Summary Sri Lanka beat hosts Pakistan 2-1 in the South Asian women's football championship on Tuesday.
ISLAMABAD (AFP) - Sri Lanka beat hosts Pakistan 2-1 as the third South Asian women s football championship kicked off in Islamabad on Tuesday.
The South Asian Football Federation (SAFF) women s cup, which runs until November 20, features eight teams including Pakistan s arch-rivals India and neighbour Afghanistan.
The tournament is the first high-profile regional women s sports event in deeply-conservative Pakistan.
A young home-side were contained in their own half for most of the match by a composed Sri Lanka team, going one down before half time to a goal from midfielder Ishara Madushani.
After the break Pakistan had several chances to equalise, but Sri Lankan forward I.L.E. Kumudumala added a second goal in the 86th minute.
On the stroke of full-time, Pakistan captain Hajra Khan scored a face saving goal in the 89th minute.
Women s sports were taboo in conservative Islamic Pakistan, but military ruler General Pervez Musharraf opened the way during his near decade-long tenure from 1999 to 2008.
The first women s national championship was held in 2005 but players were required to follow a strict dress code, wearing trousers instead of the shorts normally worn by the players.
Pakistan skipper Khan said the tournament would give her youthful side good experience of international competition.
"We lack exposure, I am pretty sure if we get more international exposure, we can perform well," she told AFP.
"We are a very young team and I think we gave them a good fight specially in the second half."
The Pakistan Football Federation (PFF) promised tight security for the teams, after a suicide attack at a border post with India last week killed nearly 60 people.
Doubts had been raised over whether the tournament would go ahead following the incident.
Monika Staab, a FIFA consultant for women football, told AFP she had no security worries and said the tournament would send a good signal to budding young female players.
"I hope all parents watching this and give the girls permission to play," she said.
"It s a beautiful game and it s not only for the boys, it s also for girls."
India will play their opening game against Maldives in a group A match on Thursday while Afghanistan will face Bangladesh on the same day.
Nepal take on Bhutan in the second match of the group B Wednesday.
