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Beth Mead calls lack of diversity on England WNT ‘completely coincidental’

(Harriet Lander/The FA via Getty Images)

When BBC Women’s Footballer of the Year Beth Mead sat down for a conversation with The Guardian to promote her new book, “Lioness: My Journey to Glory,” she touched on her mother’s battle with cancer as well as personal struggles that led to her on-field success.

But when asked about the England women’s national football team’s lack of diversity, Mead, a forward for Arsenal and the Lionesses, dismissed concerns of racism in elite women’s football, calling the makeup of the team’s roster “coincidental.”

Just three Black players featured on England’s Euros-winning squad: Jess Carter, Demi Stokes and Nikita Parris.

“I think it’s completely coincidental,” Mead said. “We put out our best 11 and you don’t think of anyone’s race or anything like that. I think that’s more an outsider’s perspective.”

Mead did mention that more should be done to make sure football is accessible to everyone at a grassroots level, but she didn’t see racism as a concern at the elite level of the women’s game, The Guardian reported.

Amid the Lionesses’ historic run in July, former England international Anita Asante criticized England’s player pipeline for creating exclusivity that bars many girls of color from playing at the highest levels.

“Like England, France have reached the quarter-finals of Euro 2022, but unlike the Lionesses their 23-woman squad contains 15 black or brown players,” she wrote.

Asante went on to note that the scouting process in England doesn’t have enough resources or “the imagination required to look in the right places.” She also spotlighted how coaches of color are rarely promoted or seen, and how a lack of resources to travel for training or games can be prohibitive to underserved populations.

“Visibility – or the lack of it – remains the biggest problem,” Assante concluded.

Current England captain Leah Williamson also has addressed the team’s lack of diversity head-on, telling BBC Sport in October: “Within the squad, this is an important issue and we’re all aware of it. There’s nothing that we can do right now to change it.”

Lotte Wubben-Moy, a teammate of Mead and Williamson on Arsenal and England, also discussed the issue with BBC Sport.

“I’m from London, I see a lot of deprivation,” Wubben-Moy said. “I see a lot of young children who don’t have opportunities. And while I feel like I have responsibility to talk about it, I think everyone does.”

Less than 10% of the 300 players in the Women’s Super League are players of color, The Athletic reported in July, much lower than the estimated 33% in the men’s Premier League.

“The visibility, the accessibility, all of those things from the bottom need to be better so that we don’t lose the diversity of the game,” Williamson said.

The Lionesses also have faced allegations of racism within their program in the past. In 2017, Angel City FC director of recruitment Eni Aluko, who played for England at the time, accused then-manager Mark Sampson of making racist comments. Incidents included making a joke about Ebola towards Nigerian-born Aluko and asking forward Drew Spence how many times she had been arrested.

The English FA eventually formally apologized to Aluko for her experiences. Sampson’s tenure ended before Mead’s first call-up to the England first team.

In contrast with her comments on diversity, Mead has spoken out about other social issues, most recently in relation to the men’s World Cup that will be held in Qatar in November.

Last week, Mead — who is openly in a relationship with Arsenal teammate Vivianne Miedema — told BBC Radio 4 that Qatar’s laws banning homosexuality were “the complete opposite to what I believe and respect,” and that she would not be backing or promoting the event.

“Although I’m cheering for the boys who are going to play football there, from the minute it was announced I thought it wasn’t the best idea,” she said. “We’re in the 21st century and you fall in love with who you fall in love with. It doesn’t matter who they are.”

WNBA MVP Frontrunners Napheesa Collier, A’ja Wilson Gear Up for Lynx vs. Aces Clash

Las Vegas Aces center A'ja Wilson and Minnesota Lynx star Napheesa Collier look up during a 2024 WNBA game.
A'ja Wilson and the Las Vegas Aces haven't lost a WNBA game since August 2nd, while Napheesa Collier's Minnesota Lynx sit atop the league. (David Sherman/NBAE via Getty Images)

The No. 1 Minnesota Lynx and No. 3 Las Vegas Aces have spots in the 2025 WNBA Playoffs on lock, but the league's top-tier teams still have plenty to play for as MVP frontrunners Napheesa Collier and A'ja Wilson gear up for their final regular-season clash.

Collier's 23.5 points per game this season is nearly identical to Wilson's 23.4 average, plus the Lynx standout ranks third in steals per game and fourth in block rate on the year.

Wilson, however, has the edge as the WNBA's blocks leader and the league's second-best rebounder on the season.

This is far from the first time the two titans have squared off in a WNBA awards race, with 2024 voters splitting honors by naming Collier the Defensive Player of the Year while Wilson earned a third MVP title.

History will be made should either emerge as the 2025 MVP, as Collier is still hunting her first title as the league's top player while a Wilson win would mint the Las Vegas star as the WNBA's first-ever four-time honoree.

MVP race aside, Collier's Lynx and Wilson's Aces have a lot on the line in their Thursday matchup, with Minnesota aiming to snap Las Vegas's 12-game winning streak — a stretch dating back to the Aces's 53-point blowout loss to the Lynx on August 2nd.

Meanwhile, Las Vegas will be looking to dish out some revenge and claim their first win of the season over Minnesota, all while continuing to fight their way up the WNBA table in order to snag the postseason's coveted No. 2 seed.

