A reflection on what I'm calling The Matilda Effect.

I'm not really a sports-team follower. I remember once getting really excited by a great game of beach volleyball, and I did watch the cricket as a kid, but I've never had a sports team and I'd rather play than watch.

But I've been totally sucked in to cheering on the Matildas (weirdly, not Australia so much as specifically the Matildas). Particularly I've loved how human these women are. The kids are not hidden away, the kindness to other teams, the queer visibility. Awesome.

To watch all genders get behind a group of women, to want to be these players, to turn their backs on the live AFL and instead cheer the Matildas... To be cliched, it's felt so much bigger than sport. It's felt like a window into what it would look like for a moment if women felt that level of support generally.

I had an experience this week where I was interviewed for a podcast along with another (male) guest. He was introduced as Dr whereas that titled was dropped from my name (despite me correcting their briefing info the week before). During the interview I was cast as the naive over "overly enthusiastic" perspective and my colleague as the expert (he did a great job backing me). I was also misnamed as Mollie multiple times.

Afterwards I had this sense of "Not today dickheads!" and I wrote to them and told them this wasn't ok. While I would nearly always stand up for myself this way, I had such a sense of power. It really felt like this week we were allowed to be our best.

So I am now a convert to the power of sport to do wonderful things. Sport, and the sheer tenacity and hardwork of these players and those who came before who unionised, advocated, and kept playing.

#thematildas #matildas

@_MillieRooney have you watched the Matildas documentary on Disney+? If not, and if you're not a subscriber, it would be worth the trial period (I believe there's one) to watch it. I powerfully backs and enhances your conclusions about this group of people, the coaching and support staff, and the fans.
I get the sense that this is a pretty healthy workplace with a very positive culture.

As an aside, whoever made that podcast owes you an apology.

@trib oh good tip thanks! The (female) producer was awesome and had already picked it up. I apologised to her that it had to be me raising it with a woman but she was thankful i had as it helped her to also push for a re-record of the intro at least :)

@_MillieRooney I can't watch a lot of games/matches/sport anymore, but women's soccer has an air of sport that has been wrung out like everything else.

For me the Matildas are just a welcome inclusion. In that, hey look, we made it too! For them to be in the finals was genuinely exciting, and chances of getting a place, even if it's third, is awesome.

There's a sense of chance and luck in many of these matches that seems actually fun. There was a moment there where mere millimetres made the opportunity for Kerr an entire robbery. If luck had gone her way the whole thing could have been different.

I enjoy the beauty in that leading to defeat in a crucial match, as much as if it had of led to victory.

@_MillieRooney I am in California and have cheered the Matildas from afar but I also feel the same way about my local FC Angel City - so much more diverse than any sports teams I've seen plus the energy in the stadium is unparalleled.
@_MillieRooney I'm so sorry you dealt with that BS
@_MillieRooney I love AFL, and am always happy to chat what’s happened in men’s at work. But the workdays after the quarter and semis were just so good, the excitement, the openness and pride and support for women’s sport. It was so encouraging.