Keira Walsh’s record move to Barcelona underlines how much women’s soccer can still grow

The women’s world transfer record should be so much higher by now

Keira Walsh is having a pretty spectacular summer.

The England midfielder has signed a three-year contract with Barcelona, who broke the women’s soccer transfer record by paying a reported £400,000 to bring her over from Manchester City.

It is widely claimed that the old record was Pernille Harder’s move from Wolfsburg to Chelsea, valued at somewhere above £250,000. That claim might be up for debate: the trade that saw Alex Morgan join the San Diego Wave saw the Orlando Pride receive $275,000 and Wales midfielder Angharad James. Either way, it seems fair to say that Walsh’s move is the new global record.

Walsh will join a Barca side that lost the Champions League final this past May, but also only lost two games in the entirety of the 2021-22 season. While the club will have to make due without Alexia Putellas due to injury, Walsh will join a star-studded midfield that includes Aitana Bonmatí and Patri. She’ll also be the second England starter to suit up for Barca, joining Lucy Bronze.

When will this become the norm?

Walsh’s move being a world record dramatically underlines how much room for growth there is in women’s soccer. It doesn’t even cost half a million pounds to get one of the world’s best midfielders, at 25, coming off of a triumphant and widely-watched Euro 2022, onto your roster. Man City, arguably the wealthiest soccer club on the planet, was willing to let a player fitting that description go for what would constitute a rounding error on the men’s side of their club.

Women’s soccer has made tremendous strides in recent years, but the fact is that when it comes to salaries and transfer fees, clubs are still dragging their feet. If Keira Walsh, at this moment in time, can be brought to Barcelona for £400,000, imagine the team that any mid-tier European soccer club can build if they’d set aside a meager £5 million transfer budget for their women’s team.

Take the example of Lyon, who on the women’s side have made it their policy to field about half of the French national team, and then fill the rest of the lineup out with international all-stars. Lyon is a wealthy club in the grand scheme of things, but when it comes to big-time European soccer on the men’s side, their days as a Champions League dark horse are long past, largely because they’ve been priced out.

There’s not a good justification for why Walsh would only command a transfer fee at this level. The argument would probably have something to do with revenue, but we’re in a world where Barcelona’s transfer policy on the men’s side is clearly one that has disconnected the concept of revenue from expenditure.

If you’re a club like Manchester United, the ease with which you could assemble the greatest women’s soccer team ever assembled in this moment in time is frankly staggering. They’ve spent over $260 million on transfers this summer alone. Putting 3% of that figure towards their women’s team would give them, by a wide margin, the biggest transfer budget on the planet.

The giant clubs of Europe have taken the first tentative steps towards treating women’s soccer seriously. Most of them have their teams playing in real stadiums, rather than renting out a semi-pro club’s home. Clubs with training grounds that are essentially soccer heaven have, despite themselves, allowed their women’s team to train there as well. They put their players in marketing material and social media content, they take care of meals and other bare-minimum basics, and they’ve made up technical staffs of actual professionals.

The next step? Seeing how easy it would be to take over the woso world by spending at an even remotely serious level.

[lawrence-related id=870,2008,5977]

Jenni Hermoso leaves Barcelona for Liga MX Femenil’s Pachuca

A legit international superstar is heading to Mexico

In a landmark deal for both club and league, Jenni Hermoso, Barcelona and Spain’s all-time leading scorer, has signed with Pachuca in Liga MX Femenil.

Hermoso is one of the most decorated players in Spanish women’s soccer history, winning the La Liga Iberdrola scoring title five times and featuring on seven league champions during spells at Barca, Atlético Madrid, and Rayo Vallecano. She won the 2020-21 UEFA Champions League with Barca as well, along with four Copa de la Reina victories, and won the Coupe de France during her one season in France with Paris Saint-Germain.

Hermoso was the runner-up for the 2021 Ballon d’Or, and has 45 goals in 91 appearances for Spain.

Hermoso choosing Liga MX Femenil is a game-changer for the league, and the fact that she’s moving to Pachuca rather than Tigres, Club América or Monterrey signals that club’s ambitions.

Mexican clubs have been making some major moves over the past two years. The one that got the most attention is likely Tigres signing U.S. women’s national team prospect Mia Fishel after the Orlando Pride had selected her in the first round of this winter’s draft, but that’s not the only sign that Liga MX Femenil is looking to grow quickly.

Tigres has also signed Nigeria striker Uchenna Kanu and just brought in former Canadian international Carmelina Moscato as their head coach, while NWSL players like Maria Sánchez and Stefany Ferrer van Ginkel have impressed enough to make the move, with Sánchez now a key player for the Houston Dash.

Still, Hermoso is a legitimate international star that could play in any league in the world. The fact that it’s Pachuca bringing her in, rather than one of the traditional juggernauts of Mexican soccer, underlines the fact that Liga MX Femenil has grown by leaps and bounds in its first five years.

[lawrence-related id=2008,1624,870]

30 games, 30 wins: Barcelona Femeni completes perfect season

In 30 league games, Barcelona scored 159 goals while conceding just 11

Barcelona Femeni defeated Atletico Madrid 2-1 on Sunday, clinching an incredible perfect league season that saw the Blaugrana win all 30 of their games.

Irene Paredes and Aitana Bonmati scored in the first half to secure a narrow win for Jonatan Giráldez’s side.

Barca had long since clinched the league title, having done so all the way back on March 13. By winning on Sunday the club’s margin of victory in the league was a staggering 24 points, finishing on 90 points to 66 for second-place Real Sociedad.

Across 30 games of the season, Barcelona scored 159 goals while conceding just 11.

With 20 goals over the season, Barca’s Nigerian star Asisat Oshoala clinched the Pichichi trophy for the league’s top scorer.

Barcelona chases treble

There are still two trophies left to play for this season for Barcelona, which is looking to cement its status as the undisputed top club side in Europe.

The Champions League final is next weekend, with Barca looking to win its second straight European crown by defeating Lyon.

Four days after the Champions league final, Barca will face rival Real Madrid in the Copa de la Reina semifinal.

In addition to its on-field accomplishments, Barcelona has also twice set the all-time record for attendance at a women’s game this season.

[lawrence-related id=870,920]