England’s women’s team dismantled Ukraine 3-0 in a FIFA Women’s World Cup 2027 European qualifier at Hill Dickinson Stadium in Liverpool on June 9, delivering the kind of performance that makes you wonder why ITV reportedly spent more airtime talking about Friday night’s fixtures than the match actually happening in front of them.

The result itself was emphatic. Carter opened the scoring in the 14th minute, Georgia Stanway doubled the lead in the 37th, and Beth Mead sealed the deal with a free-kick. Three goals, zero conceded, and yet England still didn’t clinch automatic qualification for the 2027 Women’s World Cup. The Lionesses needed favorable results from other simultaneous Group A3 matches to punch their ticket directly.

Where crypto meets the beautiful game

Not a single crypto sponsor was attached to this fixture. No jersey logos from exchange platforms. No stadium naming rights tied to a blockchain company. In men’s football, crypto partnerships have become so ubiquitous they’re practically part of the kit. Women’s football, by comparison, remains largely untouched by the industry.

Prediction markets are already paying attention