World Cup: BBC shows 5 reasons why women's football is better than men's

This world championship in the category of men is being handed over to the world with great entreaty. Only in the United Kingdom has the record of watching a match been broken, with 6.9 million watching England face - to - face against Cameroon. But why men's football remains generally much more popular, there is [...]
This world championship in the category of men is being handed over to the world with great entreaty. Only in the United Kingdom has the record of watching a match been broken, with 6.9 million watching England face - to - face against Cameroon.
But while men's football remains generally much more popular, there are some forms in which women's players are winning, writes BBC, translate Periscope.
1.The Value of Money
In order to see with your own eyes a football match at the Russia 2018 World Cup last year, you had to have a lot of money. For a good country in the men's finals between France and Croatia, you had to pay over a thousand Euros.
Meanwhile, in the women's final the most expensive ticket was about 84 euros. A regular match at this year's world championship can be seen for only 9 euros.
2. More goals
Statistics speak for themselves.
So far, women have scored an average of 2,69 goals per match, exceeding last year's average in Russia to men who were 2,64.
3. Women Obey the Rules
It has also proved that women adhere to rules more than men. Men take yellow and red cards more than women, pretend to be hurt more, simulate more, drag on more, and so on.
4. The Global Race
The men's World Cup winners have been from only eight countries on two continents across Europe and South America.
So far, the World Cup for women has won four seats from three continents, and for each race there is real chance for many teams to come to the winning end.
5. Support for LGBT+ Community
It's embarrassing to realize there's no open game player in Premier League, the men's category.
In 1990, Justin Fashanu, who had played teams like Norwich City and Nottingham Forest, had been the first football player in Britain to come out as a gay.
In women, however, the issue is very different.
Casey Stoney, who turned out to be a lesbian, said homosexuality was more acceptable to women's football.
The captain of West Ham United, Gilly Flaherty, also said last season it was. /Periscope











