One in five players at Women’s World Cup received online abuse


One in five players at Women’s World Cup received online abuse

FIFA has found that one in five players whose social media accounts were actively monitored received online abuse throughout the Women’s World Cup. 

697 player social media accounts were monitored with 152 players receiving discriminatory, abusive or threatening messages with homophobic, sexist and sexualised messages accounted for more than half of the abusive posts identified by FIFA. 

Players at the finals were given the opportunity to opt in to the social media protection service (SMPS) moderation service, which can intercept and hide abusive messages from view. SMPS scanned more than five million social posts, with 102,511 posts flagged by artificial intelligence for human review. Of those, 7,085 were verified as discriminatory, abusive or threatening and reported to platforms.

Players from Argentina and United States received the highest volume of abuse with 637 instances of abuse taking place during the England v Spain final with the conduct of former Spanish football federation president Luis Rubiales seeing a spike in abusive and misogynistic content. 

The report included a quote from Colombia’s Leicy Santos “If there is one thing that footballers suffer from the most, apart from losing, it is all the abusive comments – the taunts, the insults. Beyond what we do as professional footballers, we are people. Some players are able to put up with the outrageous abuse we receive online, but other players aren’t. It is a very sensitive issue when it comes to mental health.”

FIFA President Gianni Infantino, said there was “no place on social media for those who abuse or threaten anyone.” 

You may also like

View All

FIFPRO study finds playing-time gap between top and lower-ranked women’s teams is increasing injury risks on both sides

Research by FIFPRO, the International Federation of Professional Footballers, has drawn attention to a “two-tier ecosystem” within women’s football where top team players have overloaded schedules whereas those lower down the rankings are facing “underload,” which is increasing injury risks for both sides 

Read More

70% of 2026 Winter Olympic Games tickets sold, but Paralympic sales slower than expected

The international Olympic Committee has shared that 70% of 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympic Games tickets have been sold and that it hopes that the torch relay will continue to drive sales. However, sales for the Winter Paralympics are notably lagging behind

Read More

Los Angeles 2028 Olympic organisers generated over $2 billion in commercial revenue so far

The Los Angeles 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games organising committee have generated over $2 billion in domestic sponsorship revenue so far, meaning it may become one of the most commercially successful Olympics in history

Read More