18 March, 2026
a-league-women-faces-surge-in-acl-injuries-amid-calls-for-greater-investment

Cannon Clough didn’t realize the severity of her injury when she first hit the ground. After leaping to defend a high ball, the Central Coast Mariners defender felt a sudden kick through her leg. As she landed, her foot twisted one way while her body went another, accompanied by a distinct pop. “I was like ‘oh, that was weird,’” Clough shared. “I hadn’t been in the game for long at all, but the staff were like ‘you look really white’ and then I went into shock.”

Initially, the team believed there were no major issues. Structurally, everything seemed fine. However, a subsequent scan revealed a torn ACL and meniscus, abruptly ending her season. “It smacked me in the face,” Clough said. “I was so hopeful and so naive to think that it was just a MCL sprain. I’ve never faced an injury that keeps you out for as long as this one. Nothing has hit me that hard.”

Clough is among seven A-League Women players who have suffered an anterior cruciate ligament tear during the 2025-26 season. In the past two weeks alone, four players – Clough, Sabitra Bhandari, Grace Kuilamu, and Isabella Coco-Di-Sipio – have sustained the injury. This alarming trend highlights a significant issue within the league.

The Lack of Research and Data

Currently, there is no publicly available data tracking ACL injuries in the A-Leagues, nor is there any dedicated internal research exploring the circumstances of their occurrence. This lack of information is part of a broader global trend: despite women athletes being two to six times more likely than men to tear their ACLs, only 6% of all sports science research focuses on women’s bodies.

However, organizations like Kynisca, founded by Michelle Kang, and Fifpro, the global players’ union, are working to change that. Fifpro launched Project ACL, a multi-year initiative investigating ACL injuries in England’s Women’s Super League in 2024. The project focuses on environmental factors such as access to facilities, staff, equipment, recovery, game schedules, and travel.

“The day-to-day conditions that players experience is sometimes ignored because attention on this topic often pivots to: ‘this is an ACL injury, therefore it’s medical’,” Dr. Alex Culvin, director of women’s football at Fifpro, explains. “What is overlooked, though, is the lack of holistic research done on conditions; the real quality control issue that we have in women’s football.”

Understanding the Conditions

For Clough and her Mariners teammate, Taren King, who returned from her own ACL injury last season, the condensed schedule of ALW matches during the holidays combined with the summer temperatures, increased travel, and lack of appropriate off-field support could explain the recent surge in injuries. Additionally, the league’s part-time structure means players aren’t afforded the same rest time as fully-professional footballers, with training and recovery squeezed in around other work commitments.

For an injury that can take more than 12 months to heal, a 32-week contract often leaves players fending for themselves. “The darkest days are when you feel you’re on your own,” King says. “You don’t really have anyone to lean on, getting out of bed to go and do your rehab is tough because there’s no one there making sure you do it.”

“I don’t feel like I’ve recovered from the games around Christmas time, and it’s now the middle of January. It’s tough, and I don’t think you can point to any one thing, but all of them combined feels like it increases risk.”

Calls for Full-Time Professionalism

This situation has led King, Clough, and the entire playing cohort to call for the league to become full-time as of next season. They argue that with more investment comes more research that can help prevent major injuries and sustain the careers of Australia’s best women footballers. “If we’re full-time, hopefully it means the staff will be full-time too, which means they’re not spread too thin and you can actually get the care you need,” Clough notes.

“You don’t have to self-motivate or find ways to set it up yourself; it’s a structure that’s already set up for you, so you just show up to work and do your thing. It’s just making sure the engine, the athletes – the things that need to keep working – actually keep working. Otherwise the whole league suffers.”

As the A-League Women grapples with this spate of injuries, the call for greater investment and a shift to full-time professionalism grows louder. The future of the league and the wellbeing of its players may well depend on how these demands are addressed.