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Fired Up Sport

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If you are a lover of sport and women's sport in particular then you have come to the right place. Presented by Clare McDonnell in the UK and Kirsten Webster in Australia, Fired Up is a truly global production.

We will be your one stop shop for the biggest news in women's sport: the star names, the one’s to watch, the sponsorship deals, the equal pay battles, the fight for media coverage. Each week, come with us on a journey around the world as we find out who’s leading the way in pioneering participation for women and girls in sport. The Women’s World Cup is about to kick off and we are Fired Up!

Join in and #changetheconversation / @FiredUpSport
58 Episodes
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This week on the Fired Up Sport podcast we hear from former Man City player Fran Brown on her groundbreaking football program Goals4Girls and how it's helped scores of young women, from mainly BAME backgrounds, gain confidence and find their voice both on and off the pitch. From a mixed race family herself Fran tells us how her own background helps her relate to the girls, why she thinks the government needs to focus more on inclusion in schools and about a life changing pep talk from Tennis legend Billie Jean King.
Dame Heather Rabbatts was not only the first woman but the first Black woman to sit of the Board of Director's at the Football Association in England and she has blazed a trail ever since. She recently founded the Women's Sports Group, Group, a media rights management company who are negotiating the new Women’s Super League broadcast deal, so who better to talk to about how the league can come back stronger following this season's early curtailment due to coronavirus. Plus, we hear from Lizette Cabrera, an up and coming Australian Tennis star who was about to break into the top 100 when the pandemic hit, Since lockdown, with no income from competing, she tells us she's been getting financial help from a government job keepers program, an insight into the flipside of tour life when you're not one of the superstars
Just a few weeks ago AFC Fylde's Women's team was disbanded, the decision blamed on the financial uncertainty the club had been thrown into because of coronavirus. But the team found their voice, they spoke to the media, including the Fired Up Sport podcast, and that made one hell of a difference. Coach Kim Turner returns to the podcast to update us. And we hear from Jorge Sanchez, a Canadian Football coach who tweeted  his support of Lewes FC's Marketing lead Charlie Dobres in last weeks podcast. Charlie was arguing the case for women's footballers to stop being compared to their male counterparts and seen as elite athletes in their own right. It's a battle Jorge has been fighting his entire career. As a University soccer coach he's trained players who've gone on to play for the national side. So, we thought we'd get him on to hear what that fight for equality felt like, one he's fought for decades, from a male point of view ?
This week on the Fired Up Sport podcast we ask why the monetary value of women's football isn't being embraced more widely with the marketing Director of Lewes Football club Charlie Dobres. Charlie believes there needs to be more ambition when we talk about how women's teams look on the other side of the current pandemic and we should start talking about women's teams "thriving" rather than "surviving". Plus the first ever Chief Women's Officer at Fifpro,the body that represents professional footballers worldwide, Amanda Vandervort.
This week on the Fired Up Sport podcast Women's sport has seen its first casualty due to the financial fall out from the coronavirus pandemic. AFC Fylde, who play in the third tier of women's football in the UK, have been disbanded. The chairman said it was due to the "ongoing fluid situation regarding the virus". The team were not only shell shocked but disappointed they weren't consulted about other ways of financing the team before the plug was pulled; they were told just fifteen minutes before the club released a statement to the press. We caught up with Assistant Manager Kimberley Turner and former team manager Luke Swindlehurst to get their reaction to the news and hear how they think women's football can future proof itself from further financial shocks.
As the lockdown weeks tick by sports stars the world over are stepping forward and using their clout to try and encourage us all to stay active and maintain public health. We are honoured on the Fired Up Sport podcast this week to have the company of a sporting great who's doing just that. Olympic Gold Medal winning Australian Beach Volleyball star Natalie Cook has launched the 30 second challenge and has roped in big sports names to help spread the word. Plus the former X Factor dancer who's taking a realistic approach to exercise in quarantine and starting with the basics; Do you slouch on the floor with your laptop ? Does your bum stick out when you walk ? Are your shoulders well and truly frozen after weeks of working from home ? Then you need Tig and Sam, the hilarious instagrammers and their hugely relatable, true-to-life posts and quick fixes for a more mobile, healthy life in lockdown. They are the StrongHer Women.
