GB
  
You are currently viewing the United Kingdom version of the site.
Would you like to switch to your local site?
12 MIN READ TIME

WOMANS RISE

RESPECT

That’s what women’s football demands more than anything. Its status has grown exponentially during FourFourTwo’s lifetime, but finally the long and arduous battle for recognition is starting to pay dividends

On a Sunday afternoon in April 1994, just 1,674 hardy souls watched Doncaster Belles defeat Knowsley United in the FA Women’s Cup final at Scunthorpe’s Glanford Park. Fast forward to May 2024, and 76,082 packed into Wembley as Manchester United beat Tottenham in the showpiece three decades on.

It’s hard to think of any area of football that’s changed as immeasurably as the women’s game since FourFourTwo launched 30 years ago. It was almost an entirely amateur world sport. The World Cup was just three years old and even then, FIFA didn’t allow it to be called as such – instead, 1991’s maiden event bore the following name: 1st FIFA World Championship for Women’s Football for the M&M’s Cup. Catchy.

Today, there are multiple professional leagues across the world, with professional teams in England as low as the third tier of the game. International and domestic matches regularly draw crowds of more than 50,000. The pace of change has at times been glacial, and there’s still a long way to go to overcome the harm caused by the bans that kneecapped the game’s growth in the 20th century – between 1921 and 1971, the FA banned women’s football from all affiliated grounds, relegating the sport to park pitches. Registered referees were prevented from officiating matches.

Progress since has been heartening. The 1990s brought a seismic shift, as national governing bodies began to take back control of women’s football. As bans were initially lifted across the world – Germany, France and Brazil all imposed similar directives – independent organisations had governed the women’s game. In England, that was the Women’s Football Association, who in 1991 began a 24-team national league. However, two years later they voted to be taken over by the Football Association – although the Women’s FA Cup had commenced in the 1970s, the 1994 final was the first to be fully organised by the FA.

Despite this, the women’s game was not immediately afforded a new level of respect and resources. Some who’d been part of the defunct WFA felt that women’s football was deprioritised, given all of the other aspects of the game that the FA was dealing with.

Unlock this article and much more with
You can enjoy:
Enjoy this edition in full
Instant access to 600+ titles
Thousands of back issues
No contract or commitment
Try for 99p
SUBSCRIBE NOW
30 day trial, then just £9.99 / month. Cancel anytime. New subscribers only.


Learn more
Pocketmags Plus
Pocketmags Plus

This article is from...


