“A Beautiful Gift“: Swiss women pioneers celebrate the game’s transformation

“A Beautiful Gift“: Swiss women pioneers celebrate the game’s transformation
Former Swiss national team players Rose-Marie Siggen, Elisabeth Copt and Nelly Juillard pose at Tourbillon stadium in Sion, Switzerland, July 3, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 04 July 2025

“A Beautiful Gift“: Swiss women pioneers celebrate the game’s transformation

“A Beautiful Gift“: Swiss women pioneers celebrate the game’s transformation
  • The mascot of the tournament, a Saint Bernard puppy, bears her name, Maddli, in recognition of her role in advancing women’s football in Switzerland
  • There are now 40,000 registered women players and 134 female referees in Switzerland, according to the Swiss FA

SION, Switzerland: On the terrace of a restaurant in the Swiss city of Sion sits a group of pioneers of women’s football in Switzerland who have seen the beautiful game change beyond recognition.

For ⁠72-year-old Madeleine Boll, seeing the city in the French-speaking part of Switzerland hosting three games in the Women’s European Championship, which is being staged across the country, is a proud moment.

The mascot of the tournament, a Saint Bernard puppy, bears her name, Maddli, in recognition of her role in advancing women’s football in Switzerland.

At 12 years old in 1965, Boll became the first woman in Switzerland to obtain a license to play football, with FC Sion’s boys’ youth team. But just months later it was taken away from her after the club said it had made an error.

“I was the happiest little girl. But the day they took away my license, I was the unhappiest because I didn’t understand why I was forbidden to play,” Boll told Reuters.

However, it marked the first in a series of landmark moments that enabled women’s inclusion in Swiss football.

By 1970 the first Swiss Women’s Football League was created, with Boll’s father, Jean Boll, its president. Madeleine later played for FC Sion, one of the earliest women’s football clubs in Switzerland.

“It’s a beautiful gift because it’s here that the beginnings of Swiss women’s football took root,” she said.

KEY MOMENT
A lot has changed since Boll and her generation played. There are now 40,000 registered women players and 134 female referees in Switzerland, according to the Swiss FA.

“It was different. We didn’t have jerseys, we didn’t have means to travel ... We had to make people understand that we are capable of playing,” said 72-year-old Rosemarie Siggen, from Sion who started playing football toward the end of the 1960s.

For Siggen and Boll, who were joined by four other footballing pioneers in the women’s game in Sion, this year’s tournament is a key moment to make strides in supporting women’s football.

“The Euros will be a catalyst,” Boll told Reuters, pointing to it as an opportunity for greater investment in the women’s game.

The Swiss hosts are hoping the legacy of the tournament — being played across eight cities over the next month — will bolster female football in the country as Euro 2022 did for champions England. It is aiming to double the number of female players by 2027, according to the Swiss FA.

“It’s a bit difficult for these young girls. They need help. I think there should be stronger support, a real investment ... we want to see them progress because they can bring many beautiful things,” said Siggen.

Boll hopes that the Switzerland side, who lost their first match of the tournament 2-1 to Norway, can continue to make strides with more financial support.

“If we want to have a good Swiss team ... it will be important that girls become professional because it is difficult ... to achieve results while having a job or being a student,” Boll said.

UEFA, the governing body for European soccer, announced a record 600,000 tickets have been sold for the tournament. Basel will host the final on July 27 at St. Jakob-Park, the largest football stadium in Switzerland.


Chengdu All Gamers crowned champions at King Pro League Grand Finals

Chengdu All Gamers crowned champions at King Pro League Grand Finals
Updated 23 sec ago

Chengdu All Gamers crowned champions at King Pro League Grand Finals

Chengdu All Gamers crowned champions at King Pro League Grand Finals
  • 2025 Honor of Kings International Championship now takes centre stage
  • Saudi’s Twisted Minds among 16 teams heading to Manila to fight for share of a $1m prize pool

DUBAI: The 2025 King Pro League Grand Finals concluded spectacularly at Beijing’s National Stadium (the Bird’s Nest), as Chengdu All Gamers (AG) emerged victorious to claim the championship title and $2.8 million in prize money from the total prize pool of $9.8m.

The KPL Grand Finals this year, for the first time in history, featured a mobile esports tournament held in the Bird’s Nest, and welcomed a live audience of 62,196 fans to make an attempt on the Guinness world record for the Largest Attendance for an Esports Match.

The stage production featured a 7,000 sq meter panoramic LED setup and a 128m main stage, making it the largest and most ambitious esports tournament in China to date.

In the KPL Grand Finals Championship Match, two powerhouses of esports collided — AG, fresh off back-to-back victories in the 2025 spring and summer seasons, and Wolves Esports, the 10-time champions.

The Grand Finals culminated in a hard-fought 4–2 victory as Yinuo delivered a stellar performance to claim the FMVP title for AG. YiNuo from AG was awarded an FMVP exclusive skin, a champion team signature skin, an in-game exclusive team avatar frame, and a limited-time team voice line, cementing themselves in Honor of Kings history.

The KPL is the esports event with the highest viewership in the world, uniting hundreds of millions of young fans with 250 million unique viewers on KPL in 2025. With 18 city-based clubs deeply rooted in local culture, KPL continues to lead mobile esports in scale, engagement and influence.

The Honor of Kings esports ecosystem is a dynamic, multi-tiered global structure that connects players and organisations across every level of competition, from grassroots to professional. The KPL Grand Finals, and the Honor of Kings International Championship display world-class professional play at the highest level.

Attention now turns to the 2025 Honor of Kings International Championship scheduled to take place from Nov. 14-30 in Manila, Philippines, featuring a $1m prize pool. n esports team Twisted Minds will be among the teams targeting the crown.

KIC2025 will be held at two venues: Shooting Gallery (Nov. 14-23 for group stage and knockout stage) and Activity Center, Ayala Malls Manila Bay (Nov. 28-30 for knockout stage and grand finals).

A total of 16 elite teams from around the world will battle it out, featuring Southeast Asia’s powerhouses, the winners of Brazil’s Honor of Kings championship, the Major East and West League titleholders, and top contenders from the KIC 2025 Last Call and Phoenix Reborn qualifiers.