Lowestoft Ladies F.C.

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Lowestoft Ladies
Full nameLowestoft Ladies Football Club
Nickname(s)The Waves
Founded1971
Dissolved1983
GroundCrown Meadow, Lowestoft

Lowestoft Ladies Football Club was a football club based in Lowestoft, Suffolk, England. One of the top clubs in the country during the late 1970s and early 1980s, they won the WFA Cup in 1981–82, but folded less than a year later after the league they played in was discontinued. Nicknamed 'The Waves',[1] the club played at Lowestoft Town's Crown Meadow ground.[2]

History

During Lowestoft's participation in It's a Knockout in 1970, competitors from the town's team began playing football together.[1] The female players asked the team's organiser Geoff Frost to form a women's football team, which was established the following year.[1] Under Frost and later Joe Annis, the club won the East Anglian League three seasons in a row, before moving up to the South East of England League.[1] Julia Manning became the club's first player to be called up to the England squad in 1972.[3]

Lowestoft became one of the top teams in the country, featuring several current or future England internationals, including

Cleveland Spartans 2–0 at Loftus Road with goals from Curl and Poppy.[1]

However, shortly after the club won the cup, the South East Regional League folded.[1] After the club were rejected by five other leagues due to Lowestoft's location as the most easterly point of England, they were offered a place back in the East Anglian League but turned it down due to the difference in standard with their potential opposition. Most of the first team players subsequently left the club and in their first competitive match in the 1982–83 WFA Cup, fielded reserves and youth players as young as 12,[1] losing 7–0. The club soon folded, less than twelve months after winning the cup.[1] Several of the club's former players would go on to feature in Norwich Ladies' 1985–86 WFA Cup winning side, which was managed by Maureen Martin.

A new Lowestoft Ladies club was established in 1995 but ceased to exist the following year. Another reincarnation as Lowestoft Town Ladies was founded in 2005, but folded in 2017 due to lack of players.[7]

Honours

  • WFA Cup
    • Winners 1981–82
  • East Anglian League
  • South East of England League

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Taking the Lowe road", When Saturday Comes, November 2021, pp28–29
  2. ^ a b Lowestoft Ladies' incredible FA Cup final triumph remembered in new book The Lowestoft Journal, 6 October 2021
  3. ^ a b c Football She Wrote, pp83–94
  4. ^ Debbie Bampton National Football Museum
  5. ^ Where are they now? Carl Poppy Lowestoft Town F.C.
  6. ^ The forgotten story of women’s football pioneer Maureen Martin Athletique, 20 July 2021
  7. ^ Chris Slegg, Patricia Gregory (2021) A History of the Women's FA Cup Final p71