UEFA.com works better on other browsers
For the best possible experience, we recommend using Chrome, Firefox or Microsoft Edge.

'Limitless potential' for women's football

UEFA President Aleksander Čeferin says the UEFA Women's Champions League final will become a focal point of the calendar in its own right.

Lyon and Wolfsburg will meet again in this season's UEFA Women's Champions League final
Lyon and Wolfsburg will meet again in this season's UEFA Women's Champions League final ©Getty Images

UEFA President Aleksander Čeferin believes the exponential growth of women's football across Europe will ensure UEFA Women's Champions League finals become a centrepiece of the calendar in their own right.

Wolfsburg and Lyon meet in this year's final at the Valeriy Lobanovskyi Stadium in Kyiv on Thursday, two days before Real Madrid and Liverpool contest the UEFA Champions League final in the same city.

It will be the last time before the events are separated, the UEFA President explaining that the surge in popularity of women's football – and the governing body's commitment to growing participation, visibility and engagement in the game – has prompted the change. Next year's UEFA Women's Champions League final will take place in Budapest, Hungary, with the men's version being held in Madrid.

It has been a prosperous year for women's football, with UEFA Women's EURO 2017 recording a 50% increase in cumulative audience and UEFA launching its pan-European campaign, Together #WePlayStrong.

Wolfsburg's road to the final

"I said at the UEFA Congress in Bratislava that we should dare to aim high, launch initiatives that continue to instil hope, and make European football as big as it can be," Mr Čeferin told UEFA.com. "The potential for women's football is limitless and it is with this in mind that we decided to separate the two UEFA Champions League events. That will give the women's game a platform of its own, to continue to grow and to become an unmissable event and television spectacle in its own right.

"We saw at Women's EURO how popular the game has become, both from a fan experience perspective and also to an ever-growing television audience. At UEFA we have worked harder than ever this year to maximise the potential of women's football to tap into that growing market."

To further reinforce the distinctiveness of women's football, UEFA has unbundled its sponsorship rights from the men's game to appeal to a wider audience and alter perceptions. In 2017, UEFA reported a 7.5% increase in registered girls and women participating across the 55 member associations, with further growth expected for 2018.

UEFA has also launched the hugely successful Press Play vlog on its Together #WePlayStrong channels, giving fans a unique insight into the daily lives of four professional players around Europe each week. To date, the weekly vlog has amassed almost 5m views on YouTube.

Watch how Lyon made it to Kyiv

Recently, global pop star Rita Ora has also signed up as official supporter of Together #WePlayStrong, with UEFA sponsoring her European stage return with the The Girls Tour.

It is all part of a concerted effort to raise awareness of women's football, with former German international and FIFA World Player of the Year Nadine Kessler appointed as head of women's football unit.

"It's really exciting and the continued growth of women's football is a strategic priority for UEFA," Kessler said. "This is a long-term project but it's heartening to see the game become more professional across Europe. With that comes increased opportunity, exposure and affinity.

"Both Wolfsburg and Lyon deserve to be in this year's final and will provide a great spectacle for the fans. From next season, we will give the UEFA Women's Champions League final its own space to flourish and its own identity. At the current rate of progress, it's a journey that will inspire more people than ever before."