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Women FA Cup pioneer Lesley Lloyd hails progress

 

The Women’s FA Cup final as it is today would have seemed a “dream” to the Southampton players who were the competition’s first winners 50 years ago, the team’s captain Lesley Lloyd has said.

Lloyd has spoken of her pride that “we were the pioneers that started it all” ahead of Arsenal taking on Chelsea in Sunday’s Wembley showpiece, the attendance for which has been over 40,000 in recent years.

The former midfielder, 74, skippered the Saints to a 4-1 victory over Scottish side Stewarton Thistle in the inaugural final at Crystal Palace National Sports Centre in May 1971.

It came as the Football Association lifted its ban on the women’s game that was imposed, come Sunday, exactly 100 years ago.

Asked what she and her team-mates would have thought in 1971 if told what the match would be like 50 years later, and the general progress women’s football in the country would have made by then, Lloyd said: “We would have thought it was a dream.

Arsenal face Chelsea in the 2020/21 Women’s FA Cup final on Sunday

“We’d all love to be 50 years younger. I’d love to have played in the era today. I’m proud we were the pioneers that started it all really, certainly with the women’s cup final.”

Looking back to the 1971 final, Lloyd recalls the build-up on the day included her and team-mates going for coffee and cake, then eating cheese and pickle sandwiches outside the venue, and that “when we saw the actual playing surface, the grass was so long  that was my first thought”.

She remembers as the match got under way, in front of what she estimates was 1,500 to 2,000 people, her “knees were knocking” with nerves. At its conclusion, after Pat Davies’ hat-trick had secured victory for Norman Holloway’s team, they were “overjoyed  I don’t think we knew what to do with ourselves!”

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Lloyd added: “I was presented with the cup, picked it up, and it was great. The people in the stand were clapping. For us 50 years ago, that was our Wembley.”

The women’s game in England has made great strides in the half-century that has followed, and the FA Cup final has been played at Wembley since 2015.

 

 

 

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