Northern NSW Football Launches Female Referee Mentor Program to Strengthen Officiating Pathway

Northern NSW Football has launched a Female Referee Mentor Program, backed by NSW Office of Sport funding, as the federation moves to address one of the game’s most persistent development gaps: retaining and advancing women in officiating.

The program pairs emerging referees with experienced female officials and coaches, and has already been introduced in match conditions during the 2026 Northern NSW Women’s State Cup under the oversight of NNSWF high-performance referee coach and FIFA referee Casey Reibelt.

Northern NSW says the initiative is designed to improve progression into representative appointments and leadership roles while building the support networks often cited as critical to referee retention.

Tournament rollout offers first test of model

NNSWF said 25 female referees officiated during the Women’s State Cup as part of the program’s initial phase.

The federation also released a number of key appointments linked to the rollout. Sophie Whale and Jamie Mills-Cove were appointed assistant referees for the Community Plate final. Lilli Skaines and Kaitlyn Digby were appointed to the under-13 and under-15 Premier Youth League Girls Cup finals, with Indi Charlesworth named assistant referee for both fixtures.

Reibelt said the initiative was intended to support younger and less-experienced referees in a practical environment and to reduce the sense of isolation that can come with early officiating experience. NNSWF general manager participation and women’s football Allana Neeve said the federation viewed refereeing as a critical part of women’s football and described the funded program as a pathway investment aimed at long-term sustainability.

From participation goal to workforce strategy

Over the past years, women’s player participation has boomed, but officiating pathways have not always expanded at the same pace, particularly in regional systems where access to experienced coaching and consistent appointments can be uneven.

That has consequences beyond referee numbers. Match officials are a core workforce input for competition quality, scheduling and player development. If attrition is high in early officiating years, federations are forced into constant replacement cycles rather than building depth.

In that context, mentor programs are increasingly treated as operational infrastructure, not supplementary participation projects. What matters is not only recruitment, but conversion: whether referees remain in the system long enough to progress into advanced appointments and eventually into coaching and leadership roles.

Northern NSW’s decision to embed mentoring in live competition rather than classroom-only delivery is a practical strength. Development feedback linked to real matches is generally more actionable for emerging referees than abstract technical sessions.

The next phase, however, will determine whether the program produces structural change. Initiatives launched around major events often generate strong short-term engagement but weaken across regular-season demands, especially where travel, study and work pressures are high.

Over time, the federation will need to show progress in second- and third-season retention, advancement into higher-grade appointments, and sustained mentor participation beyond flagship tournaments. Consistency across metropolitan and regional cohorts will also be central to any claim of pathway equity.

Public funding raises reporting expectations

Office of Sport support gives the program early stability, but it also raises the bar on transparency. Publicly supported pathway programs are typically expected to report outcomes, not just participation stories.

For this initiative, that means publishing practical indicators: cohort continuity, appointment progression and evidence that mentoring remains active throughout the season cycle. Without that reporting architecture, it is difficult to distinguish between a successful event and a durable reform.

For now, Northern NSW has delivered a credible first step: a defined mentor structure, named participants and immediate implementation inside a representative competition. The next challenge is to convert that start into a repeatable officiating pipeline.

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Regional carnival puts Football West’s Country Pathway in Focus

Football West’s first State Regional Carnival has done what many federation pathway initiatives promise but do not always deliver: it brought regional players into a central high-performance environment and made them visible on equal terms, at least for a weekend.

Almost 160 players from six Football West Regional Academy zones: South West, Goldfields, Great Southern, Mid West/Gascoyne, Pilbara and Kimberley, were brought to the Sam Kerr Football Centre in Queens Park for the three-day event last week. For the governing body, the carnival is now being positioned as a formal part of its talent identification and development pathway.

Football West general manager of football David Lewis said the carnival had highlighted the standard of regional football and the role country programs continue to play in the state game’s future. He described the event as an “important part” of the development pathway and thanked players, staff, volunteers and families who travelled from around WA to attend.

From event success to system performance

Western Australia’s structural constraint is distance. Regional players face layered costs that metropolitan players usually do not: long-haul travel into Perth, additional accommodation, time away from school and work, and repeated trips if selected into subsequent camps. Those costs are not incidental. They influence who can stay in the system.

That is why the next stage of this initiative matters more than the launch optics. If identified players cannot progress because the second and third steps of the pathway carry prohibitive financial or logistical burdens, then early identification becomes a limited intervention.

In governance terms, the carnival has shifted Football West’s accountability point. The federation has now demonstrated it can convene regional talent at scale. The policy obligation is to show what proportion of those players can be retained and advanced across the following 12 to 24 months, and on what support settings.

Infrastructure is in Place; Distribution as the Issue

The use of the Sam Kerr Football Centre means WA now has a purpose-built football base capable of hosting large-format pathway activity in one location. That removes one of the traditional constraints often cited in state development systems. Once infrastructure is available, attention moves to distribution: who accesses the environment, how often, and under what conditions.

If Football West wants this carnival to function as a durable pathway mechanism rather than a showcase event, several design questions become central. What are the progression criteria after carnival selection? What travel and accommodation support is available for players invited back into metro-based programs? How is regional representation balanced across age groups and cohorts? What protections exist to prevent early dropout linked to cost rather than capability?

