The most difficult dilemma facing English women’s football can best be illustrated by the contrasting metaphors favoured by its top executives.
Baroness Sue Campbell, the Football Association’s director of women’s football, often draws on anatomy when warning of a division between the Women’s Super League’s richest and most resourceful clubs and those less privileged, in July stating: “The important thing is we don’t let the head leave the body. If the head leaves the body then there is no integrity to the football pyramid.” Read More
Not since the swimmer Lia Thomas has a college athlete or team put the fiercely…
UConn women’s basketball coach Geno Auriemma passed Tara VanDerveer as college basketball’s all-time winningest coach…
Five years ago, Lindsey Vonn retired from ski racing, largely because her aching right knee,…
As confetti fell and Frank Sinatra’s “New York, New York” blared through the arena, the…
Susie Maxwell Berning, a three-time champion of the United States Women’s Open golf tournament who…
Once a dominant figure in girls’ and women’s soccer, Rory Dames in recent years has…