Seizing the Matildas moment, prime minister promises $A200 million for women's sport

9:00 am on 19 August 2023
Australia's players celebrate their victory after a penalty shoot-out during the Australia and New Zealand 2023 Women's World Cup quarter-final football match between Australia and France at Brisbane Stadium in Brisbane on August 12, 2023. (Photo by WILLIAM WEST / AFP)

Australia play Sweden in the play off for third this evening. Photo: WILLIAM WEST

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has promised one of the largest investments in women's sport following the history-making performance of the Matildas at the FIFA Women's World Cup in Australia.

$200 million will be invested through the Play Our Way programme to improve sporting facilities and equipment specifically for women and girls.

The Matildas' matches became the most watched events in decades, as Australia went all the way to the semifinals in nail-biting games played out in front of audiences of millions on home soil.

Albanese said after the World Cup, women's sport in Australia had been forever changed.

"The Matildas have given us a moment of national inspiration," Albanese said.

"This is about seizing that opportunity for the next generation, investing in community sporting facilities for women and girls around Australia."

The Matildas are shaping up for their last match of the cup on Saturday night to determine third place.

Following their semifinals loss on Wednesday, Matildas captain Sam Kerr said it was time for the team and women's sport to be better funded for their development.

"The comparison to other sports isn't really good enough. And hopefully, this tournament changes that because that's the legacy you leave - not what you do on the pitch. The legacy is what you do off the pitch," Kerr said.

Sam Kerr of Australia celebrates

Sam Kerr said it was time for the team and women's sport to be better funded for their development. Photo: PHOTOSPORT

"And hopefully, I mean, it's hard to talk about now, but hopefully this is the start of something new."

Minister for Women Katy Gallagher said women's athleticism should be celebrated.

"Gender equality doesn't happen overnight, but it's clear something has changed in Australia, and it feels like we're getting closer," Senator Gallagher said.

Opposition leader Peter Dutton earlier this week committed his party to providing $250 million for women's sport if it won the next election - funding he said should be matched by the states.

The government will make funding available for all sports but says it anticipates soccer, as the highest participation sport in Australia, will need significant resourcing in the wake of the Women's World Cup.

Seeking to avoid the controversies of the former government's sporting grants scheme, the government says funding will be determined by an expert advisory panel that will assess where funding is needed most and will have the greatest impact.

The prime minister said the Matildas, the Diamonds in netball, the Wallaroos in rugby and other teams had changed Australian sport, and that the government was acting quickly to ensure that momentum rippled through generations.

Sport Minister Anika Wells said the $200 million commitment would ensure women had their own facilities and gear, rather than having to borrow from men's teams.

"Too often women and girls are changing in men's bathrooms, wearing hand-me-down boys uniforms, playing with men's equipment on poor fields that boys' teams wouldn't train on," Wells said.

-ABC NEWS