Durham W.F.C.

Durham Women Football Club is a women's football club based in Durham, North East England. The team has competed in the FA Women's Championship, the second tier of Women's football in England,[1] since 2014 having been awarded a licence in its inaugural season. They play their home games at Maiden Castle, part of Durham University.[2]

Durham Women F.C.
Full nameDurham Women Football Club
Nickname(s)The Wildcats
Founded2014
GroundMaiden Castle, Durham
Capacity3,000 (300 seats)
First Team ManagerLee Sanders
LeagueFA Women's Championship
2019–20FA Women's Championship, 3rd of 11
WebsiteClub website

History

Durham W.F.C. was founded in 2014 as a collaboration between South Durham & Cestria Girls and Durham University.[3] Prior to that, Cestria, founded in 2006 as a youth team by Lee Sanders, had become perennial achievers, winning the World Peace Cup in Oslo in 2010 and finishing runners-up at the 2011 Gothia World Youth Cup. In their only season as a senior side before the merger Cestria won the 2012–13 Northern Combination Women's Football League. Sanders, in conjunction with Quentin Sloper, head of sport at Durham University, then created Durham W.F.C in time for the 2014 FA WSL expansion.[4][5]

Durham's first competitive matches were in the 2013–14 FA Women's Cup where they reached the fifth round.[6] The team's first league game was held on 17 April 2014, a 2–4 defeat against local rivals Sunderland at their New Ferens Park home. The Wildcats secured their first league victory away at London Bees, with a 1–0 win at The Hive Stadium. Despite a difficult start to the 2014 season, the Wildcats finished 6th. They won five, drew three and lost ten of their eighteen games.

2015 saw a much improved season for the Wildcats, including a better points total, albeit achieving a lower league finish, 7th place a reward for an injury-ravaged season.

However 2016, saw Durham really hit their stride, with the Wildcats competing for promotion up until the final weeks of the season. The signings of Sarah Robson, Becky Salicki and Emily Roberts among others proved a catalyst as the Wildcats excelled throughout 2016. A record-breaking season eventually ended in a 4th-place finish with a highest-ever points total. They were also awarded the 'FA WSL 2 Club of the Year' award at the 2017 FA Women's Football Awards.

2017–18 was the Wildcats best ever season, finishing 4th, gaining 35 points in the process and only two points off second place. Durham also enjoyed their best ever FA Women's Cup run, reaching the quarter-finals before losing to Everton.

2018–19 started well for the Wildcats, including a Continental Cup win over FA WSL side Everton and a 0–0 draw away at newly-formed Manchester United. Durham won 3–1 in the return fixture, thus becoming the first team to beat the Red Devils.[7] 2018–19 also saw The Wildcats reach their second successive FA Cup quarter-final before narrowly losing 1–0 to Chelsea in front of a record attendance of 1,629.[8]

Durham Hospitals Radio have broadcast all Home matches since 2014 via their website to Durham Hospital (UHND) and around the world.

In October 2020, Durham Women became one of 41 clubs to be founding signatories of the Football Association’s Football Leadership Diversity Code (including two others from the Women's Championship).[9]

Current squad

Kathryn Hill (2) and captain Sarah Wilson (5) in March 2019
As of 10 January 2021.[10]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK  SCO Hannah Reid
2 DF  SCO Kathryn Hill
3 DF  ENG Lauren Briggs
4 MF  ENG Mollie Lambert
5 DF  ENG Sarah Wilson (c)
6 DF  NIR Sarah Robson
7 MF  ENG Beth Hepple
8 FW  ENG Molly Sharpe
9 FW  ENG Nicki Gears
10 FW  NED Iris Achterhof
11 FW  ENG Bridget Galloway
13 GK  ENG Megan Borthwick
14 DF  ENG Becky Salicki
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 DF  ENG Ellie Christon
17 MF  ENG Emily Roberts
20 FW  ENG Jordan Atkinson
21 DF  ENG Hannah Greenwood
24 DF  ENG Abby Holmes
25 FW  USA Julia Weithofer
96 MF  ENG Rachel Lee
GK  ENG Brooke Mackain
DF  USA Dee Bradley
DF  ENG Danielle Brown
MF  ENG Lily Crosthwaite
FW  ENG Chloe Ryan

Club staff

As of July 16, 2019[11]
Executive staff
General ManagerLee Sanders
Club SecretaryDawn Hepple
RTC Technical DirectorSteve Common
Coaching staff
First Team ManagerLee Sanders
First Team CoachSteph Libbey
First Team CoachMichael Third
First Team CoachChris Sewell
Strength and Conditioning CoachTom O’Neill
RTC ManagerLee Coulter

Records

Season summary

Results of league and cup competitions by season
Season Division P W D L F A Pts Pos FA Cup League Cup Name Goals
League Top goalscorer[nb 1]
2014 WSL 2 185310193218 6th Fifth round Group stage Caroline Dixon5
2015 WSL 2 186210243220 7th Third round Group stage Courtney Corrie5
2016 WSL 2 181035301933 4th Fifth round Preliminary round Beth Hepple14
2017[nb 2] WSL 2 9513141016 5th Fourth round N/A Zoe Ness5
2017–18 WSL 2 181125442635 4th Quarter-final Group stage Beth Hepple11
2018–19 Championship 201163371639 4th Quarter-final Group stage Beth Hepple8
2019–20[nb 3] Championship 141022331032 3rd Fourth round Group stage Beth Hepple10
  1. Goals in all competitions (FA Women's Championship, FA Cup and League Cup are counted)
  2. Shortened Spring Series: teams only played each other once and there was no WSL Cup
  3. Season curtailed due to the COVID-19 pandemic

References

  1. "Women's Super League: North East seeks knock-on effect". BBC Sport. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  2. Donnelly, Mark (12 September 2020). "Durham Women Move To New Home Ground". Durham Women FC.
  3. Clark, Steph. "Durham Women gear up for Super League bow". Northern Echo. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  4. "History of Durham Women FC, TheFA WSL". durham.fawsl.com.
  5. Association, The Football. "Newcomers Durham primed for FA WSL challenge". www.thefa.com.
  6. Watson, Neil. "Sunderland Ladies relish Durham derby opener". Sunderland Echo. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  7. "Manchester United Women lose unbeaten record at Durham". BBC Sport. 9 December 2018. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  8. "Women's FA Cup: Durham Women 0-1 Chelsea Women". BBC Sport. 17 March 2019. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  9. Paul MacInnes (27 October 2020). "'An important step': Tyrone Mings welcomes launch of FA's new diversity code". The Guardian.
  10. Donnelly, Mark (24 January 2020). "Meet The Squad". Durham Women FC.
  11. "Club Staff". Durham Women FC. 23 April 2019.
  12. Women's FA Cup: Durham Women 0-1 Chelsea Women BBC Sport, 17 March 2019

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