Posted: 2024-06-28 20:02:50

Almost a year on from the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup, the Matildas remain the hottest ticket in Australian sport.

The 'Tillies' tidal wave has crashed through the Australian cultural landscape and in its wake, women's football is flourishing like never before.

But for some of Australia's "other" national women's football teams, breaking new ground is proving anything but straightforward.

On June 3, the Australian Deaf women's football team took on the USA in Denver, Colorado.

Lit by a sparkling early summer sun, it was the first time an official Deaf football match had been broadcast on American television.

Unfortunately, it didn't end well for the Australians.

They conceded 11 unanswered goals to a rampant US team who, in addition to their four Deaflympic titles and three Deaf world championships, have only ever lost one game.

But for Justeen Kruger, who plays in goal for the Australian team, merely making it to Colorado was a win in itself.

In Australia, Deaf football struggles for funding. So, despite her team receiving some assistance from the US Soccer Federation, Kruger's passage to the "Land of the Free" was anything but.

A deaf footballer saves a shot at goal during a match.

The Australian women's Deaf football team played a landmark international against the USA this year.(Supplied: Deaf Football Australia)

"If I wasn't playing on the weekend, I was either working, getting another shift or out selling raffle tickets," Kruger said.

This is also a landmark year for the Australian women's blind football team.

Come December, they will be touching down in Japan for what will be their first-ever international tour.

Bess Hepworth is the coach of the squad. Her team received a grant from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) for their upcoming trip, but funding is also an issue for her sport.

Female deaf footballers doing soccer training drills.

Australia's women's Deaf football team training.(Supplied: Deaf Football Australia)

With the squad spread across the country and only able to meet a few times a year, her training sessions are largely confined to group chats and video recordings.

"We've got a WhatsApp group with every athlete and official where the players upload videos of their weekly training sessions and the coaches give them feedback," Hepworth said.

All athletes begin with the same training schedule before it is tweaked to meet an individual's particular needs.

"One of our athletes had her wisdom teeth out but still wanted to play. So, we devised training sessions she could do while she was laying down on the couch," Hepworth said.

"We just don't want distance and lack of opportunity to come together to be a barrier for our players."

A legacy to be leveraged

The 2023 World Cup was a watershed moment for not only women's football in Australia but also accessibility and disability awareness.

Matildas players celebrate winning penalty against France.

The Matilda's Women's World Cup run raised the profile of women's sport in Australia.(Getty: Elsa)

In a first for football in this country, Audio Descriptive Commentary (ADC) was available at some live games during the tournament.

ADC allows for people with blindness and low vision to follow a game more easily by painting a detailed verbal image of what's happening on the field.

Shianne Durdin, 14, is the youngest member of the blind squad. She says that the availability of ADC at last year's tournament allowed her to engage with the sport in a way she had never previously been able to.

"As I was listening to the audio description, I thought, there's so much that I missed out on not having this," she said.

"I was finally able to understand the fast pace of the game. I was like, 'whoa, this is how it is.'"

While there had been women involved in the men's national set-up for years prior, the women's team only officially kicked off in 2023, with training camps held either side of the Women's World Cup.

Several people including female blind footballers pose with the FIFA Women's World Cup trophy and mascot Tazuni.

Members of the Australian women's blind football team during the trophy tour for last year's FIFA Women's World Cup.(Supplied: Australian Blind Football)

"We were really motivated to officially launch off the back of the World Cup," coach Hepworth said.

"It was a really exciting time to leverage the concept of the legacy of football in this country."

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