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Women's Football Boca Juniors win first women’s game in La Bombonera

ARGENTINA’S Boca Juniors women’s team hammered Lanus 5-0 in La Bombonera yesterday in a landmark game that was the first time an official women’s tournament match was played in the legendary stadium.

The game, held prior to a Boca Juniors-San Lorenzo men’s match, was highly anticipated coming a day after International Women’s Day and amid the rising force of Argentina’s feminist movement, which has been holding marches against gender violence under the slogan “Not One Less.”

Women’s football in Argentina is still played by amateur athletes who get little to no money and one player, Macarena Sanchez, recently took legal action against her club and the Argentine football federation in an effort to gain professional status. 

The case could set a precedent in a nation that is home to Lionel Messi, but where football is still largely seen as a men’s only game.

Yesterday, La Bombonera stadium opened a half an hour before the start of the women’s match and, when the teams took the field, a handful of Boca Juniors fans received the players with the same song they would sing to the men: “Boca, my good friend, we will be with you this campaign again.”

The big stage, in one of South America’s most famous football venues, did not intimidate the Boca women.

Nine minutes into the match, midfielder Camila Gomez Ares threaded a pass to forward Yamila Rodriguez, who knocked the ball into the Lanus’ goal with her left foot.

“Thousands of things crossed my mind. I didn’t know if I should follow the play or look at the people. I’m not going to forget this feeling,” said Rodriguez. “Playing this football with these people shows that women’s soccer can do it.”

With some of the male players watching the game from the entrance tunnel, Noelia Espindola later headed in Boca’s second goal.

“It’s worth it because of everything we went through and lived through to get here,” said Fabiana Vallejos, who scored at the 61-minute mark.

In neighbouring Chile, women’s football is also amateur, while Brazil, Mexico and Colombia are among regional countries that have professional leagues. But there is still prejudice, and ignorance, to overcome.

Argentina’s women’s national team recently qualified for the World Cup for the first time in 12 years. But even the national team’s players have struggled financially. They went on strike in 2017 after their stipends of about $10 (£7) went unpaid.

The female players were also angered when Adidas, the brand that sponsors a few members of the national teams of both genders, unveiled the new shirt for last year’s Women’s Copa America with models rather than players.

“Girls from other clubs wrote us and told us to take advantage of this opportunity and hopefully others will get it because it is something indescribable,” said Vallejos of Saturday’s game in La Bombonera.

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