German football chief Fritz Keller slams discrimination facing female stars

Keller pointed out that backward thought processes are still prevalent in society and said it is important to usher in a change in a positive way.

Published : Mar 23, 2021 20:14 IST , BERLIN

The criticism began when the West German Football Association ordered Borussia Mönchengladbach under-23 coach Heiko Vogel to take charge of six training sessions of a women’s or girls’ team as part of his punishment.
The criticism began when the West German Football Association ordered Borussia Mönchengladbach under-23 coach Heiko Vogel to take charge of six training sessions of a women’s or girls’ team as part of his punishment.
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The criticism began when the West German Football Association ordered Borussia Mönchengladbach under-23 coach Heiko Vogel to take charge of six training sessions of a women’s or girls’ team as part of his punishment.

German Football Federation president, Fritz Keller has slammed the structural discrimination facing female players in his country.

Keller made his comments on Tuesday, after a video conference the day before with Germany captain Alexandra Popp and goalkeeper Almuth Schult to discuss the fall-out from a sports court case that ordered a male coach to take charge of a female team’s training sessions as part of his punishment for verbally abusing female match officials.

“It was a worthwhile and open exchange about the stones that are placed in the way of our female soccer players," Keller said. "They are still at times hugely disadvantaged structurally. It’s not acceptable.”

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The 63-year-old federation president said it was “very important” to address Popp and Schult in response to an open letter from female players across the top two divisions in which they, on Saturday, condemned the decision made on March 9 in the case against Borussia Mönchengladbach under-23 coach Heiko Vogel at the sports court of the West German Football Association (WDFV).

Vogel reportedly made sexist comments to Vanessa Arlt and Nadine Westerhoff at a game involving his team on Jan. 30. The court fined him 1,500 euros ($1,800), banned him for two league games and ordered him to take charge of six training sessions of a women’s or girls’ team before June 30.

The players asked in their open letter “how the training of a women’s or girls’ team can be defined as punishment” and said the judgment “discriminates against all women in sport.”

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Keller also criticized the court’s judgement and said the players had his full support.

“The preposterous statement and inconceivable ‘punishment’ of coaching a women’s team are only a manifestation of thought patterns that are unfortunately still far too widespread in football today,” he said.

Keller added it was important “that we all fight against it together.”

On Saturday, federation vice president Hannelore Ratzeburg slammed the court’s judgement and welcomed the regional association’s call for it to be reviewed.

Gladbach sporting director Max Eberl had already criticized Vogel for his comments to the officials.

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