Liverpool Feds W.F.C.

Coordinates: 53°22′04.12″N 2°56′19.71″W / 53.3678111°N 2.9388083°W / 53.3678111; -2.9388083
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Liverpool Feds W.F.C.
Full nameLiverpool Feds Women's Football Club
Nickname(s)Feds
Founded1991
GroundJericho Lane Football Hub, Liverpool
ChairmanBill Stewart
ManagerLeanne Duffy
LeagueFA Women's National League North
2022–23FA Women's National League North, 9th of 12
WebsiteClub website

Liverpool Feds Women's Football Club is an English women's association football club based in Liverpool, Merseyside. The first team currently plays in the FA Women's National League North and during the 2019–20 season the reserve team play in North West Women's Regional Football League Division One South. They play their home games at the Jericho Lane Football Hub in Aigburth area of Liverpool.

History[edit]

The club were formed in 1991 and originated from the Liverpool Institute of Higher Education (now known as Liverpool Hope University) where they entered the North West Women's Regional Football League (NWWRFL). The name Feds originates from the Liverpool Institute of Higher Education College origins where the sports teams played as a Federation of the St Katherine's and Christ Notre Dame Colleges.[1] In 1993 a reserve team was added, who during the 2019–20 season are playing in the NWWRFL, and in 1994 a girls youth section was created. They play their football in the Liverpool County FA Girls Leagues. A Development Squad and an under-18s team followed shortly afterwards.[2]

The first team won promotion from the NWWRFL into the now-defunct Northern Combination Women's Football League in 2009 when they won the 2008–09 Premier Division title without losing a single game. They ended the campaign with a record of nineteen wins and three draws from twenty-two games played.[3] They remained in the Northern Combination until 2014 when a major restructuring of the women's football pyramid saw the Combination leagues scrapped and the teams playing at that level moved into the new FA Women's Premier League (now known as the FA Women's National League) Division One, which was divided into four regional sections.[4]

In the summer of 2015 Liverpool Feds linked up with the men's club Marshalls F.C. and changed their name to Liverpool Marshall Feds. This alliance lasted for three years, but in 2018 the women's club opted to break away and the word Marshall was dropped from the name of the club, reverting to their original name.[1]

Ground[edit]

Liverpool Feds play their home games at the Jericho Lane Football Hub in Aigburth, having moved there from their previous home at the I M Marsh Campus of Liverpool John Moores University in 2018.[5] The Jericho Lane site, which they share with South Liverpool F.C., was jointly developed by Liverpool City Council, the Liverpool County Football Association and The Football Association[6]

53°22′04.12″N 2°56′19.71″W / 53.3678111°N 2.9388083°W / 53.3678111; -2.9388083

Current squad[edit]

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 Northern Ireland NIR Rachel Norney
2 DF England ENG Chelsey Jukes
3 DF England ENG Rosie Kinvig-Wardale
4 MF England ENG Natalie Clark
5 MF England ENG Chantelle Thompson (captain)
7 DF England ENG Ellie Fletcher
8 MF England ENG Amy Seagraves
9 FW England ENG Beth Donoghue
10 MF England ENG Mia Parry
11 DF England ENG Abby Pope
13 MF England ENG Katie Anderson
No. Pos. Nation Player
14 FW England ENG Aleesha Collins
15 MF England ENG Holly Deering
16 FW England ENG Paige Cole
17 MF Gibraltar GIB Tiffany Viagas
18 DF England ENG Emma Johnson
19 DF England ENG Lucy Walsh
21 DF Wales WAL Seren Carrington
22 DF Wales WAL Amy Richardson
23 DF England ENG Bex Guy
25 GK England ENG Freya Heap

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Slegg, Chris; Garry, Tom (2019). Women's Football Yearbook 2019/20. Legends Publishing. pp. 277–279. ISBN 978-1906796327.
  2. ^ "About Us". Liverpool Feds WFC. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
  3. ^ "North West Womens Regional League 2008-2009". Full Time. The Football Association. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
  4. ^ "AN INTRODUCTION TO THE FA WOMEN'S PREMIER LEAGUE". The Football Association. 13 August 2014. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
  5. ^ Slegg, Chris; Garry, Tom (2018). Women's Football Yearbook 2018/19. Legends Publishing. pp. 277–279. ISBN 978-1906796310.
  6. ^ "The Jericho Lane Sports Hub". South Liverpool Football Club. Retrieved 3 March 2020.

External links[edit]