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| FILE - Japanese referee Yoshimi Yamashita warms up during a training session Monday, June 27, 2022, at JFA YUME Field in Chiba, near Tokyo. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko, File) |
Japanese referee Yoshimi Yamashita knows that being one of three women picked to officiate matches at the World Cup — the first time a woman will be in charge on the game’s biggest stage — is not simply about soccer.
Stephanie Frappart of France and Salima Mukansanga of Rwanda
must be of the same mind. They are in a pool of 36 referees listed for Qatar —
the rest are all men. FIFA has also named three female assistant referees in a
pool of 69: Neuza Back of Brazil, Karen Diaz Medina of Mexico and Kathryn Nesbitt
of the United States.
Yamashita is aware that her selection put the focus on
Japan’s low ranking on most measures of equal pay for women, and in global
studies of gender equality.
“I would be very happy if women could play an active role in
sports in this way, and if sports and especially soccer could lead this,”
Yamashita said in an interview with The Associated Press. “In Japan, there is
still a long way to go in the world of soccer (regarding participation of
women), so it would be great if this could connect to the promotion of female
participation in different ways, not only in soccer or in sports.”
All three have worked men’s matches, and their World Cup
debut comes in a Middle Eastern country where the role of women is closely
prescribed.
Frappart is the best known and has already worked men’s
games in World Cup qualifying, and the Champions League. She also handled the
2019 Women’s World Cup final, and refereed this year’s men’s French Cup final.
Yamashita has worked games in Japan’s men’s league, and has
also been in charge of the Asian equivalent of the men’s Champions League. She
was also a referee at last year’s Tokyo Olympics.
Earlier this year, Mukansanga became the first woman to
referee an Africa Cup of Nations match, leading an all-female officiating team.
“As always, the criteria we have used is ‘quality first’ and
the selected match officials represent the highest level of refereeing
worldwide,” said FIFA referees committee chairman Pierluigi Collina, who worked
the 2002 World Cup final. “In this way, we clearly emphasize that it is quality
that counts for us and not gender.
“I would hope that in the future the selection of elite
women’s match officials for important men’s competitions will be perceived as
something normal and no longer as sensational.”
Yamashita said the difference in the men’s and women’s game
was, of course, speed. But not simply that some men might run faster.
“It’s the speed, but not just the players’ speed,” she told
the AP. “Not the ball speed. It’s just the game speed. It means for me I have
to make quicker decisions — more speed.”
Then there’s the stress, the largest stage, and the
attention she is certain to generate at the World Cup.
“Of course, I think the pressure is huge,” she said, “and I
think I have a lot of responsibility. But I am really happy to take this duty
and pressure, so I try to take it positively and I try to be happy.”
Though it’s likely that all three will be in charge of
games, it’s not a given. They could also be used as “fourth referees” on the
sideline. However, they cannot be used as assistants.
Like many referees, Yamashita said her job was to stay out
of the way and let the game shine.
“One of the big goals as a referee is to bring out the the
attractiveness of soccer,” she said. “I do my best for that, and I will do what
I should at that time toward that end. So if I need to communicate with the
players, I will do that. If I need to show a card, I will show a card. Rather
than control, I’m thinking about what to do toward the big goal of bringing out
the appeal of soccer.”
Yamashita conducted most of the interview with the AP in
Japanese, but said she would use English and “facial gestures, body gestures”
when communicating with players in Qatar.
“Usually when I give a card, I say nothing,” she said,
shifting to English. “But when I give a warning, I just tell them I’m not
happy. They understand.”
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