Ada Hegerberg’s voice in football is a powerful one given she claimed the first ever women’s Ballon d’Or, owns four Champions League titles with Lyon and has earned her place among the finest female players on the planet, all by the age of 24.
Hegerberg’s talent is matched too by a fearlessness in standing up for the rights of her gender in her sport.
She refused to play for Norway at last year’s World Cup due to perceived inequality with the men’s team and drew widespread praise after collecting her Ballon d’Or in 2018, having refused to indulge a request that she ‘twerk’ on stage.
Yet even for one of the game’s most successful players, the sprawling effects of the coronavirus pandemic bring doubt. “It’s a strange situation for everyone,” Hegerberg says in a telephone interview. “Everything is uncertain.”
Unable to see her husband in Poland or her family in Norway, Hegerberg is confined to her apartment in the French city of Lyon, where she is recovering from the anterior cruciate ligament injury she suffered in January.
She has an exercise bike, physios, who visit but maintain the health measures in place, and history books. “I’m reading Ken Follett at the moment - history in the 13th century, it takes your mind off things a bit,” she says.
Fight for prominence
But Hegerberg is concerned about the future too and she is adamant the women’s game must not be forgotten in football’s fight for survival.
“It’s very, very important women’s football doesn’t lose position,” Hegerberg says. “Obviously men’s football is in first place, with all the questions about money and when leagues will restart, but it is very important women’s football pushes for position as well.
“We will be sitting in the second row in all of this but we can’t fade into the background.”
Most women’s teams in Europe operate at a financial loss, relying instead on the profits of men’s sides until progress allows them to support themselves. But football’s economic crash as a result of coronavirus means nothing is guaranteed.
Financial struggle
With even the world’s biggest clubs taking measures to avoid extinction, the fear is staff, players and even teams on the women’s side will be deemed expendable.
“Women’s football is still in its beginning phase and we have to push for the same rights, whatever gets decided, and we have to push for the same changes we were pushing for before,” says Hegerberg.
“We also need men’s football to be stable so we have our position and get that financial help before we can support ourselves.
“If you see how the biggest men’s clubs are struggling, you can only imagine how this is going to affect women’s teams.”
Players have come under pressure to help clubs and their lower-earners through wage cuts but blanket agreements have proven difficult to achieve.
Lyon are yet to confirm reductions but Hegerberg, whose reported 400,000-euro ($440,000) annual salary puts her among the highest earners in the women’s game, insists players are ready to help.
“We are in discussions at the moment but for me, as an individual player, I’ll do whatever is necessary to help the club,” she says.
“We can all make a difference. We all have our own opinions but my view is, ‘how we can help?’ I can’t speak for all clubs but players want to make sure we come out of this. Crises can create solidarity too.”
Lyon were three points clear at the top of the French women’s Division 1 when the action was halted.
Agence France-Presse