Team GB football team 'unlikely' for Rio 2016 Olympics says FA general secretary

 

Pa
Tuesday 14 August 2012 06:46 EDT
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Highlight: BBC3 7.30pm A sell-out crowd awaits Team GB in Coventry for their quarter-final football clash with Canada. Can Steph Houghton, (No 3, right) repeat her scoring feat after her stunning strike guided GB to a shock 1-0 win over Brazi
Highlight: BBC3 7.30pm A sell-out crowd awaits Team GB in Coventry for their quarter-final football clash with Canada. Can Steph Houghton, (No 3, right) repeat her scoring feat after her stunning strike guided GB to a shock 1-0 win over Brazi (Getty Images)

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The Football Association have dealt a blow to Hope Powell's wish for a British women's team to compete at the Rio Olympics.

Alex Horne, the general secretary of the FA, said it was "unlikely" that the concept of a unified Team GB would be resurrected in 2016.

The men's and women's football teams qualified for 2012 by dint of host nation berths, but concerns over unifying the four home nations over the longer term meant GB's involvement was only ever billed as a one-off arrangement.

That did not stop women's head coach Powell from expressing her hope that a British team could compete in 2016 following her side's quarter-final loss to Canada.

Powell was encouraged by the support her team enjoyed during the London Games, which peaked with a 70,000-strong crowd for their final group game against Brazil at Wembley, but Horne admits the FA are set to quash the prospect of a rematch in Rio in four years' time.

"Within the men's game, it's not going to happen again," Horne told the Times.

"On the women's side I'm going to say it's unlikely, for the same reason.

"But you can understand why it's more compelling. Olympic football for women is the pinnacle."

PA

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