The prevalence of knee accidents in girls’s soccer has been brought on by a scarcity of analysis and funding, former Australia ahead Sarah Walsh mentioned forward of the Women’s World Cup.
“I think at the heart of the issue is a real lack of research,” Walsh, who earned 70 caps for Australia between 2004-2012 and scored greater than 30 targets, informed the BBC on Sunday.
Several gamers will miss the Women’s World Cup, which kicks off on Thursday, after tearing their anterior cruciate ligaments (ACL).
European champion England is among the many worst affected groups, having misplaced captain Leah Williamson, Euro 2022 Golden Boot winner Beth Mead and Fran Kirby.
Other key gamers lacking with ACL accidents embody Janine Beckie (Canada), Delphine Cascarino and Marie-Antoinette Katoto (France), Vivianne Miedema (Netherlands) and Catarina Macario and Mallory Swanson (United States).
Studies recommend girls are two to eight occasions extra more likely to endure ACL accidents in comparison with males in the identical sport and 25% much less more likely to return after restoration.
Theories as to why girls usually tend to endure from ACL accidents vary from girls enjoying in boots designed for males to anatomical variations in feminine gamers and altering hormones throughout girls’s menstrual cycles.
“The entire high-performance environment is designed by men for men,” Walsh mentioned. “For a long time, women have been treated like little men. I would have loved to have known if my menstrual cycle would have affected any of my knee reconstructions.
“We haven’t even scratched the surface. A hundred years of under-investment in women’s football has brought us to this point where we have lost a number of different players for this World Cup. It’s a shame we won’t get to see them play. It’s something we need to invest in, research.”
The ninth girls’s World Cup is being hosted by New Zealand and Australia.