How can you live a life on less than 100 pesos a day as a professional athlete? This is how most players should live.
They also spend most of the week training, focusing on the team, traveling and playing every week; However, the reward for your work can be insulting. In Mexico, as in most women’s leagues in the world, there are situations where this is the case it’s not enough for anything so much for failing to make it through training, maintaining a professional athlete routine in all aspects or living life in a dignified manner .
At the time Alicia Cervantes, former Atlas footballer and now striker Chivas reported a salary of 1,500 pesos per month, insufficient for transport. This was the minimum set by the FMFwho distributed the funds generated by the women’s national team so that the clubs pay, it is up to everyone to add money.
“The club shall determine the training schedules, practices and hours during which the player must be available to the club for participation in matches that the player must play (…) The fixed work schedules or days will be variable given the nature of this agreement,” the regulations stated stuck in Mexico.
Daniela Pulido, Former Chivas footballer who decided to put football aside due to poor conditions at his club, reported that his salary had not been increased since the title he won in the first Women’s League tournament, where he played at the time 4,000 pesosa situation that continued until the end of the Guardians 2020.
However, the situation seems to be changing little by little. Although there are clubs that pay Minimum 3,500 pesosthere are institutions that pay their players amounts approximately equal to the 120 thousand pesos per monthwithin entities such as Tigres, Rayadas de Monterrey And America.
The National Council for Social Development Policy Evaluation (Coneval) believes this is feasible The minimum welfare line in this country, the salary, should be 2,850 pesos per month . But How can you maintain a professional athlete’s diet on less than a hundred pesos, taking into account transportation and housing costs? All this without considering that many of them are the breadwinners of their families.
The League has, almost six years after its launch, managed to improve the conditions of players through the clubs, although this is down to the women’s teams’ own sponsors such as food brands, feminine care products and national brands. such as banking institutions, casinos or household products.
There are those who have dedicated themselves to capitalizing on fan approval to also generate resources from payments to television stations, with contracts negotiated annually for the benefit of women’s football. The gap is still wide, but in Mexico they are on track to build the Women’s League into one of the best in the Americas, even surpassed by the National Women’s Football League (NWSL by the acronym) of the United States.
Source: Goal

Gregory Robert is a sports aficionado and a writer for “Social Bites”. He provides in-depth coverage of the latest sporting events and trends, offering a unique and knowledgeable perspective on the world of sports.