Football West reveal encouraging female participation statistics with Sam Kerr influence

Female player registrations for the 2024 season are exceeding previous levels in Western Australia, Football West has announced.

Dubbed the “Kerr Factor” by the organisation, female registrations for the 2024 season have increased by 67.1% when compared to this time last year.

Last year’s hosting of the FIFA Women’s World Cup, coupled with the Matildas’ on-field success, has had a profound impact on girls across Western Australia.

The introduction of Sam Kerr Football, a football academy created by the Matildas’ Perth-born forward, has created an additional buzz around the women’s game at junior level.

Football West’s efforts go a long way to helping Football Australia meet its Legacy ‘23 plan objectives, which includes achieving 50/50 gender participation in community football.

Football West CEO Jamie Harnwell is proud of the organisation’s strategic plan execution to build female participation, and highlights the collective effort of the WA footballing community.

“In the lead-up to the World Cup and at the height of Matildas-mania last year, Football West committed to providing a legacy for the game in this state and this is what we are seeing with the early registration figures,” he said via press release.

“It was always about meeting the demand, and credit must go to our clubs, associations and their volunteers, as well as Football West staff, for being prepared for the growth in interest.

“The numbers are very encouraging, especially with so many women and girls having already registered.”

Harnwell remains grounded, understanding that the football experience will be paramount to sustaining current participation and increasing future rates.

“While we are delighted with these levels of growth so far, we know there is a lot of hard work ahead to provide an enjoyable season for all of our participants in 2024,” he added.

The good news for Football West does not end at female participation, revealing a 32.8% increase in overall player registrations compared to the same period in 2023.

Furthermore, the organisation reports a 75.9% increase in referee registrations across the state, ultimately ensuring that games can run and meet the rise in demand.

The current football landscape in Western Australia underlines the growth in football participation nationally, particularly for juniors and women, and Football West will be eager to meet this demand with more developments in its elite pathways and infrastructure.

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More than 220 coaches attend Football South Australia’s second NOVA Youth Club Championship workshop

Football South Australia drew more than 220 coaches to its second NOVA Youth Club Championship Coaches Workshop in late May, underlining the scale of engagement clubs are generating through the state’s restructured youth competition framework.

The online session was facilitated by Football SA Technical Director Michael Cooper, who also serves as Junior Matildas Head Coach. Cooper shared observations from the AFC U17 Women’s Asian Cup and Australia’s qualification for the FIFA U17 Women’s World Cup, giving club-level coaches a window into the demands and standards of elite international football.

The presenter line-up extended that international lens further. Lachlan Tosh and Cristiano Dos Santos spoke to their experiences in national tournament environments, while legendary Australian coach Tom Sermanni addressed the fundamentals of youth coaching. Colin Sanctuary from the University of Newcastle examined coaching language and its direct influence on player learning.

Themes running across the session included the primacy of long-term player development over short-term results, with presenters consistently emphasising technique, ball mastery, individual improvement, and decision-making under pressure. Coaches were encouraged to expose players to varied styles of play, facilitate practice outside organised training, and help young players retain possession longer in match conditions.

Post-session feedback pointed to strong practical value, with coaches singling out clear communication, relationship-building, and age-appropriate feedback as key takeaways.

The workshop series sits within the broader transition from the Youth Premier League to the Club Championship model, which ties coaching participation to championship points for clubs and CPD credits toward individual coaching diplomas. Six workshops are scheduled across the season, with four still to come.

1200 players to descend on Geelong for Football Victoria Country Championships as Regional Football Enters New Era

More than 1,200 junior footballers from across regional Victoria will converge on Geelong this weekend for the 2026 Football Victoria Country Championships, with players representing eight regions competing across the King’s Birthday long weekend at Stead Park and Myers Reserve.

The tournament, which has been running since 1978 and has grown into one of the largest junior football events in the country, takes on additional significance this year. It marks the first Country Championships since Football Victoria announced a restructured regional football model in December 2025, making this edition an early measure of how that new framework translates into competitive outcomes at the representative level.

Sixty-seven teams will compete across Under-11 to Under-16 age groups for both boys and girls, with finals day scheduled for Monday. All fixtures and results will be available through the DRIBL app.

More than silverware

FV Regional Development Manager Lauren Stevens said the tournament represented something beyond the competitive results it produces.

“The Country Championships are an exciting opportunity for players from across regional Victoria to come together, represent their region and create lasting memories both on and off the pitch,” Stevens said. “This tournament has a rich history and continues to play an important role in bringing regional football communities together while providing players with the chance to experience a high-level representative environment and talent identification opportunity.”

That dual function is central to what makes the Country Championships structurally significant. For many players travelling to Geelong this weekend, a regional representative tournament is the highest level of football they have experienced. For some, it will be the environment in which they first come to the attention of Football Victoria’s technical staff and pathway programs.

The talent identification dimension carries particular weight at a moment when Football Victoria’s participation numbers are at record levels and the pipeline from community football to elite competition has never been more closely scrutinised. The 2025 Annual Report documented a 14 percent overall participation increase, with junior football among the fastest-growing segments. Tournaments like the Country Championships are where that growth begins to translate into representative opportunity for players who live outside metropolitan Melbourne.

Regional football in transition

The timing of this year’s Championships against the backdrop of Football Victoria’s regional restructure adds a layer of context that will be watched closely by administrators and clubs. The December 2025 announcement of the new regional model represented the most significant structural change to regional football governance in the state in some years, and the process of transitioning Life Members from regional associations into the Football Victoria honour roll at last month’s AGM reflected the scale of that change.

How the eight regions perform this weekend will offer an early indication of whether the restructured model is serving regional communities effectively.

The Corrie Koppen Fair Play Award, introduced last year to celebrate the life and legacy of the late Cornelius Koppen, adds a dimension to the competition that sits alongside the on-field results. The award is given to the region judged to have played and conducted itself in the spirit of the game, a recognition that how communities behave at a junior tournament is as meaningful as what they win.

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