Culture secretary Lucy Frazer to be briefed on plans to grow women's football
- Published
The Football Association and NewCo will on Tuesday update the government with its plans to grow the women's game.
The first meeting of the women's football review implementation group follows a major review of the sport by former England midfielder Karen Carney.
In December, the government said it would back all 10 of Carney's recommendations.
Lucy Frazer, secretary of state for culture, media and sport, said they are "delivering" on those recommendations.
Representatives from NewCo, the new independent body responsible for the management of the women's professional game, the Football Association (FA), Football Foundation, Sport England, the Sports Ground Safety Authority, Professional Football Association, the English Football League, the Department for Education and the Premier League are set to update Frazer on progress made so far.
Carney's 126-page report called for:
world-leading standards for players, fans, staff, and everyone in the women's game
restoration of the talent pathway needed to create future generations of Lionesses
professionalisation across the top two tiers to attract and develop the best players in the world
the lack of diversity to be addressed across the women's game, in on-pitch and off-pitch roles
the game's governing bodies to work with broadcasters to create a new dedicated time slot
adopting more measures to support fans
provision of equal access to school sports for girls
more investment in grassroots facilities and better access for females.
The government has pledged to invest £30m to deliver 30 new state of the art 3G pitches at sites supporting women's and girls' teams across England via the Lionesses Future Fund.
"It's great to see how far we've come and the commitment made by the government to women's football, but we cannot become complacent," said Carney, who won 144 caps for England.
"It is my hope that the implementation group will ensure that we can progress further at a faster pace, working to get the review's recommendations in play.
"The growth of women's sport represents a wider movement towards equity and I am proud to be part of it."