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Magdalena Eriksson, a Bayern Munich women's player, is scouting for the men's team, aiming to break barriers for women in football. She hopes her role will inspire other clubs to provide similar opportunities for women.
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The buzz after I mentioned doing some scouting in the menâs game for Bayern Munich, during my appearance as an analyst on Swedish broadcaster SVT for the menâs teamâs Champions League match against Real Madrid, is a bit of a double-edged sword.
On the one hand, I thought: âWhy is this such big news? It shouldnât be.â On the other hand, I understand it and Iâm happy there has been so much positivity and encouragement around it. I hope it widens peopleâs perspectives and helps break barriers for women working in menâs football, because I think weâre ready for that, menâs football is ready for it and it needs it. I hope it inspires other clubs to see it as a good idea. Why not give these opportunities to someone who wants them and wants to prepare for their career after football?
Itâs all football: youâre watching the same game, the same dynamics and I think we can contribute to each other. One of the things that really impressed me was the reason behind Bayern wanting to get me involved. The head of scouting, Nils Schmadtke, said: âWe know youâre going to offer such a good perspective. Yes, you are a woman and youâre from womenâs football, but mainly you are an active football player and active football players always have a different perspective.â
It was important to me that it wasnât a token appointment. I was actually approached almost exactly a year ago. I have been a Bayern player since 2023 and received an email from someone with a Bayern email address that I didnât recognise. I thought they maybe wanted to talk about womenâs football. As I understand it, they asked the womenâs clubâs director of football, Bianca Rech, whether someone in the womenâs team would fit the role. Knowing that I love to watch football â Iâm a bit of a nerd like that â and that Iâm getting older, she recommended me.
We arranged to meet and during that meeting I realised they were interested in me joining their department. I was totally honoured. They said: âMagda, you can go home and think about it and let us know.â I said: âI donât need to think about it.â

Magdalena Eriksson in the thick of the action against Union Berlin. Bayern were clear her playing career comes first. Photograph: Ebrahim Noroozi/AP
It felt like such a great opportunity and was something I had never imagined because in womenâs football scouting departments are rare because when there are limited resources you put them where theyâre most needed. Now, with more and more resources and more and more talent out there, I think creating scouting departments for womenâs teams is going to be crucial for the development of the game.
Magdalena Eriksson is scouting for Bayern Munich's men's team while playing for the women's team.
Her role is significant as it challenges traditional gender barriers in football and promotes women's involvement in men's football.
Bianca Rech, the director of football for Bayern's women's team, recommended Eriksson for the scouting role.
Eriksson hopes to inspire other clubs to provide opportunities for women in men's football and widen perspectives on gender roles in the sport.
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After agreeing to join the department, I started my training through the summer. I even had a few sessions during the Euros in Switzerland with one of the scouts; just a few hours here and there to bring me up to speed on the way they work, the process and that side of things.
The good thing is that the guys have been really clear with me that I am a footballer first and the club would never allow the scouting to impact negatively on that. Thatâs been good to hear but I still struggle with it a little bit. I always want to do more, but I have to accept, especially in moments like these when we have so many games, that I canât do everything I want to do with the quality I want to do it.
Once I began the new season, as a player, I went into the office at SĂ€bener Strasse and got to learn the way things work in more detail. I had about six months of training, where they were sending me players they were looking at and training me in writing scouting reports and giving recommendations.
Now Iâm feeling more warm in the role and Iâve started getting more responsibilities, including making more decisions about what games and players I should watch, within the remit of the type of profile of player the club want and the positional targets. They recently restructured a bit and gave me responsibility for the South American market, so thatâs my main focus. Itâs a mix of me keeping track of the young players in different leagues and any new ones coming up and the bosses sending promising targets or tips for me to look at. Thatâs been a fun new step in the process.
Itâs exciting too because the individual quality in South America is unreal. Many players have moved from South America to Europe at a young age and are now world-class players and the fact that someone is keeping track of the young talent there is really important for the club.

Pernille Harder (right) has been helping her fiancee with the scouting. âSheâs a bit of a consultant,â Eriksson says. Photograph: Ălex CaparrĂłs/Uefa/Getty Images
Despite being a centre-back, I look at all positions, except goalkeepers â thank God we have a goalkeeper scout, because thatâs beyond my expertise. It has been extremely interesting for me because normally when I watch a game I look at it through the lens of a centre-back. Now Iâm being forced to look at it from the perspective of a midfielder, forward or a winger too and that is widening my knowledge. Understanding what makes a really good midfielder and winger is maybe something I hadnât really reflected on.
Having my fiancee, Pernille Harder, around helps with that aspect too. She also wants to stay in football beyond playing and is super-interested in young talent and helping to develop young players. We want to see more and better academies in the womenâs game. That stems from the experience most of us in the womenâs game have: being coached by our parents or volunteer coaches until well into our teens and not learning a lot of fundamentals until well into our careers. She will look over my shoulder to see who Iâm looking at and Iâll ask her opinion, especially when I have attacking midfielders or wingers, about the offensive decision-making and the scanning and those kinds of things that sheâs an expert in. Sheâs a bit of a consultant.
Iâve watched a lot more of the Bayern menâs teamâs games too, because I want to learn more about how they play and be able to see if a player can fit in that system. To really get to know our menâs team and watch every game has been fun, especially with the season theyâre having.
The whole thing has been a great experience and super-valuable no matter what route I go down in football. Iâm learning to do video edits, watching a lot of football and feel my knowledge of the game is increasing and if I become a scout, a coach, a sporting director or something else, all those are things that are important to take with me.
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