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Iceland captain Sara Bjork Gunnarsdottir slams England's Euro venues as 'embarrassing'

Iceland captain and Lyon midfielder Sara Bjork Gunnarsdottir has said the stadiums chosen for the women's European Championship in England this summer are "shocking" and "embarrassing." 

The venues chosen for the tournament have capacities which range from the Manchester City Academy Stadium's 7,000 to Wembley's 90,000. 

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Iceland will play two of their group stage matches at City's training ground which also acts as the home ground for their women's team. 

"I am disappointed with the arenas we have been given. It is shocking -- we play a tournament in England with several large arenas, and we get to play at a training facility that takes around 5,000 spectators," Bjork Gunnarsdottir told the podcast Their Pitch.

"It is just embarrassing and it is not the respect we deserve. They haven't prepared for the fact that we can sell more than 4,000, it is disrespectful to women's football." 

In response to Bjork Gunnarsdottir's comments, a Euro 2022 spokesperson said on Wednesday: "Manchester City Academy is not a training ground. It is the official home stadium of Manchester City Women's Football Club.

"It has been used previously for UEFA Women's Champions League fixtures and will generate a great atmosphere worthy of a Women's Euro.

"We believe that with two of the biggest football stadiums in England [Old Trafford and Wembley], four venues with a capacity of 30,000 or more, two venues over 10,000 and two stadiums under 10,000, the right mix of stadiums has been chosen to provide the tournament with a platform to fulfil its potential."

Both of Iceland's games at the Academy Stadium have already sold out along with a multitude of other games including all of host England's group stage matches. 

"Women's football takes two steps in the right direction, but then things like this happen and then you take a step back," Bjork Gunnarsdottir added. 

"But matches will be played in larger arenas that I'm sure will sell out. Women's football explodes and you start to get the respect you deserve. It's getting better -- more money is being pumped in now and it's going in the right direction. But there are still things that need to improve.

"They should 100% reconsider [changing the stadiums]. Because if you look at the reactions and how many people buy tickets and how popular it has become, then you have to reconsider."

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