Uefa's requirements for the EC stadiums differ between men's and women's championships, among other things regarding the number of cameras.

In the men's EC last year, the minimum requirement was 36 cameras, in the women's group stage the requirement was only 15, according to SVG Europe.

Something that SVT's expert Jonas Eriksson has previously criticized.

UEFA responds

Uefa responds to the criticism and believes that the number of cameras is not at all fewer during the EC than in the men's competitions.

"The TV production for the women's EC 2022 is on par with the standard production for the men's Champions League," they write in an email to TT.

Something Jonas Eriksson thinks is a lie.

- It is absolutely not like that.

That is not the truth.

It is a pure lie, he says.

"A way to mislead everyone"

Jonas Eriksson explains that Uefa includes cameras that follow the players to get scientific data when they say the number of cameras is equivalent, something they don't do when they count the men's cameras. 

- It's a way to mislead everyone.

To deceive the Swedes, the Swedish national team and everyone who wants to know how it is.

It's low, it's bad, you have to be transparent and say that you treated men and women differently in this case, he says.

- I think Uefa has made a miscalculation, that it is a championship that very few care about.

That there is not at all the media interest that it does.

It becomes apparent that they underestimated the dignity of the championship, he concludes.

See Jonas Eriksson's answer to Uefa in the player above