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The 2010s has been a ·¹Çø®Ä«Áö°©=·¹Çø®Ä«Áö°©
game-changing decade in terms of the profile, popularity and perception of women's sport.

Certain key moments stand out: the trailblazing ±¸Âî=±¸Âî¿©¼ºÀÇ·ù
London 2012 victories of Jessica Ennis and Nicola Adams, Fallon Sherrock making history by beating male opponents in darts' World Championship, Bryony Frost becoming the first woman to ride a Grade One winner at Cheltenham, Dina Asher-Smith winning Britain's first global women's sprint title and Simone Biles redefining gymnastics.

The record TV audiences that watched the groundbreaking 2019 ·¹Çø®Ä« ¸íǰ=·¹Çø®Ä« ¸íǰ
Fifa Women's World Cup felt like a watershed moment. As had the inspiration provided by Team GB's gold-medal winning hockey players at Rio 2016, England's World Cup-winning cricketers in 2017, and their triumphant netball team at the Commonwealth Games in 2018.

Then there was the emergence of US football star Megan Rapinoe ¿äÁö¾ß¸¶¸ðÅä=¿äÁö¾ß¸¶¸ðÅä¿©¼ºÀÇ·ù
as sport's leading voice on equality and women's rights, the face of a new era of athlete activism. The Commonwealth Games vowing to make Birmingham 2022 the first major multi-sport event to have more women's than men's medal events is another milestone.

But while there has been clear progress in the 2010s, equality ÀνºÇ»¾î ¾óÀ½³Ã¿ÂÁ¤¼ö±â·»Å»=ÄíÄí Àξؾƿô ICE 10's ÀνºÇ»¾î ¾óÀ½³Ã¿ÂÁ¤¼ö±â·»Å»Èıâ

of opportunity, pay, media coverage, grassroots participation and boardroom representation still feels decades away from being realised.
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