Tom Garry at Hayes Lane, Bromley 

London City Lionesses and Newcastle embark on ‘beautiful’ journey

The Women’s Championship sides, who are fighting hard to realise broader ambitions, met on the opening weekend of the season
  
  

Newcastle’s Elysia Boddy (right) controls the ball as she is pursued by Kosovare Asllani
Newcastle’s Elysia Boddy controls the ball as she is pursued by Kosovare Asllani, the Lionesses’ marquee summer signing. Photograph: Michelle Mercer/Newcastle United/Getty Images

Just 18 hours before kick‑off in south London, the London City Lionesses’ owner, Michele Kang, was at Audi Field in Washington DC celebrating a 96th-minute winner for another of the clubs she owns, Washington Spirit, in the National Women’s Soccer League. But an owner flying in via a private jet was just the first of a host of new-era elements to this rather star-studded start to the Women’s Championship season.

Kang, who watched yesterday’s opening 1-1 draw at home against Newcastle United in the company of several senior figures in women’s football, including the Women’s Professional Leagues Limited’s chief executive, Nikki Doucet, has injected cash into this relatively little-known club and has started work on a new elite-level training facility in Kent, as well as a plethora of high-quality transfers. She has two simultaneous visions: to try ultimately to win the WSL and also prove that women’s sport is not charity but a thriving business.

Kang’s new recruits – coupled with the summer additions made by an equally ambitious Newcastle side after their second successive promotion, meant there were a combined 468 senior international caps across the two starting sides, along with a level of experience and quality on show that made for an entertaining start to the campaign.

In the north terrace at Hayes Lane, providing a rather sweet juxtaposition to the battles playing out before them with World Cup stars and a Euro 2022-winning squad member in Demi Stokes, making her Newcastle debut at left‑back, one family had brought along their two pet sausage dogs, which yapped along for much of the game. That’s not to say, though, that the turnout resembled a “one man and his dog” scene. On the contrary, the attendance of 1,781 was a record for a league fixture for London City Lionesses. That was helped by the large travelling contingent from the north-east, who provided a good atmosphere.

There were many elements to the afternoon in the September sun that were unique to a women’s football event. Foudys, a bespoke women’s football kit seller named after the former USA midfielder Julie Foudy, was running a pop-up shop in the bar area, while a half-time dance show also provided additional entertainment for fans. But, on the field, this was a serious, hard-fought contest between teams hoping to be in the league’s sole promotion spot by May.

The newly visitors impressed early on and went ahead through the Jamaica forward Shania Hayles’s close-range finish, but it was cancelled out by a classy finish from London City Lionesse’s’ marquee summer signing, the 188‑time capped Sweden forward Kosovare Asllani. Formerly of Real Madrid, she said after the game: “She [Kang] will give us everything we need to create a successful team. That’s the coolest part, that it’s a woman investing. I want to help her achieve this dream that will be successful.”

In their latest bid to help get there, the club signed Isobel Goodwin from Sheffield United for an undisclosed fee on Saturday. She scored 15 goals in 19 league appearances last season. The 21-year-old striker is moving home, out of her parents’ house, for the first time to make this life‑changing move south.

Speaking to the Guardian before the match, Goodwin said: “I’m absolutely buzzing to finally get this over the line. As soon as I spoke to them, I wanted to come here. Her [Kang’s] plans are brilliant and it’s something I want to be involved in. I want to score more goals – coming to this club is the best club to do that.”

Goodwin made her debut in the second half and showed good glimpses of her strength, athleticism and movement. Both teams had to settle for a point in the end and Newcastle’s head coach, Becky Langley, said: “I thought the level was high, the intensity from both teams, the speed in-behind from both teams was a real threat. It’s fantastic to see this level of investment in the Championship and hopefully other clubs follow suit.”

London City’s new head coach, Jocelyn Prêcheur – hired from Paris Saint-Germain – said: “As I told my players, it’s not a new chapter, it’s a new book we are writing. We have a history to create. It was the first page of the new story. I hope the journey will be long and beautiful.”

 

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