''Unsuitable for Females'': The Rise of the Lionesses and Women''s Football in England
English
By (author): Carrie Dunn
Shortlisted for the 2023 Sports Book Awards for Best Football Writing of the Year
Discover the origins of the Lionesses that brought football home.
England's Lionesses are on the front and back pages; their stars feature on prime-time television; they are named in the national honours lists for their contribution to their sport and to society. The names of Lucy Bronze, Steph Houghton and Ellen White are emblazoned across the backs of childrens replica jerseys. These women are top athletes and top celebrities. But in 1921, the Football Association introduced a ban on womens football, pronouncing the sport 'quite unsuitable for females'.
That ban would last for half a century - but despite official prohibition the womens game went underground. From the Dick, Kerr Ladies touring the world to the Lost Lionesses who played at the unsanctioned Women's World Cup in Mexico in 1971, generations of women defied the restrictions and laid the foundations for today's Lionesses - so much so that in 2018 England's Womens Super League became the first fully professional league in Europe...when just a few decades previously women were forbidden to play the sport in England at all.
This book tells the story of womens football in England since its 19th-century inception through pen portraits of its trailblazers. The game might have once been banned because of its popularity find out about the subversive women who kept organising their teams and matches despite the prohibition, who broke barriers and set records the legends of the game who built the foundations of the stage upon which todays stars flourish.
'At what feels like a pivotal moment, Carries forensic research and depth of knowledge make her the perfect person to guide us through the constantly changing landscape of womens football' - Kelly Cates, TV presenter
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