Outrage as Male Coach Who Secretly Filmed Women Players Still Free to Work in Football

A disturbing investigation by The Athletic, the subscription-based sports arm of The New York Times, has exposed a major safeguarding crisis in women’s football after a coach who secretly filmed players undressing was allowed to remain eligible to work in the game outside his home country. The report centres on former Czech coach Petr Vlachovsky, […]

Outrage as Male Coach Who Secretly Filmed Women Players Still Free to Work in Football

A disturbing investigation by The Athletic, the subscription-based sports arm of The New York Times, has exposed a major safeguarding crisis in women’s football after a coach who secretly filmed players undressing was allowed to remain eligible to work in the game outside his home country.

The report centres on former Czech coach Petr Vlachovsky, who used a hidden miniature camera to record at least 15 female players—some as young as 17—while they showered and changed between 2019 and 2023.

One of the victims, Kristyna Janku, said the scale and intent of the abuse only became clear when police invited her to identify herself in the footage following the coach’s arrest in 2023.

“You never think something like that can happen,” Janku said, describing her shock after seeing the recordings. “It was not by accident… he knew exactly what he was doing.”

The incidents occurred during Vlachovsky’s time at top-flight club 1. FC Slovacko, where he was regarded as a respected figure, having also coached Czech youth national teams and previously been voted the country’s best women’s coach.

The emotional toll on the players has been severe. Some reportedly vomited upon learning of the recordings, others left the club, while several sought psychological support. Janku, now playing in Poland, admitted the trauma has permanently altered her sense of safety.

A Czech court in May 2025 handed Vlachovsky a suspended one-year prison sentence, a five-year domestic coaching ban, and modest compensation of 20,000 Czech koruna (about $940) to each of 13 affected players. He was also found guilty of possessing child pornography material.

However, a major loophole remains: while banned in the Czech Republic, Vlachovsky is not currently prevented from working as a coach internationally, as neither FIFA nor UEFA has imposed a global sanction.

This has sparked outrage from FIFPRO, which is now calling for a worldwide lifetime ban. The union argues that failure to act sends a dangerous message and may discourage other victims from coming forward.

FIFPRO officials insist the case highlights systemic weaknesses in football governance, including the absence of a global database of sanctioned individuals, lack of mandatory safeguarding education for coaches, and inadequate reporting mechanisms.

“Despite being non-contact, this is still sexual abuse,” said FIFPRO legal counsel Barbara Mere Carrion, stressing the need for recognition of its severity.

FIFPRO’s women’s football director, Alex Culvin, criticised what she described as a lack of urgency from football authorities, arguing that women players are often not treated as priorities within the system.

The case has also reignited concerns about conflicts of interest within football governance structures. FIFPRO Secretary General Alex Phillips warned that federations may be reluctant to investigate their own officials, while global bodies face political pressures tied to elections and internal alliances.

Although FIFA says it has introduced safeguarding reforms, including a confidential reporting platform and a newly approved comprehensive safeguarding policy, critics argue enforcement remains inconsistent and opaque.

The Czech players’ union has now proposed new regulations to address abuse and is pushing for legislative changes at national level, while calls grow for independent oversight mechanisms in football.

For Janku, speaking out was a difficult but necessary step.

“It’s not comfortable to speak about it, but it is needed,” she said. “If there is a chance to make football safer for women and younger girls, we must act. Don’t be silent… and don’t let him coach again.”

The case is increasingly being viewed as emblematic of deeper safeguarding failures in global football, with experts warning it may represent only a fraction of a much wider, underreported problem.

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