The UAE Under 14 girls team is in preparation for the West Asia Championship in Bahrain. Courtesy UAE FA
The UAE Under 14 girls team is in preparation for the West Asia Championship in Bahrain. Courtesy UAE FA
The UAE Under 14 girls team is in preparation for the West Asia Championship in Bahrain. Courtesy UAE FA
The UAE Under 14 girls team is in preparation for the West Asia Championship in Bahrain. Courtesy UAE FA

Women’s football game making great strides in the UAE on senior and youth levels


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Two weeks ago, the UAE women’s football team moved into the top 100 in the Fifa World rankings to reach No 73; the highest rated team from the Arabian Gulf, and second highest Arab team behind Jordan.

The rise came on the back of the senior women’s team’s participation in the Aphrodite Cup in Cyprus where they won one of three matches.

Meanwhile, the next generation is already being prepared for the future with the UAE taking part in the Under 14 West Asia Championship starting in Bahrain on Monday.

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While the news is welcome for Emirati football, these rankings are often purely cosmetic. Women’s football in the UAE is only just starting to take its first steps on the international stage.

“The game is starting to spread but it needs more hard work and patience,” said Belhassan Mloush, head of the technical committee at the Football Association.

“The girls’ team is new, a result of the FA’s intensified efforts to discover talent whether in schools or at clubs and training academies.”

Even more encouraging are the steps that the FA has taken to build the game at grass-roots level.

Last month saw the start of the 2015 IPIC Women’s Football League season. Organised by Abu Dhabi Sports Council and the FA, the eight-team league is made up of established local clubs, B teams and independent expatriate sides. Matches are played over two 35-minute halves.

The country’s oldest club, Al Nasr, has for the first time introduced a women’s football team.

Some games have been one-sided but there is plenty of optimism about a league that is only in its third season.

More significantly for the long-term future of women’s football in the UAE is the continuing progress of the youth leagues, which are also in their third seasons. Both the U16 and U14 competitions kick off today with teams made up of schools, clubs and training centres.

The ultimate goal is to produce and promote a steady stream of Emirati talent that can progress through the ranks of international football.

Already the FA has thrown its support and resources behind age-group national teams. As part of the preparation for Bahrain, the U14s over the last week took part in a friendly tournament that included Nitra of Slovakia and Jitex of Sweden.

“We held this tournament so the players can get a feel for international football and as preparation for the West Asia Championship,” Muslim Ahmed of the Women’s Football Committee (WFC) said.

“The schedule will be tight in Bahrain as they will play three matches in three days, have a day’s rest, and then play on the fifth day. That was replicated at the tournament.”

After a tentative start, the Emirati youngsters did well.

In their opening match, on April 8, they lost 2-1 to Nitra. There was a huge improvement intheir next match: a 5-0 win over Jitex.

That was backed up with a 2-1 win in their second match against Nitra. The team concluded the matches with a 3-2 loss to the Swedish team last Sunday.

Already the likes of Salha Rashid and Alanood Khaled Fakher have stood out with their contribution and goals.

“The team came out with a lot of positives from the friendly tournament, especially as they faced teams with more experience in European football,” said Alia Al Hussaini, another WFC member.

akhaled@thenational.ae

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Tributes from the UAE's personal finance community

• Sebastien Aguilar, who heads SimplyFI.org, a non-profit community where people learn to invest Bogleheads’ style

“It is thanks to Jack Bogle’s work that this community exists and thanks to his work that many investors now get the full benefits of long term, buy and hold stock market investing.

Compared to the industry, investing using the common sense approach of a Boglehead saves a lot in costs and guarantees higher returns than the average actively managed fund over the long term. 

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• Sam Instone, director of financial advisory firm AES International

"Thought to have saved investors over a trillion dollars, Jack Bogle’s ideas truly changed the way the world invests. Shaped by his own personal experiences, his philosophy and basic rules for investors challenged the status quo of a self-interested global industry and eventually prevailed.  Loathed by many big companies and commission-driven salespeople, he has transformed the way well-informed investors and professional advisers make decisions."

• Demos Kyprianou, a board member of SimplyFI.org

"Jack Bogle for me was a rebel, a revolutionary who changed the industry and gave the little guy like me, a chance. He was also a mentor who inspired me to take the leap and take control of my own finances."

• Steve Cronin, founder of DeadSimpleSaving.com

"Obsessed with reducing fees, Jack Bogle structured Vanguard to be owned by its clients – that way the priority would be fee minimisation for clients rather than profit maximisation for the company.

His real gift to us has been the ability to invest in the stock market (buy and hold for the long term) rather than be forced to speculate (try to make profits in the shorter term) or even worse have others speculate on our behalf.

Bogle has given countless investors the ability to get on with their life while growing their wealth in the background as fast as possible. The Financial Independence movement would barely exist without this."

• Zach Holz, who blogs about financial independence at The Happiest Teacher

"Jack Bogle was one of the greatest forces for wealth democratisation the world has ever seen.  He allowed people a way to be free from the parasitical "financial advisers" whose only real concern are the fat fees they get from selling you over-complicated "products" that have caused millions of people all around the world real harm.”

• Tuan Phan, a board member of SimplyFI.org

"In an industry that’s synonymous with greed, Jack Bogle was a lone wolf, swimming against the tide. When others were incentivised to enrich themselves, he stood by the ‘fiduciary’ standard – something that is badly needed in the financial industry of the UAE."

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