Secret History Of Womens Football (eBook)

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eBook Download: EPUB
2013
300 Seiten
John Blake Publishing (Verlag)
978-1-78219-686-0 (ISBN)

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Secret History Of Womens Football -  Tim Tate
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IN THEIR DAY THEY WERE BIGGER THAN BECKHAM. THEY WERE THE WORKING CLASS FACTORY GIRLS WHO PLAYED IN FRONT OF VAST CROWDS THROUGHT BRITAIN AND BECAME CELEBRITIES ACROSS THE WORLD. THEY THREATENED THE ENTIRE MALE-DOMINATED BASTION OF 20TH CENTURY FOOTBALL. SO THE FA PLOTTED TO SHUT THEM DOWN.Boxing Day 1920, and 53,000 men, women and children pack inside Goodison Park. The extraordinary crowds have come to watch two rivals play a match for charity. But this is no ordinary charity fixture. Eleven of the players are international celebrities and their team is the biggest draw in British - and world - football. Yet they are all full-time factory workers - and they are women. They are the ladies of Dick Kerr electrical works. And the male football establishment is terrified by them.With the men away fighting from 1914-1918, most of the workers in the factories of northern England were women. And many factories had a ladies' football team. In December 1917, the team from Dick Kerr factory challenged the ladies of the nearby Arundel Coulthard Foundry to a charity match. It was the first of 828 games for Dick Kerr Ladies as over the decades they scored more than 3,500 goals and raised the equivalent of ?1million for an array of charities.By 1920, ladies' football was a major spectator sport. But away from the cheering terraces the bastions of professional men's football viewed the mass popularity of women's soccer with increasing alarm. On 5 December 1921 the Football Association met in London. After a brief debate behind closed doors it unanimously passed an urgent resolution: women's football was banned from all professional grounds.Dick Kerr Ladies did not give in, playing their matches on parkland with thousands of spectators turning up to watch. But constant pressure from the FA meant that one by one, teams began to fold. It would take until 1971 for the FA to lift its ban. Today, women's football has once again claimed a place in the global game. But it came too late for the pioneers of the sport: Preston Ladies - nee Dick Kerr Ladies - played their last match in 1969.Girls With Balls tells the extraordinary story of the time when women ruled the football world. With recollections from the last remaining member of the team from Dick Kerr's glory years and a treasure trove of contemporary photographs, this is the missing chapter in the history of football - its last great secret. It is a story of men with power, wealth and a fiefdom to protect. But above all, it is a story of girls with balls.

TIM TATE is a multi-award winning documentary filmmaker, investigative journalist and bestselling author. His films have been honoured by Amnesty International, the Royal Television Society, UNESCO, the International Documentary Association, the Association for International Broadcasting, the (US) National Academy of Cable Broadcasting and the New York Festivals.
Tim has written eleven non-fiction books, and is the co-author of the bestselling Slave Girl (John Blake Publishing, 2009), which has spent more than three years in Amazon’s Top 100.

Erscheint lt. Verlag 5.8.2013
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Literatur Biografien / Erfahrungsberichte
Sport Ballsport Fußball
Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte
Weitere Fachgebiete Sportwissenschaft
Schlagworte Deepdale • Dick, Kerr & Co • Dick, Kerr Electrical Works • Dick, Kerr ladies • Dick, Kerr's Ladies • Factory Workers Football Team • First World War • Football • football Association • Football Biography • Girls with Balls • Goodison Park • Ladies Football • Lancashire • Munitions workers • Preston • Preston Ladies F.C. • Preston North End W.F.C. • Soccer • sport biography • suffragette movement • The Championship of Great Britain and the World • The English Ladies' Football Association Challenge Cup • The Great War • The Munitionettes' Cup • UEFA Women's Championship • Women in football • Women in Sport • Women's Euro • women's football • women's soccer • Women's World Cup
ISBN-10 1-78219-686-2 / 1782196862
ISBN-13 978-1-78219-686-0 / 9781782196860
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