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Woman's Game (eBook)

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2022 | 1. Auflage
240 Seiten
Guardian Faber Publishing (Verlag)
978-1-78335-217-3 (ISBN)

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Woman's Game -  Suzanne Wrack
11,99 € (CHF 11,70)
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***WINNER OF A SUNDAY TIMES SPORTS BOOK AWARD*** A TIMES SPORTS BOOK OF THE YEAR LONGLISTED FOR THE WILLIAM HILL SPORTS BOOK OF THE YEAR 'A truly important book.' MEGAN RAPINOE 'Hardhitting and clear sighted.' THE TIMES 'Impassioned . . . joyous.' SPECTATOR DISCOVER THE STORY OF THE WOMEN WHO PAVED THE WAY FOR THE LIONESSES This is the astonishing history of women's football: from the game's first appearance in England in the late nineteenth century to the incredible teams that at their height drew 53,000 spectators to Goodison Park, through to its fifty-year ban in the UK and the aftershocks when restrictions were lifted. Following the game's meteoric rise in recent years, Suzanne Wrack considers what the next chapter of this incredible story might - and should - be. 'A thoroughly entertaining and enlightening read.' CLARE BALDING 'A fantastic book on how the game has developed and what its future could hold.' PHIL NEVILLE 'A compelling narrative . . . The history of the women's game has been long overlooked. This book celebrates it, and the teams and individuals who helped the sport develop into today's nationally and internationally recognized phenomenon.' TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT 'Wrack is something of a trailblazer herself . . . few would be better placed to write its history.' IRISH TIMES

Suzanne Wrack is the women's football correspondent for the Guardian and Observer. Her work has also been published in FourFourTwo, and she is a regular contributor to the Guardian's Football Weekly podcast. In 2020, her investigation on abuse at the Afghanistan Football Federation won an AIPS Sport Media Award. A Woman's Game is her first book.
***WINNER OF A SUNDAY TIMES SPORTS BOOK AWARD***A TIMES SPORTS BOOK OF THE YEARLONGLISTED FOR THE WILLIAM HILL SPORTS BOOK OF THE YEAR'A truly important book.' MEGAN RAPINOE'Hardhitting and clear sighted.' THE TIMES'Impassioned . . . joyous.' SPECTATORDISCOVER THE STORY OF THE WOMEN WHO PAVED THE WAY FOR THE LIONESSESThis is the astonishing history of women's football: from the game's first appearance in England in the late nineteenth century to the incredible teams that at their height drew 53,000 spectators to Goodison Park, through to its fifty-year ban in the UK and the aftershocks when restrictions were lifted. Following the game's meteoric rise in recent years, Suzanne Wrack considers what the next chapter of this incredible story might - and should - be. 'A thoroughly entertaining and enlightening read.'CLARE BALDING'A fantastic book on how the game has developed and what its future could hold.'PHIL NEVILLE'A compelling narrative . . . The history of the women's game has been long overlooked. This book celebrates it, and the teams and individuals who helped the sport develop into today's nationally and internationally recognized phenomenon.'TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT'Wrack is something of a trailblazer herself . . . few would be better placed to write its history.'IRISH TIMES

lt;p>Suzanne Wrack is the Guardian and Observer's women's football correspondent; the first person to hold this role at a national newspaper. Her work has also been published in FourFourTwo, and she is a regular contributor to the Guardian's Football Weekly podcast. A member of Women in Football, Women in Journalism, the Sports Journalist Association and the Football Writers Association, Suzanne was highly commended in the Media Initiative of the Year category at the 2018 Women's
Sport Trust 'Be A Game Changer' awards and shortlisted for the Football Supporters Federation Writer of the Year.

On 10 May 1873 the satirical British magazine Punch mockingly warned that women’s involvement in cricket would only lead one way. ‘Irrepressible woman is again in the field,’ it exclaimed. ‘“Ladies’ Cricket” is advertised, to be followed, there is every reason to apprehend, by Ladies Fives, Ladies Football, Ladies Golf etc. It is all over with men. They had better make up their minds to rest contented with croquet, and afternoon tea, and sewing machines, and perhaps an occasional game at drawing-room billiards.’

The jesters weren’t wrong. The first women’s association football match was played just eight years after these words were written. And in fact, while match reports in the traditional sense only began to appear in the late nineteenth century, there are hints of women’s involvement in football significantly earlier.

One of the earliest such mentions in British records occurs in ‘A Dialogue Between Two Shepherds’ by the poet and scholar Sir Philip Sidney (1554–86), in which one character says to the other:

A tyme there is for all, my mother often sayes,

When she, with skirts tuckt very hy, with girles at football playes.

There are also a number of accounts from eighteenth-century Scotland that tell of annual matches played between single and married women, with an audience of bachelors casting their eyes over the footballing skills of potential partners. The Rev. Dr Alexander Carlisle wrote of one such fixture in the village of Inveresk in East Lothian in 1795: ‘As [the fishwives] do the work of men, their manners are masculine and their strength and activity is equal to their work. Their amusements are more of the masculine kind. On holidays they frequently play golf; and on Shrove Tuesday there is a standing match at football between the married and unmarried women, at which the former are always victors.’

