MOSCOW — Female players have an equal right to have FIFA use video review for their tournament next year in France, U.S. women’s coach Jill Ellis said Wednesday.

FIFA is using video assistant referees for the men’s World Cup for the first time this year, and it has led to several key call reversals and an increase in penalty kicks.

“I can’t see them not having it. I think it would be a little bit insulting if we weren’t afforded the same opportunity,” Ellis said during a round-table discussion with American reporters. “There’s too much at stake to not have it, and I think our game, our passion, our drive, our motivation is at the same level as the men.”

Ellis, who coached the Americans to the 2015 Women’s World Cup title, maintains video review could be even more significant in the women’s game than it is for the men.

“With all the men’s leagues around the world, you’ve got more referees getting more into the higher-level experience. We don’t have that many leagues, so we have to, I think, add another layer to the decision-making process,” she said.

FIFA general secretary Fatma Samoura, soccer’s highest-ranking woman, did not respond to an email from the Associated Press seeking comment.

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Ellis, born in Britain, came to Russia to appear on a Fox studio show and planned to attend England’s semifinal match against Croatia. FIFA has done little-to-no promotion of the Women’s World Cup during the men’s tournament.

“They missed an opportunity to talk about it here,” said Ricardo Font, head of global sponsorships at The Coca-Cola Co., which has been a FIFA sponsor since the 1978 tournament in Argentina.

Players on the U.S. women’s team protested the decision by FIFA to play the 2015 Women’s World Cup in Canada on artificial turf, and several of them were part of a lawsuit filed in Canadian Human Rights Court, a case later withdrawn.

American players have been outspoken in their criticism of FIFA’s prize structure. The U.S. Soccer Federation received $2 million from a total of $15 million prize money allocated for the 2015 Women’s World Cup, up from the $1 million champion Japan received from a $10 million total in 2011.

This year’s men’s World Cup winner will receive $38 million from a $400 million fund, up from the $35 million Germany got from a $358 million total in 2014.

“I don’t know what the ramifications were in other countries, but you look at our own team in our own country and the viewership and the attention, there’s no difference,” Ellis said. “So I think, yeah, I think FIFA 100 percent should look at our game as a game, not as a women’s game or a men’s game.”

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The Americans’ 5-2 win over Japan in the 2015 Women’s World Cup final was seen by 26.7 million television viewers, including 25.4 million for English-language coverage on Fox and 1.27 million for Spanish-language coverage on NBC Universal’s Telemundo.

Germany’s 1-0 victory over Argentina in the 2014 men’s final was viewed by 26.5 million on TV, including 17.3 million on ABC and 9.2 million on the Spanish-language Univision.

ANTI-DISCRIMINATION experts say that sexism has been a bigger problem than racism at the World Cup.

The director of a group called the Fare network that helps FIFA tackle discrimination says 30 cases of “sexism on the streets” by male fans have been reported. Fare director Piara Powar said about half of those involved female broadcasters being “accosted while on air.”

He estimated that “there’s many, many more unreported” cases where Russian women were targeted.

Racism was predicted to be the main World Cup problem because of longstanding issues in Russian soccer and other European fan bases.

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IN A literal case of life imitating art, Mick Jagger went to see England and England lost.

The Rolling Stones frontman was at the Luzhniki Stadium on Wednesday to see Croatia beat England 2-1 in extra time in the World Cup semifinals.

Last year, Jagger unexpectedly released a pair of solo songs. One of the songs was called “England Lost,” and its starts with the tale of someone ostensibly going to watch England play a soccer match and finishes with some political commentary about Britain’s exit from the European Union.

“I went to see England, but England’s lost,” Jagger sings. “And everyone said we were all ripped off.”


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