A broader shift in Australian pathway policy

The Football West carnival also reflects a wider trend in Australian football administration. Federations are increasingly moving from ad hoc regional scouting to more formal, event-based talent aggregation tied to defined development structures. The logic is straightforward: centralised assessment improves comparability, increases selector confidence, and reduces the chance that players are missed because of location alone.

Yet national and state systems alike continue to confront the same bottleneck. Identification has improved faster than inclusion in later stages. The policy challenge is less about finding players than funding continuity for players whose families absorb higher participation burdens.

Football West does not need to prove that regional football has quality; that case has already been made repeatedly by player outcomes and now by event scale. It needs to publish evidence that regional players can convert recognition into progression at rates that are not materially depressed by geography or household income.

That means performance should be measured against more than attendance and event satisfaction. Over time, the federation will likely be judged on transition rates from regional carnival cohorts into advanced programs, retention across seasons, gender balance in progression outcomes, and the level of practical support delivered to remote participants.

For now, the inaugural carnival can be read as a constructive step with genuine strategic value. It created a focal point for regional talent and signalled administrative intent. Whether it becomes consequential policy will depend on what Football West builds around it next: transparent progression settings, repeatable support, and a funding model that does not turn distance into exclusion.

Football West’s NAIDOC ball competition turns Indigenous art into a road safety message, and a rare form of representation

Football West has opened its 2027 NAIDOC Ball Design competition, inviting members of Western Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities to submit artwork that will end up printed on 500 footballs and distributed to schools, clubs and communities across the state. It is a small competition with a modest prize, a $1,000 voucher and a set of ten footballs for the winner. But what it is actually doing sits somewhere more significant than a design contest.

The 2027 edition is a joint initiative between Football West, the Insurance Commission of Western Australia and, for the first time, Football Futures Foundation. The winning design will carry the Insurance Commission’s Belt Up road safety message alongside the artwork, with the footballs distributed during NAIDOC Week, which runs from 4 to 11 July next year.

Football Futures Foundation CEO Michael Kerr framed the partnership as an extension of work the Foundation already runs across the state.

“Through programs such as Dreamtime Spirit and Yilkari, supported by former Matildas goalkeeper Lydia Williams, we are working alongside Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities to create football opportunities that are culturally safe, community-led and built around genuine belonging,” Kerr said.

A message that travels further in a football

Road trauma in Australia isn’t evenly distributed. Indigenous Australians are consistently found in national research to be two to three times more likely to be killed in a road transport crash than non-Indigenous Australians, a disparity driven in part by higher rates of pedestrian and passenger injury and compounded by the realities of remote and regional life, longer travel distances, older vehicles, and limited access to emergency care when something goes wrong. Seatbelt non-use remains one of the most consistent contributing factors in that gap.

The Insurance Commission has invested more than 2 million dollars in the Belt Up campaign over its seven years, and its Chief Investment Officer, Steve McKenna, has been explicit about who the message is aimed at.

“About 170 people die on the road each year in Western Australia,” McKenna said. “About 60 per cent of those are male. Of that total, 17 per cent aren’t wearing seatbelts when they die.”

Generic road safety advertising struggles to reach communities where trust in government messaging is not automatic and where the delivery channel matters as much as the message itself. A football, carrying artwork made by a member of the community it is meant to reach, distributed through a sport that already has deep informal roots in many Aboriginal communities, moves in a way a billboard cannot. That is not incidental to the campaign. It is the entire design logic.

Whose stories get told

Jarnda Councillor-Barns, the Ellenbrook artist who won the 2026 competition, used the colours of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander flags in her design, with circular patterns representing gatherings and connecting pathways representing the journeys, knowledge and skills each player carries.

“I really wanted to amplify the stories that are in the Football West community, whether you’re based metro or rural like I was, and how everyone in a team comes with their own stories,” Councillor-Barns said.

Her own football story reflects exactly the kind of informal, community-rooted participation the competition is built to recognise. She grew up in Broome playing social games whenever she could, and has family connections to the Jambinu team, a regional Indigenous women’s side based in Geraldton, despite never being formally registered with a club herself.

“Soccer is a sport that brings people from all walks of life together, creating a larger family built on respect, teamwork and shared passion,” she said.

Football West’s David Williams, a former Socceroo who now heads the National Indigenous Boys Under-16s program, said initiatives like this had value beyond the artwork itself.

“For the creativity of artists to be involved with sport goes a long way,” Williams said. “The more initiatives we have with this kind of stuff, the better.”

That is a modest way of describing what is, functionally, a form of representation that Indigenous communities in Australian sport have not always had. Governing bodies commission Indigenous rounds, jerseys and acknowledgements regularly. Fewer hand the creative authorship, and a public platform for it, directly to community members with no requirement that they already hold a formal position within the sport.

Insurance Commission Chief Investment Officer Steve McKenna, reflecting on the 2026 winning design at its unveiling, saw something in it that spoke to the broader purpose of the exercise.

“You see the Socceroos playing, and look across the team, and a ball like this, the designs, it reflects what Australia’s all about,” McKenna said.

In the meantime, five hundred footballs carrying a community-made design and a road safety message will reach further into regional and remote Western Australia than most government campaigns manage on their own. Whether that message changes behaviour on the roads that data suggests still needs the most attention is the harder, longer question the competition cannot answer by itself.

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