Putting aside the reality-TV-style sexual politics, what is interesting about this decidedly working-class form of matchmaking is that the most desirable attributes weren’t looks or femininity, but rather a woman’s physical strength and sporting prowess. In many ways this feels a thoroughly modern attitude, bringing to mind the ‘This Girl Can’ era of sports promotion, with muscles bulging, sweat dripping, make-up removed or smeared and all types of bodies welcomed. But here is an example from over two centuries ago demonstrating that frailty, paleness and slightness have not always existed as desirable features of women. Those views are man-made, products of various societies over the years that have devalued the role of women and placed men at the head of the metaphorical table.

Beyond Britain’s shores can be found even earlier examples of women’s involvement in sports closely related to the modern game. In China a game called cuju, or ‘kickball’, was played as far back as the Han dynasty, which ran from 206 bc to ad 220. Some aspects of cuju would be recognisable  to the modern spectator: teams wore different coloured kits and competed to kick a ball into a net. Rather than today’s armbands, however, captains wore hats with straight wings, differentiating them from the curling wings worn by other players. The game was popular among women, as indicated by a poem from the ninth century ad lauding the cuju performance of General Li Guangyan:

Quick as a monkey on the ballfield, with a falcon’s grace

Three thousand ladies tilted their heads to watch him

Trampling shiny earrings as they crowded for a view

Standards bobbed and waved, banners flashed and shone.

And women were not merely spectators to cuju matches: paintings from the Han dynasty depict women with hair up, long sleeves and flowing dresses kicking and flicking balls in gardens. Again, any suggestion of the impropriety of women kicking a ball and daring to take an interest in the universally accessible sport is demonstrably a more modern invention.

Fast-forward to 9 May 1881 and we have the first formal reporting from a women’s football match, in a game widely considered to have been the first recorded women’s international. The Glasgow Herald described the match, which took place at Easter Road in Edinburgh, simply as ‘rather novel’:

A considerable amount of curiosity was evinced in the event, and upwards of a thousand persons witnessed it. The young ladies’ ages appeared to range from eighteen to four-and-twenty, and they were very smartly dressed. The Scotch team wore blue  jerseys, white knickerbockers, red stockings, a red belt, high-heeled boots and blue and white cowl: while their English sisters were dressed in blue and white jerseys, blue stockings and belt, high-heeled boots, and red and white cowl. The game, judged from a player’s point of view, was a failure, but some of the individual members of the teams showed that they had a fair idea of the game. During the first half the Scotch team, playing against the wind, scored a goal, and in the second half they added another two, making a total of three goals against their opponents’ nothing. Misses St Clair and Cole scored the first two, and the third was due to Misses Stevenson and Wright.

The match report, which was far more balanced than you perhaps would have expected, also included what is seemingly the first teamsheet of the women’s game. This artefact offers a helpful insight into the women involved in that historic first outing, including the three Hopewell sisters, early counterparts of today’s foremost footballing siblings such as Rosie and Mollie Kmita, Phil and Gary Neville or Ada and Andrine Hegerberg:

  Scotland England
Goalkeeper: Ethel Hay May Goodwin
Backs: Bella Osborne
Georgina Wright
Mabel Hopewell
Maud Hopewell
Half-backs: Rose Rayman
Isa Stevenson
Maud Starling
Ada Everston
Forwards: Emma Wright
Louise Cole
Lily St Clair
Maud Riweford
Carrie Balliol
Minnie Brymner
Geraldine Vintner
Mabel Vance
Eva Davenport
Minnie Hopewell
Kate Mellon
Nelly Sherwood

This first match was the brainchild of Edinburgh-based theatre entrepreneur and actor Alec Gordon, who had watched the growing popularity of men’s international football and saw an opportunity to capitalise on the interest by using women players. Working with Charles Scholes, the head of a theatrical empire, and Scholes’s theatre manager, George Fredrick Charles, they drew players from dance and performing circles. The majority of the England side and several of the Scottish team were members of Lizzie Gilbert’s Juvenile Ballet Company, while the remaining Scots were recruited from the Princess’s Theatre house company. Gordon and Charles themselves appear in a later account of the match in the Glasgow Herald as ‘umpires’ managing Scotland and England respectively.

Today there is a clamouring for society to recognise the potential value of the women’s game, both from an economic and social point of view. Slowly the momentum has swung behind the women’s game as the men’s game begins to top out, with the marketplace saturated when it comes to sponsorship opportunities and broadcasting slots. Yet here, in the late 1800s, you have the earliest records of individuals drawing conclusions on the potential of the women’s game far ahead of schedule.

News of the game would spread across the country, filtering into local newspapers, and even gaining international attention with the New York Sun, Sydney Evening News and Montreal Daily Mail all carrying reports of the game.

Several reports mocked the quality of the game but it is frankly ludicrous for the women, playing in ‘high-heeled boots’ in their first advertised fixture, to be expected to be playing to the same standard as the men. The Dunfermline Journal noted that more than half of those in attendance,...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 14.6.2022
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Sachbuch/Ratgeber Freizeit / Hobby Sammeln / Sammlerkataloge
Sachbuch/Ratgeber Sport
Weitere Fachgebiete Sportwissenschaft
Schlagworte alex scott • euros 2022 • football weekly • guardian football • Megan Rapinoe • womens euros • womens football
ISBN-10 1-78335-217-5 / 1783352175
ISBN-13 978-1-78335-217-3 / 9781783352173
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
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