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The Globalisation of Women's Club Football Has Begun

Louise Beltrame-Bawden

Erin Lent

~ 6 min read
WomensChampionsCup WEB

A final that proved both benchmark and balance

The final outcome reflected both the established benchmarks of the women's club game and the narrowing margins at the top.

Arsenal's lifting of the inaugural FIFA Women's Champions Cup aligned with what performance data had suggested. The European champions entered the tournament with sustained domestic and continental success, and the Opta Power Rankings identified them as statistical favourites.

But the manner of the victory is just as significant as the result; the Gunners were taken all the way to extra time by the Brazilian side, finally clinching it 3-2.

SC Corinthians pushed the contest to the limit, forcing a fiercely competitive final that demonstrated tactical organisation, physical intensity and technical quality equal to any stage in the global game. This was not a one-sided affirmation of European dominance; it was evidence that elite standards are being met across continents.

That dynamic is a hallmark of sporting maturity.

Established leaders remain strong, but challengers from other regions are no longer distant; they are operating within the same competitive bandwidth.

The same can be said for the broader tournament field, where clubs from different confederations demonstrated that a small concentration of power no longer defines the global women's club ecosystem, but rather an expanding base of high-performance environments.

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