
The trio will be joined by Neuza Back of Brazil, Mexico’s Karen Díaz Medina and Kathryn Nesbitt from the United States, who form part of the 69-strong list of assistant referees.
According to Fifa’s head of refereeing, Pierluigi Collina, the appointment of officials was made without consideration to gender.
“This concludes a long process that began several years ago with the deployment of female referees at Fifa men’s junior and senior tournaments,” Collina said.
“In this way, we clearly emphasise that it is quality that counts for us and not gender. I would hope that in the future, the appointment of elite women’s match officials for important men’s competitions will be perceived as something normal and no longer as sensational.
“They deserve to be at the Fifa World Cup because they constantly perform at a really high level, and that’s the important factor for us.”
Frappart is one of the leading referees in women’s football and a trailblazer within the men’s game. In 2019 she refereed the final of the Women’s World Cup and became the first female official of a French Ligue 1 match, and refereed the men’s Uefa Super Cup between Liverpool and Chelsea. The following year she was the first woman to referee a men’s Champions League game and in 2021 the first to referee a men’s World Cup qualifier.
Yamashita, 36, has made a similar breakthrough in Asian competitions. She became the first female referee of a J1 League game in May of last year and this year has taken charge of matches in the Women’s Asian Cup and the Asian equivalent of the men’s Champions League. Mukansanga has officiated at the Africa Women Cup of Nations, the CAF Women’s Champions League and the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.
Fifa has picked 24 men to work on video review technology, with semi-automated VAR for offside decisions still being considered. Two referees were picked from each of Argentina, Brazil, England and France. England’s representatives will be Michael Oliver and Anthony Taylor.
Janny Sikazwe of Zambia has also been chosen, after causing controversy in January when he refereed a chaotic Africa Cup of Nations match despite suffering from heatstroke.
Source: The Guardian
BDST: 1523 HRS, MAY 20, 2022
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