How to watch Minnesota Lynx vs. Las Vegas Aces in Thursday's WNBA lineup

Coming off an eight-day rest, No. 3 Las Vegas will host No. 1 Minnesota on Thursday.

The top-tier matchup will tip off live at 10 PM ET on Prime.

Chicago Stars Announce Move to Northwestern Stadium for 2026 NWSL Season

A general view of Northwestern University's Martin Stadium before a 2024 NCAA football game.
The Chicago Stars will move to the Evanston lakeshore in 2026. (Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

The Chicago Stars are moving out of Bridgeview, the NWSL club announced on Wednesday, signing a one-year deal to play at Northwestern University's Martin Stadium on the shore of Lake Michigan for the 2026 season.

Currently home to the Big Ten school's lacrosse and football teams, the open-air, turf-field stadium in Evanston accommodates 12,000 fans — a steep drop from the 20,000-seat capacity SeatGeek Stadium where the Stars have competed for the last 10 years, often struggling to fill the stands.

"What began as a temporary lakefront home for Northwestern football has quickly become a unique venue that has welcomed collegiate, professional, and international competition," said Northwestern director of athletics Mark Jackson in a club statement.

The Stars have never had a full-time home inside Chicago's city limits, making their 2011 debut at Benedictine University in Lisle, Illinois, before moving to Bridgeview ahead of the 2016 season.

Stars fans will have a sneak peek of what it's like to attend an NWSL game at the team's 2026 digs this Sunday, when a surging Chicago side will host the reigning champion Orlando Pride in a pre-announced match at Martin Stadium.

"This is just one step in a series of changes, including the recent hiring of renowned head coach Martin Sjögren,... [to] set the club on a new trajectory," noted Chicago Stars president Karen Leetzow.

USWNT Icon Alex Morgan Talks Equal Pay, Motherhood on ‘Call Her Daddy’ Podcast

"Call Her Daddy" podcast host Alex Cooper poses with guest and USWNT legend Alex Morgan
Soccer icon Alex Morgan appeared on Alex Cooper's “Call Her Daddy” podcast on Wednesday. (SiriusXM)

Retired USWNT superstar Alex Morgan hit up Alex Cooper's Call Her Daddy podcast this week, talking motherhood, soccer stardom, and the fight for equal pay.

"Fast forward to 2019, and we were owning our s—t," she said, referencing the USWNT's long fight to achieve financial equity. "We're going to win, we filed an equal pay lawsuit against US Soccer, we know that winning [the World Cup] is going to help our case, and we are the best."

"We likely won't reap the benefits of what we're fighting for, but our kids will," Morgan recalled thinking. "I hope my daughter knows nothing other than equal."

Morgan also opened up about life as a high-profile soccer celebrity, discussing how she juggled becoming a new mother while also navigating her playing career for both club and country.

"It was very difficult because there was no rules — there was no standard for moms in the NWSL, or even on the national team," she said. "I was trying to be a great mom, and I was trying to be a great soccer player, but I was also now having to write new rules and advocate for all moms in the future in soccer."

How to watch Alex Morgan on Call Her Daddy

Wednesday's Call Her Daddy episode featuring Morgan is currently available to download on all podcast platforms and can be watched on YouTube.

Chelsea Finalizes £1 Million Transfer for ACFC Star Alyssa Thompson as WSL Kicks Off

Angel City forward Alyssa Thompson reacts to a loss during the 2025 NWSL season.
Angel City star Alyssa Thompson reportedly closed a transfer deal to play for six-time WSL champs Chelsea. (Harry How/NWSL via Getty Images)

USWNT rising star Alyssa Thompson is officially on her way to London, with the NWSL's Angel City and WSL side Chelsea FC finalizing the 20-year-old's reported £1 million transfer ahead of the UK league's 2025/26 season kick-off on Friday.

The two clubs reached a verbal agreement with Thompson readying to ink a five-year contract on Thursday, just hours before the WSL's 6 PM ET transfer window closure — with six-time reigning league-winners Chelsea set to open their next WSL campaign against Manchester City in a mere 24 hours.

Chelsea has been aggressive in the transfer market this year, as the WSL titan fields mounting pressure from clubs eager to upend the top of the table.

Second-place 2024/25 finishers Arsenal enter the season as UWCL champions, coming off Canadian star Olivia Smith's splashy £1 million transfer while also signing Smith's former Liverpool teammate Taylor Hinds.

Man City will also be looking to better their fourth-place 2024/25 run, hoping for a healthy Bunny Shaw to combine with Dutch phenom Vivianne Miedema while adding ex-Arsenal defender Laura Wienroither and decorated German midfielder Sydney Lohmann to their ranks.

This weekend's WSL action will also feature the newly promoted London City Lionesses, kicking off their top-flight entry against Arsenal on Saturday.

Backed by US-based multi-team owner Michele Kang, London City has also been busy this offseason, bringing on a laundry list of talent including midfielder Daniëlle van de Donk (OL Lyonnes) and forward Nikita Parris (Brighton) plus their own Angel City finds in midfielder Katie Zelem and defender Alanna Kennedy.

How to watch the Barclays WSL season kick-off this weekend

The 2025/26 WSL action kicks off with Chelsea hosting Manchester City at 2:30 PM ET on Friday, before league debutants London City visit Arsenal at 8:30 AM ET on Saturday.

Currently, WSL matches will likely stream live on YouTube, though an official US media partner has not yet been announced.

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