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First female coach to win World Cup title ( 2003-10-10 13:50) (Agencies)
Either Sweden coach Marika Domanski-Lyfors or German counterpart Tina
Theune-Meyer will be the first person to win a Women's World Cup title for her
country. Neither thinks that matters too much. "It's not the sex that's the obvious thing here," Domanski-Lyfors said Wednesday. "It's the coaching staff and the players that will succeed and get the medals together." In the three previous Women's World Cups, the coaches who won titles were all
men - former U.S. coaches Anson Dorrance and Tony DiCicco, and former
Norway coach Even Pellerud won the titles with their teams. Some of the players on the German team are already planning to join the coaching ranks when their playing days are over. "This is the future, former international players," said Willi Hink, the German soccer federation's chief manager of the women's national team. "Especially Maren (Meinert), Bettina (Wiegmann) and Steffi (Jones), who have played in the WUSA and have experienced professional football." Hink, who was training with the team Wednesday at the Home Depot Center, hopes the trend of female coaches will expand _ even to the men's game. "In the future, hopefully it'll be normal to have female coaches on men's teams and the other way around," he said. "In Germany, we still have prejudices, so it's important to show women can do it." Germany goalkeeper Silke Rottenberg, who had a spectacular match in the semifinals against the defending champion United States, thinks it's good to have a woman coach win the biggest women's soccer tournament in the world. "When women trainers win a World Cup it's good for the development of women's
soccer," Rottenberg said.
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