This week on the Fired Up Sport podcast how can we protect investment in women's sport on the other side of the current lockdown ? And why isn't women's sport, in the absence of any competitive sport right now, male or female, being given increased coverage in the print and broadcast media ? We hear from Isabelle Westbury, former cricketer turned sports journalist, who thinks she knows why and what needs to happen to change things. And as the weeks tick by in quarantine, we hear from Kate Dale, Campaign Lead for This Girl Can at Sport England. Kate tells us more about phase two of their  "Join the Movement" campaign #stayinworkout, which aims to inspire us to stay active during the lockdown in new and innovative ways.
This week on the Fired Up Sport podcast we catch up with Fed Cup Captain Anne Keothavong, the daughter of an immigrant and a refugee to the UK, her background was not one that meant she was destined to a career in the top flight of tennis. But thanks to her determination, and the sacrifice of her parents, that's exactly where she ended up. She now presides over the most diverse team in the history of the Fed Cup. She shares with us her ambition, not only for the team, but also for getting more women into coaching tennis at both grassroots and elite level. Plus how to stay motivated in lockdown with Professor of Psychology at Loughborough University in the UK, Ian Taylor. He also asks will we come out the other side of this period of confinement more empowered to make our own exercise choices and or still be slaves to the local gym ?
The lockdown that’s resulted from the Coronavirus pandemic has disrupted everyone’s lives, and that includes exercise regimes. This week on the Fired Up Sport podcast we hear from women who’ve come up with inventive ways of exercising from home, either with neighbours or family members. We have advice for fitness procrastinators and perfectionists, from University of Sheffield Psychology Professor Fuschia Sirois, and we’ll hear from the professional footballer, and friend of the Fired Up Sport podcast, Lewes FC Women’s Striker Katie Rood, who initially found it hard to get motivated to do anything at this difficult time.
It’s Reload time on the Fired Up Sport podcast. We’re giving you the chance to hear one of our most listened to podcasts from last year; the Great Period Cover-up. Why is there still such stigma around female athletes and periods? The monthly cycle has such a fundamental impact on athletic performance, so why is there so little research into its effects? On this podcast we hear from Commonwealth Games medal winner, track and field athlete, Jazmin Sawyers, who has spoken candidly about how her period almost prevented her from taking part in the  long jump final at the Rio Olympics. We also talk to Australian Tennis star Priscilla Hon about how she never used to feel comfortable talking about her period to male coaches. Plus Emma Ross, Head of Physiology at the English Institute of Sport, discusses the pioneering research she is doing to help female athletes turn their period into a super power . It's the Fired Up Sport podcast in association with Sport England and This Girl Can. Come with us and #ChangeTheConversation.
They were the team that made headlines across the world last year at the FIFA Women's World Cup. Jamaica's Reggae Girlz were the first ever team from the Carribean to qualify for the competition, and wherever they went, they brought the party with them. But it was thanks to the perseverance of one woman that they got there in the first place. Cedella Marley, daughter of reggae legend Bob Marley, invested in the team when their own football federation had pulled the plug. In an exclusive interview with the Fired Up Sport podcast Cedella reveals how lack of funding is still an issue, so she is stepping in to fill the gap. She also throws her support behind US soccer's Megan Rapinoe in her fight to get equal pay for the women's national side. She is a straight talking, hilarious, inspirational tonic and it was our complete honour to t?alk to her on the Fired Up Sport podcast. As Cedella says: "Get up, stand up, don't give up the fight".
Over 86,000 people watching women play a cricket match. A pipe dream and now a reality after the Australian and Indian Women's teams pulled in a record crowd at the MCG in Melbourne. It's Australia's home of cricket and a place where women were only allowed to become members in the last twenty years. We talk to the victorious Australian Vice Captain Rachael Haynes and find out why she missed the onstage celebration with Katy Perry ! Plus we hear from one of This Girl Can's Project Leads in Australia Mel Feinberg as the campaign goes from strength to strength down under.
