Emma Hayes began with a powerpoint, but soon ditched it and spoke from the heart. She was outlining her paradigm-shifting vision for U.S. soccer. She’d been refining it for months, but really, she said, “I feel like I’ve worked on this my whole life.” She’d lived it as a London girl, in an age when boys’ teams were her only soccer outlet; and as an aspiring coach, in courses designed for and taught by men. “Within our game,” she said, everything “has been centered through a male bias and a male lens.”
And that, now, in her role as U.S. women’s national team head coach, is what she wants to change.
She also wants to win, of course, “but for the WNT,” she told a small group of reporters via Zoom this week, “it goes further than that.”
Ever since she returned from Paris, where the USWNT won Olympic gold in her 11th week on the job, Hayes has been constructing a plan to revolutionize women’s soccer. She wants to use her power, as the highest-paid coach of the sport’s most popular team, to fundamentally rejigger how everyone — from coaches to performance scientists to data analysts to U.S. Soccer Federation marketing execs — approaches the women’s game. Countless customs, rules, tactics, systems and so on have been copied or adapted from men’s soccer. Hayes has been asking provocative questions that boil down to one: If they weren’t copied, and were instead designed principally for women, how would they be different?
And she has been “challenging everybody across the federation, internally,” to reflect on “how they’ve been viewing the women’s game through that male lens.”
Hayes wants to replace it with a “female lens” that, she believes, could reshape the sport — and keep the USWNT atop it.
That is the vision and “mission” she’s presented, powerpoint and all, to youth national team staff and U.S. Soccer leadership: “Architect a ‘Female blueprint’ to win and set the bar for the global game.”
Reshaping the men’s soccer mold
The “male lens” is a legacy of centuries-old sexism, and when Hayes urges you to look for it — humbly, intentionally — you realize it’s ubiquitous. Nearly every aspect of soccer, from the size of the field to the lexicon to the strategies that teams employ, was developed by men, for men in the 20th century, when most women were banned or strongly discouraged from even playing the sport.
So, as women’s soccer grew in the 21st century, it was funneled into the mold of men’s soccer. The formations and training programs and league structures that worked on the men’s side were the natural reference point. The commercial schemes and passing techniques and footwear were replicated, or at least became the women’s starting point. And the experts came, too, often without considering that the starting points might be faulty.
“So often, so many people come into the women’s game, and they have little to no knowledge of females whatsoever,” Hayes said. “None. They have knowledge of their area of expertise, which is crucial. … But there are real differences between men and women. And … they just get dismissed.”
The result, Hayes explained, is the U-14 coach who knows how to run a defensive drill, but has no clue what to do when one of his players starts her period.
It’s the pro coach who idolizes Pep Guardiola, and espouses the same ideals, but has never even pondered that the pace or spacing of women’s soccer might be different. “In the men’s game, a left back can hit a ball in behind an opposing left back. But you [typically] can’t do that in the women’s game,” Hayes said, by way of example. “So, it alters the way I might think, in terms of how I might set a team up defensively.”
It’s also the rehab regimens that haven’t accounted for female physiology. It’s the facilities that might be gorgeous, but don’t fulfill a woman’s needs. It’s the administrator who, for a road trip, picks a hotel simply because the men’s team loved it. It’s the analytics and Expected Goal (xG) models that have transformed modern soccer — but were based on data from the men’s game.
It’s even the social media intern who posts a seemingly innocuous photo to Instagram, but doesn’t understand how society has conditioned women to think about body image.
“If you’re taking that photograph in exactly the same way you do a male player, and you share that at the wrong angle — let me tell you, as a coach, I could be spending weeks and months on that,” Hayes said. “I might need to get clinical support. Over a photograph.”
These are the types of conversations Hayes has been having with the ever-expanding staff at U.S. Soccer.
“I want people to be uncomfortable,” she said.
And some have been. “I have people even within my staff that are so unaware of their own biases,” Hayes noted. “And they’re not living in Zambia, nor Spain; they’re living in the U.S. And they’re working in the best program in the world.
And their response was, “I’m ashamed of myself for some of the things I’ve been doing, just because I hadn’t even reflected on that as a woman, and [the potential] impact.”
Hayes’ mission to rebuild the system
Hayes understands that her team is just a small part of a vast soccer community. In order to truly transform the sport, she believes that they need to focus on the younger age groups as soon as possible.
She envisions a new approach to coaching education within U.S. Soccer, with a distinct women’s department that tailors courses specifically for women’s soccer. This includes a Pro License, B License, C License, and more, all designed to cater to the unique aspects of women’s soccer.
“We can’t create the best environments for our girls and women nationwide until we prioritize the systems that support us,” Hayes emphasized.
She is also advocating for collaboration with professional leagues like the NWSL and USL to establish a “pro game advisory board.” Additionally, she aims to work with Nike and universities to develop research projects and sports science degrees tailored to females.
While she acknowledges the challenges of engaging with independent youth leagues like the ECNL and Girls Academy, Hayes remains optimistic and energized about her mission.
She is deeply involved in coaching education and stakeholder engagement with U.S. Soccer, alongside managing the player pool and preparing for the upcoming World Cup tournaments.
Hayes envisions a future where her influence extends beyond her time, leaving a lasting impact on the sport she loves. “I’ve worked my entire career to have the ability to influence something much bigger than me,” she stated.