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FIFA’s World Sevens sparks debate over women’s football innovation

World Sevens offers women’s football a rare creative outlet, but it faces criticism whether it plays conventionally or innovatively. The double standard highlights the sport’s struggle for legitimacy, despite its potential for growth through innovation.

There is cynicism about the World Sevens — but this is why women’s football needs it
Yahoo Sports — 31 May 2026
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World Sevens just staged its third edition in west London, and critics are already calling it the sport’s death knell. The three-day, seven-player tournament—co-founded by Jennifer Mackesy and Justin Fishkin—ended with Chelsea beating Manchester United 6-5 in a 15-minute-per-half, half-size-pitch spectacle that mixed cartwheeling referees with player nicknames on footballs and even a “coffin suitcase” send-off for an Everton player. The noise online was anything but quiet: some fans declared the competition an irredeemable insult to elite football, while the players themselves said they loved the freedom and fun of it.

What feels like cynicism actually reveals a deeper truth about women’s football: it can’t win. When the sport plays it straight, critics say it’s still not taken seriously enough. When it dares to be playful—think Aston Villa’s can-can or Chelsea turning into a skittles board—others claim it’s betraying the “real” game. The men’s game, by contrast, can post milk-drinking routines or dog-naming antics without the same backlash. The double standard is glaring, and it speaks to the pressure on women’s football to prove itself at every turn, even when it innovates.

For all the eye-rolling, World Sevens delivered something rare: a space where players and clubs could express themselves beyond the rigid expectations of 11-a-side football. Staff talked about bonding and creativity; decision-makers highlighted the chance to showcase clubs as distinct brands in a media-driven market. The prize money—half a million dollars for Chelsea—also matters in an ecosystem where even top clubs struggle to make ends meet. If the goal is growth, not just prestige, these moments of levity aren’t a distraction; they’re part of the brand.

The bigger question isn’t whether World Sevens is “serious” enough. It’s whether women’s football can ever break free from the shadow of judgment—whether it’s the old ban, the endless comparisons to men’s football, or the latest viral stunt that’s deemed “too much.” The tournament’s critics forget that men’s football thrives on spectacle, from pre-match routines to viral challenges. Women’s football doesn’t need to mimic that; it needs the freedom to define itself. World Sevens might be chaotic, but its real crime is daring to exist outside the usual box. And that’s exactly why it matters.

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