Soccer-Australia, Japan women say AFC ignoring pay inequality concerns

Soccer-Australia, Japan women say AFC ignoring pay inequality concerns

The Star Online - Sport·2026-04-02 19:02

MELBOURNE, April 2 (Reuters) - Women's ⁠Asian Cup finalists Australia and Japan said on Thursday the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) had ignored an ⁠invitation to address gender pay inequality before the record-breaking tournament.

The women's teams also called on ‌global governing body FIFA to meet its equal prizemoney target for the men's and women's World Cups.

The 12 nations at the quadrennial Asian Cup hosted by Australia competed for a prize pool of $1.8m, about 12% of the total for the 2023 men's Asian ​Cup in Qatar.

It was the lowest prize money among women's continental ⁠competitions in recent years, barely half of ⁠the 2024 Africa Cup of Nations pool ($3.47m).

"Despite the success of this tournament, it remains the lowest-paying continental tournament ⁠in ‌the world and inequality between the men’s and women's game remains," the Australia and Japan women's teams said in a statement.

"Our pre-tournament invitation to the AFC to work together on equal prize money, ⁠a guaranteed share to all players, and to co-develop a lasting ​legacy has so far been ‌ignored."

The AFC declined to comment.

The governing body has taken steps to develop the women's game, including ⁠launching the Women's ​Champions League in 2024, but critics say progress has been uneven and prizemoney remains a key issue.

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