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Euro 2022: Will All the Euphoria and Attention Translate to Better Pay For Players?

Germany may have failed to win Euro 2022, but the women's team still won the hearts of many soccer fans. They hope to capitalize on those feelings during their upcoming season.
Lina Magull (second from right) scored Germany's only goal in the final of Euro 2022

Lina Magull (second from right) scored Germany's only goal in the final of Euro 2022.

"I hope that the hype remains, that women's football continues to develop. Mere lip service simply won't do," former West Germany striker and former Germany women's coach Horst Hrubesch told German broadcaster Sport1 recently. 

In the public discourse of recent weeks in Germany, three core demands have emerged:

Minimum salary 

"We players in the second division upwards should be able to earn enough money from football so that we don't have to hold down outside jobs," Lina Magull, scorer of Germany's only goal in Sunday's final said recently. 

"So, we are talking about a minimum salary of €2,000 [or] €3000 ($2,041, €3,061) a month. That's the way to advance women's football in a sustainable way." 

Magull stressed that this doesn't mean earning millions as some players in the men's game do, but at the same time she pointed to examples in other European countries. 

"In England, clubs are required to pay their players professionally to be allowed to play in the league. I don't know why that can't happen in Germany," she said. 

In 2019 the players of the Primera Division de la Liga de Futbol Femenino reached an agreement with the league that stipulates a minimum annual wage of €16,000, as well as maternity benefits. Previously, 49% of the players in Spain's first division received no salary whatsoever, and 31% earned less than €6,000 per year. 

In England's Women's Super League, the average salary is reported to be around £30,000 (€36,000 or $36,600) per year. This would put monthly earnings at around €3,000. 

After Euro 2022, Germany coach Martina Voss-Tecklenburg also called for a minimum salary for female German professional players, "because almost 50% of players in the Bundesliga still work on the side because they can't live on what they earn from football." 

German and English fans packed Wembley Stadium for Sunday's Euro 2022 final

German and English fans packed Wembley Stadium for Sunday's Euro 2022 final

An Internet petition addressed to German Football Association (DFB) President Bernd Neuendorf calling for a minimum wage of €3,000 per month in the Bundesliga had been signed by more than 17,000 people by August 2. 

More media presence 

The Euro 2022 final between England and Germany was watched by around 17 million people on German public television, more than ever before for a women's football match in the country. 

"The successful European Championship helps the visibility and presence of women in football enormously," the DFB's manager of marketing, Holger Blask, told the DPA news agency. 

"The record ratings show that the interest is there." 

But does this translate to the Bundesliga? 

Last season, all Bundesliga matches were broadcast live in Germany for the first time, but only on a domestic Pay TV channel. The contract runs until mid-2023, by which time the free-to-air channel Eurosport is to broadcast one Friday match per matchday.

According to the broadcaster, an average of around 100,000 people watched the live broadcasts of Friday matches last season. German public broadcaster ARD also has the right to broadcast one match per matchday. In October 2021, as many as 1.5 million people watched the Bundesliga game between Bayern Munich and Hoffenheim. 

In the United Kingdom, women's games broadcast on Sky Sports reached an average of 125,000 viewers last season, and this number is climbing.  

Promoting youth and professionalism

Former Germany coach Hrubesch points to grass-roots problems that still urgently need to be addressed, noting that in terms of training facilities and kickoff times there are "still problems offering the girls a really professional standard." 

Just 7,000 spectators turned up for the top-of-the-table clash between Wolfsburg and Bayern last April

Just 7,000 spectators turned up for the top-of-the-table clash between Wolfsburg and Bayern last April

Current national team coach Voss-Tecklenburg stresses that, "we have to do more, to get into the big stadiums."

Germany player Svenja Huth would like to see "all clubs to having a good infrastructure and medical support." 

So far, this has generally only been the case with women's teams affiliated with men's Bundesliga clubs – such as last season's top three, Wolfsburg, Bayern Munich and Eintracht Frankfurt. The two teams that were relegated, SC Sand and Carl-Zeiss Jena, don't have the financial backing of a men's Bundesliga outfit. 

Whether moving to larger stadiums would translate into a higher number of spectators in the Bundesliga in the long term remains to be seen. So far, this has been the rare exception, like when Wolfsburg played Barcelona in the Champions League in April. That game saw 91,648 viewers attend. 

The upcoming Bundesliga season opens on September 16 when Eintracht Frankfurt host Bayern Munich in the 51,500-capacity Deutsche Bank Park. Eintracht averaged 1,580 spectators per game last season. That is almost double the league's average. Still, it is clear that here too, there is still plenty of room for improvement. 

This article was translated from German.

Courtesy: DW

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