View Issues
FourFourTwo
November 2024
VIEW IN STORE

Other Articles in this Issue


WELCOME
WELCOME
Back in 1994, teams from the north west
YOU ASK
PAUL GASCOIGNE
“God, the feeling when I scored against Scotland at Euro 96 was magnificent. It was pure instinct – you just can’t teach kids that”
UPFRONT
UPFRONT
Playing off the last defender, it’s the big-manlittle-man partnership of football and funnies
GAMES THAT CHAnGED MY LIFE
ISSUE 334 APRIL 2022 “MADRID HADN’T BEEN
JULES BREACH
OPINION
THE ULTIMATE QUIZ
Test your knowledge of the past three decades of football with this selection of teasers, one for every year...
MY FOOTBALL
EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW
MEAN WHILE In…
...Tunbridge Wells, subbuteo came home – only for the Italians to whisk it away again
THE DEBATE
Is football better now than it was in 1994?
Gareth ’Gangsta’ Southgate
ASK A SILLY QUESTION
FEATURES
HAPPY 30TH ANNIVERSARY, FourFourTwo
Three decades ago when FFT launched, no one imagined it would lead to an all-nighter with Delia Smith, being abducted by an Israeli taxi driver and sending Bobby Robson bottles of HP Sauce through the post. We speak to every previous editor, to hear the full story of the ‘quite remarkable’ football magazine...
OVER THE TOP WITH BRIAN CLOUGH
The legendary former Derby and Nottingham Forest manager was a columnist for FourFourTwo from 2001 until his death in 2004 at the age of 69 – not all of his forecasts came true, though he was never short of an opinion…
EL TEL THE MAN WHO HELPED TO LAUNCH
Terry Venables was the cover star for FFT’s launch issue in 1994 – a year after his death, former players pay tribute to one of the finest managers Britain has ever produced
BECKS TO THE FUTURE
OK, we didn’t exactly nail how David Beckham would look in 2020, so let’s go again with the current crop of stars
FINDING DIEGO
A little over a year before his untimely death at the age of 60, Diego Maradona was managing Mexican second-tier side Dorados de Sinaloa – FourFourTwo went deep into drug cartel country to track him down
THY SAID WHAT?! THY SAID WHAT?!
FourFourTwo have interviewed pretty much everyone in football over the past 30 years, leading to a range of eye-catching quotes – including revelations about the time Diego Maradona tried to lure a legend to Napoli...
30 OF OUR BEST FRONT COVERS
FourFourTwo’s long-serving art director picks out his favourites, via fake refs, ponytails and a man holding an axe
HOW THE 4-4-2 BECAME BRITISH FOOTBALL’S MOST ICONIC FORMATION
A system of playing inspired the name for this very magazine – on these shores, for numerous reasons, it’s football heritage
WHY 1999 WAS THE FINEST MOMENT FOR 4-4-2… AND SIR ALEX FERGUSON
Manchester United swept to a famous Treble thanks to the management skills of their legendary boss – and a formation that suited them perfectly
WHY MESSI’S ARGENTINA HAD TO GET ‘WORSE’ TO CONQUER WORLD
The Albiceleste didn’t have their most talented squad in 2022, and their star wasn’t at his absolute peak – but 4-4-2 helped them to win anyway…
MY PERFECT XI ERIC CANTONA
The Premier League legend picks an all-star side of players who have inspired him
AROUND THE GROUNDS
JACK BUTLAND
EFL • NON-LEAGUE • SCOTLAND
GULLS GALORE
FFT studied Torquay’s empty trophy cabinet 30 years ago – they’re still gongless but with renewed hope at last
INVERNESS CALEDONIAN THISTLE
Sandy Sutherland from ICT pod The Wyness Shuffle relives the year from hell – but also Terry Butcher’s magic
AND THE WINNER IS…
FFT’s EFL Top 50 began in 2005 – future stars have triumphed, but Gareth Bale was snubbed for Jason Koumas
THE PLAYERS LOUNGE
GETTING SHIRTY
Back in 2008, FFT made a long overdue move into the world of fashion... as the main shirt sponsor of third-tier Swindon...
“I’M PROUD TO BE THE FIRST AFRICAn In THE PREMIER LEAGUE – BUT LOOK WHO CAME LATER”
FFT chats to the three Boy’s A Bit Special stars of Issue 1: first, a humble hotshot on rejecting Arsenal and being ‘Nuddy’
“HODDLE HAD BEEN PLAYING FOR MONACO UNDER WENGER, SO WE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT WHEN HE JOINED SWINDON – HE WAS LIGHT-YEARS AHEAD!”
The tireless winger opens up on playing in his dad’s shadow and making the wrong kind of headlines at Sunderland...
“THE PLAYERS DIDN’T SEE KEVIN KEEGAN’S ‘MELTDOWN’ AS ANYTHING NEGATIVE. WE LOVED HIM FOR HIS PASSION”
The Geordie recalls King Kev’s rant, shares his love for Ossie Ardiles and reveals what it’s like to cross the Tyne-Wear divide
THE MIXER
THE BEST OF FOOTBALL
KIT • FASHION • ART DESIGN • TECH
REQUIRED READING
COLES REPEAT TAPE TRACK TOP £70 admiralsports.com
Chat
X
Pocketmags Support