Soccer

'Mind boggling': Women's soccer match in England suspended due to frozen field

A top-flight women's match in England was abandoned after just six minutes on Sunday because the field was frozen, sparking complaints from managers and players that the league wasn't being taken seriously enough.

'Women's football deserves better,' says Canadian international Shelina Zadorsky

A soccer referee interacts with players and coaches in the field as members of the audience watch on from the back.
A FA Women's Super League match between Chelsea and Liverpool was postponed on Sunday due to a frozen field at Kingsmeadow in Kingston upon Thames, England. (Clive Rose/Getty Images)

A top-flight women's match in England was abandoned after just six minutes on Sunday because the field was frozen, sparking complaints from managers and players that the league wasn't being taken seriously enough.

There was a field inspection three hours before the scheduled kickoff between Chelsea and Liverpool in London in the Women's Super League, before heaters were used in an attempt to make the surface playable.

Defender Kadeisha Buchanan was in the starting lineup for Chelsea, while fellow Canadian soccer star Jessie Fleming was on the bench.

The referee, after consulting with both managers, took the teams off shortly after the match began at Chelsea's Kingsmeadow stadium "in order to protect the safety of the players," the league said in a statement.

Chelsea manager Emma Hayes said it was time for stadiums hosting games in women's soccer to have undersoil heating like in the men's game.

"We've got to take our game seriously," Hayes told the BBC. "Yes, we can have our blowers and little pitch tents, but it's not going to be enough."

The picture shows a ground-level look at a small soccer stadium with ice in the field and a man walking with a tool to help him remove some of the ice. A small stand is seen at the far back and it reads "Chelsea Football Club, the pride of London."
A ground staff member is seen preparing the pitch after the covers were removed prior to the match. (Clive Rose/Getty Images)

The 12-team WSL is run by the English Football Association.

Later Sunday, Brighton announced that its match against Arsenal scheduled for the evening was postponed because the Broadfield Stadium "was found to be frozen after an inspection this afternoon." Tottenham's home game against Leicester had also been postponed for the same reason.

Buchanan posted in an Instagram story that it was "mind boggling that there's games/trainings being cancelled because of frozen pitches throughout the league... We should have heated pitches too."

Buchanan's Chelsea teammate, Erin Cuthbert, added on Twitter: "This shouldn't be happening and we will demand more for our game."

'This is unacceptable'

Janine Beckie, Vanessa Gilles and Shelina Zadorsky, who like Buchanan and Fleming were part of the Canadian Olympic gold medal campaign in Tokyo, also voiced their thoughts on Twitter.

Beckie deemed the situation "unacceptable".

"Four years playing in England and this was a potential reality for every team, every week. The WSL is a top 3 league in the world, this is unacceptable and the players deserve to be playing in suitable grounds where this is not a reality. We're far past this in the women's game," said the former Manchester City striker.

"How was this game allowed to even begin in the first place?," asked Gilles, a centre-back for France's Lyon.

"Egregious from the FA (England's Football Association) to make these professional players compete in such dangerous conditions. Equally shocking that there are no heated fields available for the professional clubs."

"The [Women's Super League] is one of, if not the, best league in the world for Women's football. Every year we're supposed to cancel games because of the weather?," posted Zadorsky, a centre-back for Chelsea rival Tottenham Hotspur.

"Now, cancelling a game 5 minutes in on TV. We deserve better, fans deserve better, women's football deserves better."

The fixture will be played at a future date yet to be announced. Chelsea posted info on its website for fans who'd like to request a refund.

With files from CBC Sports

Add some “good” to your morning and evening.

Get up to speed on what's happening in sports. Delivered weekdays.

...

The next issue of The Buzzer will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in the Subscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.