By: Julius Konton
The race for leadership within the Liberia Football Association (LFA) has intensified following the high-profile endorsement of former Executive Committee member Rochell Woodson, whose candidacy for women’s representation has now received the backing of former Minister of Youth and Sports, Cllr. Jerome Cole Bangalu.
The endorsement, which comes just days after Woodson officially declared her intention to contest the April 18 LFA Executive Committee elections, is widely regarded as a significant boost to her growing support base and a signal of shifting dynamics within Liberia’s football governance landscape.
A Strategic Endorsement with Sector-Wide Influence
Cllr. Bangalu, one of the most influential figures in Liberia’s sports administration in recent years, served as Minister of Youth and Sports during a critical reform period marked by governance restructuring, increased stakeholder engagement, and renewed focus on institutional accountability within national sporting bodies.
His public endorsement is therefore being interpreted by football analysts and stakeholders as more than symbolic, it represents a strategic alignment with Woodson’s vision for inclusive leadership and sustainable development of women’s football.
“Madam Woodson’s commitment to women’s empowerment in football is not only timely but necessary,” Bangalu said, while urging LFA affiliates, county football associations, and women’s clubs to rally behind her candidacy.
Rochell Woodson: Experience, Continuity, and Reform
Woodson is no stranger to football administration.
As a former member of the LFA Executive Committee, she brings institutional memory, governance experience, and policy continuity at a time when the association is under increasing pressure to align with global best practices promoted by FIFA and CAF.
Over the past decade, women’s football in Liberia has grown steadily, with female participation increasing through grassroots leagues, school competitions, and national team engagements.
According to LFA development records, women now account for an estimated 25–30 percent of registered football participants nationwide, a figure stakeholders say underscores the urgency of stronger female representation at the decision-making level.
Woodson’s platform reportedly prioritizes:
Greater investment in women’s leagues and youth academies
Capacity-building for female coaches, referees, and administrators
Enhanced governance transparency and stakeholder inclusion
Alignment with international gender equity standards in sport
A Shifting Political Landscape Ahead of April 18
With the LFA elections scheduled for April 18, observers note that endorsements from respected sector leaders such as Bangalu could prove decisive, particularly among undecided delegates from affiliated associations.
Football stakeholders are now increasingly viewing Woodson as one of the most formidable contenders in what is shaping up to be one of the most competitive LFA elections in recent history.
Her candidacy reflects a broader continental trend, where African football associations are under mounting pressure to elevate women into leadership roles amid growing investment in the women’s game.
Broader Implications for Liberian Football
Beyond the election itself, the endorsement highlights a deeper debate within Liberian football: whether governance structures will evolve to reflect the changing demographics and aspirations of the sport.
Analysts argue that effective women’s representation at the executive level could unlock new funding streams, strengthen international partnerships, and improve Liberia’s compliance with global football governance standards factors increasingly tied to development grants and competition eligibility.
As campaigning intensifies in the coming weeks, Woodson’s expanding coalition suggests that women’s football may no longer be a peripheral issue within the LFA, but a central pillar of its future direction.
