England star Mead wants more action on ACL injuries in women’s football

England striker Beth Mead, voted as BBC Sports Personality of the Year for 2022, wants a fresh look at why ACL injuries appear to be so prevalent in women's football. (File/AFP)
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Updated 23 December 2022
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England star Mead wants more action on ACL injuries in women’s football

  • Mead faces a race against time to be fit for next year’s World Cup after suffering an ACL injury playing for Arsenal against Man United last month
  • The tendency of women across a range of sports to suffer ACL injuries has long provoked discussion, particularly in the US

LONDON: Beth Mead hopes the anterior cruciate ligament damage she and her partner Vivianne Miedema have both suffered can prompt a fresh look at why this particular knee injury appears to be so prevalent in women’s football.

Mead top-scored for the England women’s team in their triumphant European Championship campaign earlier this year.

She faces a race against time to be fit for next year’s World Cup after suffering an ACL injury playing for Arsenal against Manchester United last month.

Gunners teammate Miedema suffered the same injury in a Champions League match last week, with an ACL injury ruling Spain star Alexia Putellas out of the Euros as well.

The tendency of women across a range of sports to suffer ACL injuries has long provoked discussion, particularly in the US.

Mead, speaking after being voted the BBC Sports Personality of the Year for 2022, was asked if a broad study was needed on why so many leading women footballers had suffered ACL injuries.

“I would say so,” she replied. “I think something, anything (would be good), and there doesn’t seem to be a lot going on.

“Unfortunately this has happened to us, but hopefully it can kick somebody up the arse to go on (and) start doing something.”

The 27-year-old added: “I see myself as quite a robust player but this has still happened. You look at Viv, she’s quite a robust player and we’ve not been players generally hit with injuries so I do think we need to look into it a lot more.”

Mead was adamant greater action would have been taken had one such injury affected as many top male footballers.

“I think if that happened with a Messi, a Ronaldo, a Griezmann, there’s probably going to be a lot more done when those things happen,” she said.

England’s governing Football Association said research into the frequency of ACL problems in women’s football had been conducted over the last four seasons.

“ACL injuries represent 1.3 percent of the total number of injuries in the top two tiers of women’s football in England, with hamstring injuries the most common at 11 percent,” said a spokesperson for the FA.

Mead said both she and Miedema would be happy to use some of their time to participate in research regarding ACL injuries in women’s football.

“Me and Viv would really like to get involved and put it out there a little bit, hopefully we can look into some stuff and it would be a positive use of our time.”

England women’s coach Sarina Wiegman said: “We talk about it (ACL injuries) all the time.”

Wiegman added: “We also have to look at who has got an ACL, what’s her program, what does it look like, get the bigger picture so you get the right things out of this research. FIFA, UEFA and the federations have to do something about this.

“There hasn’t been that much research about women’s football. Women are built differently to men, the hips and the knees are different, the angles are different. There’s lots of research in the men’s game, not the women’s game.”


Alcaraz beats Sinner in South Korea exhibition match

Updated 10 January 2026
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Alcaraz beats Sinner in South Korea exhibition match

  • “We all need the support from the fans,” Alcaraz said.
  • The pair mixed up their game with an array of trick shots

SEOUL: Carlos Alcaraz beat his great rival Jannik Sinner 7-5 7-6(8) to win their Hyundai Card Super Match exhibition event in Incheon, South Korea, on Saturday that marked the start of the season for the world’s top two men’s tennis players.
There was little to separate the two during the entertaining clash, with world number one Alcaraz squeaking ahead toward the end of both sets to clinch the win.
“We all need the support from the fans. So having the support and feeling the love from the people was necessary for me to perform my best and play great tennis like I did today,” Alcaraz said.
In their press conference on Friday, Sinner said the match would not ⁠be a true indicator of their levels heading into the new season and that both players would focus on entertaining spectators.
It was a promise they lived up to, as the largely light-hearted hit-around unsurprisingly lacked the intensity that has characterised their previous meetings on the sport’s biggest stages.
The pair mixed up their game with an array of trick shots and engaged in a number of memorable rallies to keep fans at the Inspire Arena ⁠on the edge of their seats, with Sinner allowing a child in the stands to play a point for him in the second set.

EXHIBITION EVENTS
It was an entertaining display from both players, who are no strangers to putting on a show at exhibition events.
Sinner and Alcaraz competed in the Six Kings Slam exhibition tournament in Riyadh in 2024 and 2025, with the Italian winning in the final on both occasions.
Alcaraz has defended his decision to play in such lucrative events despite previously saying he would consider skipping ATP Tour events to prioritize his health in a crowded schedule, saying they provide relief from the grind of the tour.
The Spaniard has also admitted there are ⁠considerable financial incentives to playing exhibition events, saying last year the prize money on offer was a motivation for playing in the Six Kings Slam.
With the exhibition match wrapped up, the serious business starts for Sinner and Alcaraz, who will now shift their attention to the Australian Open.
The two have much at stake in the season’s opening Grand Slam, which begins at Melbourne Park on January 18, with Sinner looking to win a third straight Australian Open title and Alcaraz chasing a career Grand Slam.
“It was an entertaining match, that’s why we came here and obviously now the main goal is in Australia,” Sinner said.
“At the end of the day, exhibition matches are different, you are a bit more relaxed and also entertaining the crowd a little bit more with different shots and different actions on court.”