As Gunnhildur Yrsa Jonsdottir prepares to represent the country of her birth in “the most important game I’ve played in my career”, the footballing scandal rocking the country where she spent a chunk of her childhood, and now plays, still hangs heavy.
The Iceland midfielder, commonly known as ‘Gunny’, spoke to DW from Porto ahead of her team’s World Cup 2023 playoff against Portugal on Tuesday. Win in 90 minutes and Iceland are in their first World Cup (though they’ve made the last four Euros). Any outcome other than that and a complex playoff system leaves things up in the air.
“This is the biggest game in Icelandic women’s football history. So we know that, and we know what we need to prepare for,” she said. “Iceland, on the women’s side, has never qualified for the World Cup. So this is huge. If we go to the World Cup, I think we’ll be writing history for the women’s game.”
That phrase has become commonplace in European women’s football in 2022, with Iceland part of a Euros that set multiple records, mostly regarding attendance. Though Iceland have a population of less than 400,000 they have developed a reputation for traveling to matches in numbers and with enormous spectacle.
Despite only finding out where they were traveling on Tuesday, when Portugal beat Belgium, Gunnhildur said “there is a whole plane coming” and then flying back later that same day. “At least we’ll have that, which is wonderful. And we also feel the support from home,” she added.
The day after Iceland found out their opponents, Gunnhildur‘s adopted nation, the USA, played in front of more than 76,000 fans at Wembley in a 2-1 loss to England. Players from both sides wore teal-colored armbands and held a banner saying ‘Protect the Players’ following the publication of an inquiry that found that the country’s top domestic league, the NWSL, had a “systemic” culture of abuse and misconduct.
Gunnhildur, who plays for Orlando Pride in the NWSL, said the publication of the report came as a “relief”, with Pride coach and former US international Amanda Cromwell one of those placed on administrative leave as the year-long investigation was undertaken.
“Finally, there’s something happening, and you see that there are strides in the right direction,” she said. “Women’s football does deserve better, does deserve more. It’s wonderful that players are speaking up and demanding better. And it’s great to see teams taking action and players taking action. To me, that is number one because without the players, you don’t have this sport. So I think it’s time that you treat the players better and coaches and staff and owners don’t get away with how they’ve been treating players in the last years.”
The 33-year-old added that she believes that the increased attention on women’s football has helped to create an environment where victims of abuse are starting to be believed above perpetrators, but that things need to keep progressing.
“It took a player like [USA forward] Alex Morgan to get things moving because she has the platform. And it’s wonderful that she did that, because it started a movement in this sport that has been well needed,” she said. “Hopefully, people then are starting to feel more confident about speaking up if that happens to them or is in their environment.”
Having won 95 caps since making her Iceland debut in 2011, Gunnhildur is well-placed to judge the merits of the current Iceland set up.
Iceland drew with France and Italy at Euro 2022 but couldn’t progress past the group stage
“I would say it’s probably one of the best,” she said. “It has such a good balance of young players who have experience, young players that are so hungry to do well with older players who have been here for a while and have a lot of experience. Then you also have the ‘Inbetweeners’, so I think when you have that great balance and great morale and a team you can get so far.”
For a country of their size and resources, Iceland have already come a long way. But not quite far enough for Gunnhildur and her teammates. They need to get all the way to Australia and New Zealand for World Cup 2023.
Edited by: James Thorogood
Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/world-cup-2023-playoffs-nwsl-scandal-hangs-over-iceland-s-biggest-game/a-63386661?maca=en-rss-en-sports-1027-xml-atom