As the Coronavirus pandemic signals a change for many of us in our day to day routine, is it possible to continue to exercise and stay safe ? In this special edition of the Fired Up Sport podcast we hear from Strategic Lead for Campaigns at Sport England Kate Dale who has some sound advice on what extra precautions you should take if you are going to the gym or exercising in a group and how to keep active if you are having to self isolate. All of this advice is in keeping with national guidelines at the time of recording. Please be advised to check regularly for daily updates in case that advice has changed.
When we heard Andy Murray say he's frustrated we don't have more female tennis coaches, we knew a woman who would wholeheartedly agree with him. Good news is, she has a plan. She's former Pro-Tennis player Jo Ward who's now Curriculum Manager for the Lawn Tennis Association. She's taking an in-depth look into how we coach girls, who coaches them and whether this is having an effect on the sharp drop off in the number of girls who stay in the sport as they get older.  Your chance to hear Jo again in this special Fired Up Sport Reload
Ahead of the Women's T20 Cricket Final between Australia and India which will attempt to break the record for the most spectators ever recorded at a women's sporting event, this week on the Fired Up Sport podcast we revisit a great chat we had with the voice of Cricket Australia, Karina Keisler and former England International player, turned writer and broadcaster, Isabelle Westbury. Karina talks about how Australia has led the way on equal pay in the women's and men's games, whilst Isabelle muses on how not getting the same opportunities and financial support as male cricketers in her teenage years may have actually helped her in the long run. The Fired Up Sport Podcast with Clare McDonnell and Kirsten Webster; come with us and #changetheconversation
History could be made this weekend at the Women's Twenty20 Cup Cricket Final as an attempt is made to break the world record for the highest crowd ever at a women's sporting event. The World's top female cricketers slugging it out AND Katy Perry performing might just them over the 90,000+ spectator line. On this week's Fired Up Sport Podcast we take a look ahead to the final with former New Zealand player Nicola Browne and cricketer turned broadcaster India's Snehal Predhan. With teenagers in the Indian side breaking both male and female records and women players across the world slowly edging towards professional (ie. paid) status, there's a lot to be excited about right now in women's cricket.
With the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics edging ever closer this week on the Fired Up Sport podcast we hear from a trailblazing legend in Paralympic sport. Deepa Malik was the first woman to win a Paralympic medal for India in Rio 2016 when she was in her forties ! She has played a major role in changing the way disability is perceived in India and is a tireless champion and activist in her attempts to level up women's sport. She was paralysed later in life, having already suffered the devastating blow of her daughter becoming disabled following a tragic accident when she was a baby. They are now the world's only Paralympic mother and daughter sports duo. It's was a complete honour to talk to Deepa on the Fired Up Sport podcast.
When you hear that tired old sentence that begins with the words, "The thing about women's sport is that it's just not as popular as ....", stop right there and refer said speaker to work of sporting digital-analytics-guru Josie Brown. She is chief data cruncher for Tennis Australia and has some very revealing statistics about which stars sports fans search for the most on the internet. Clue ? Two out of the top three this year have been women. Plus how to get out of the house when you have three small children, let alone exercise ? This Girl Can Ambassador Kirsti Hau tells us how she does it and how she rekindled her love of netball in the process.
We hear from the only Women footballer in the world to be paid equally by club and country, New Zealand striker Katie Rood who plays for fan-owned Lewes FC in the UK. Lewes FC is also the only club in the world to not only pay the women players the same as the men but to also give equal investment to both teams. Clare McDonnell went along to their home ground, the intriguingly named Dripping Pan, to find out more about their equality philosophy and how it's not only benefiting the club, but the local community too.
As the Australian Open tennis reaches its climax, we hear from its first ever female Chief Umpire, Cheryl Jenkins. Plus we celebrate the fifth anniversary of This Girl Can by interviewing the star of their new campaign. Farrah is a Trans woman who drives lorries for a living and has a passion for climbing. But the fear of judgement almost stopped her doing what she loves: “You have to live your life, you can't live in a closet; it's too dark and too lonely.”
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