<
>

2028 Olympics: Women's soccer to have more teams than men's in L.A.

play
Hayes wanted inexperienced USWNT to 'feel the heat' vs. Brazil (0:51)

Emma Hayes reflects on the USWNT's late loss to Brazil and the lessons she's been able to learn from the latest camp. (0:51)

Female athletes will be in the majority at an Olympics for the first time at the 2028 Los Angeles Summer Games thanks to a big win for women's soccer.

The Olympic women's soccer tournament will be bigger than the men's edition for the first time in 2028, the International Olympic Committee decided Wednesday, with 16 teams for women and now just 12 for men -- flipping the gender imbalance at the Paris Olympics which had 16 men's teams and 12 in the women's tournament.

That decision by the IOC executive board helped push the core quota of athletes for L.A. to 50.7% women and 49.3% men -- 5,333 for women and 5,167 for men, the IOC said.

The gap is closed slightly when athletes for the sports being added specially to the L.A. program -- involving 322 female and 376 male competitors -- are included. Those sports include cricket, flag football and lacrosse.

The landmark progress for women athletes was made at an online board meeting Wednesday co-chaired in Lausanne for the first time by Kirsty Coventry as president-elect since her win last month. In June she will formally replace her mentor Thomas Bach and become the IOC's first female leader in its 131-year history.

Two more women's teams were added in water polo so that tournament in Los Angeles will be equal with the men's event with 12 countries each.

The IOC's headline decision was redressing an inequality since women's soccer debuted at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics with just eight teams -- half as many as the men's tournament.

The board confirmed a proposal revealed last Thursday by FIFA president Gianni Infantino when he spoke at the annual meeting of European soccer body UEFA.

The case for change was made more compelling because the women's soccer tournament is a top-tier title with national teams sending their best players.

The men's tournament, however, only rarely attracts the best players because of selection conflicts with clubs worldwide and is mostly for players aged 23 or under. The France men's team which took silver in Paris last year was unable to select Kylian Mbappé who had just signed for Real Madrid.

There were 16 men's soccer teams at every Summer Games since Moscow in 1980 through Paris last year.

The women's lineup increased to 10 teams at the 2004 Athens Olympics then to 12 four years later in Beijing.

FIFA and Infantino had repeatedly called for equality with a 16-team women's tournament, which would have added about 70 extra players, plus team officials, to push the limits on athlete accommodation quotas for Olympics organizers.

The solution found was to favor the women's edition over the men's and further drive the IOC's policy of gender parity at the Olympics that was first reached in Paris.