Emma Hayes believes men’s football is still not ready for the prospect of female coaches, saying there is much work to be done to bring about true equality in the game.
Hayes won seven Women’s Super League titles during a glittering 12-year spell in charge of Chelsea before leaving to take charge of the United States in May.
Like England coach Sarina Wiegman, Hayes has sometimes been suggested as somebody who could make the transition from the women’s game to men’s football, but no female coach has ever taken charge of a team in England’s top four tiers on a permanent basis.
Forest Green Rovers made Hannah Dingley caretaker manager last year while in the fourth tier, only to overlook her and go through three permanent bosses – including former Watford striker Troy Deeney – as they dropped out of the Football League.
Speaking during an appearance on the Today programme on BBC, Hayes said barriers remain in place to prevent women succeeding in the men’s game.
“I think you need to get more owners in to ask them that question, because they’re the people you have to ask that question to. I’m not the one in charge of that,” Hayes said.
Twelve years. Sixteen trophies. One Emma Hayes.
Thank you for everything, Emma. pic.twitter.com/TWemPzg63w
— Chelsea FC Women (@ChelseaFCW) May 21, 2024
Asked whether club owners are ready to appoint a female coach, Hayes said: “Of course they’re not, otherwise it would have happened by now.
“I’ve said this a million times over – you can find a female pilot, a female doctor, a female lawyer, a female banker, but you can’t find a female coach working in the men’s game, leading men.
“It just shows you how much work there is to be done.”
Hayes has been nominated for the Women’s Coach of the Year prize at the Ballon d’Or awards ceremony, which will take place on October 28.
Wiegman, Filipa Patao, Arthur Elias, Jonatan Giraldez and Hayes’ Chelsea successor Sonia Bompastor are also in the running.
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