World Soccer - UK (2020-10)

(Antfer) #1

New season in Europe


These are strange times, but the
transfers of Rose Lavelle and Sam
Mewis to Manchester City still made
major waves. USA internationals
have moved from America’s NWSL to
England’s WSL before, but they have
usually either been winding down their
careers (Carli Lloyd at Manchester City,
Heather O’Reilly at Arsenal), or still

developing it (Crystal Dunn at Chelsea).
Lavelle, 25, is a star, arguably the best
player at the 2019 World Cup. At 27,
Mewis is in her prime, a starter in that
victorious USA side and a winner of
three of the last four NWSL
championships.
The pair’s switch may have been
prompted by the abbreviated NWSL
season, but they will not be back until
after next summer’s Olympics at the
earliest and the choice of destination
is significant. The WSL is fast emerging
as the main rival to the NWSL, with
Chelsea previously luring Australia
icon Sam Kerr across the Atlantic from
Chicago Red Stars. “The WSL is a great
league that keeps getting better every
year,” said Lavelle. “It is attracting a
lot of really great players.”
Part of the draw is the chance to play

at venues such as Wembley. In August,
Man. City took on Chelsea in the first
women’s Community Shield since the
WSL began, as part of a double-header
with the men’s version, Liverpool
v Arsenal – another first.
The deal proved that City, now under
former men’s player Gareth Taylor,
intend to wrest the title back from

Chelsea. They have also signed
England’s Chloe Kelly from Everton,
and brought England full-backs Lucy
Bronze (ex-City) and Alex Greenwood
(ex-United) back to Manchester
from Lyon.
Chelsea have strengthened in
midfield with Melanie Leupolz and
Jessie Fleming, Germany and Canada
internationals respectively. Arsenal, the
other member of WSL’s “Big Three”,
have added Australia’s Lydia Williams
and Steph Catley, and Switzerland duo
Noelle Maritz and Malin Gut. Among the
more notable moves elsewhere, Everton
have invested significantly to bring
in Valerie Gauvin from Montpellier,
England’s Lucy Staniforth has joined
Manchester United from Birmingham
City, and Danielle Carter seeks to revive
her injury-hit career at Reading after

11 years at Arsenal.
Another English striker on the move
isJodie Taylor, who joined Lyon on loan
from partner club OL Reign. She won
her first medal after five minutes,
coming on as a late substitute in the
delayed French Cup final victory over
Paris Saint-Germain. This was settled,
like several games between the teams


  • including the 2017 Champions
    League final – by penalties. As in 2017,
    PSG’s goalkeeper missed the crucial
    kick, this time Christiane Endler.
    While Lyon and PSG will again duel
    the French title and Wolfsburg look set
    to maintain supremacy in Germany
    despite Eintracht Frankfurt’s merger
    with FFC Frankfurt, honours in Spain
    and Italy appear less clear-cut. Real
    Madrid’s move into the women’s game
    is complete, having now assumed
    CD Tacon’s name, and they will be
    expected to challenge Barcelona
    and Atletico Madrid.
    Similarly Milan, in their third season
    since buying the licence of Brescia, will
    hope to press triple championsJuventus
    much closer after successive third-place
    finishes. Much-travelled goalscorer
    Natasha Dowie is the marquee signing
    with France’s Laura Agard, Germany’s
    Julia Simic and Denmark’s Caroline
    Rask also joining.
    ACF Fiorentina, who launched the
    new era in Italian women’s football when
    they became the first Serie A club to
    field a female team in 2015, but have
    since been eclipsed byJuventus, have
    also invested. Claudia Neto (Wolfsburg),
    Louise Quinn (Arsenal) and Tessel
    Middag (West Ham) are their notable
    foreign signings. Napoli are back in
    the top flight after winning Serie B but
    the team is not formally associated
    with the men’s club.
    With no Italian clubs in the last
    eight of the Champions League, Calcio
    Femminile Serie A began on August 23,
    a fortnight earlier than the other major
    winter leagues.


Glenn Moore

Women’s Football


World Cup winner...
Lavelle celebrates
scoring against
Thailand at the
2019 finals

New WSL arrival...
Mewis has been a
regular for North
Carolina Courage

“The WSL is a great league that keeps getting better
every year. It is attracting a lot of really great players”

Rose Lavelle

USA internationals and World Cup winners Sam Mewis


and Rose Lavelle are among the many eye-catching


transfers ahead of the 2020-21 campaign

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