2018–19 Manchester United W.F.C. season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Manchester United Women 2018–19 football season

The 2018–19 season was Manchester United Women’s inaugural season following the club’s successful application to join the newly-formed FA Women’s Championship[1] after a league restructuring.[2] The club also competed in the FA Cup and League Cup. The team played their home games at Leigh Sports Village, while the training ground at The Cliff undergoes redevelopment.

Pre-season[edit]

In March 2018, Manchester United announced their intentions to enter a women’s team into the second tier of the 2018–19 season.[3] Their application was confirmed in May and they were announced as one of four new teams to enter the division alongside Charlton Athletic, Leicester City and Lewes F.C.[1]

On 8 June 2018, former England international Casey Stoney was announced as head coach.[4] The full 21-player squad was revealed in July[5] and included the return of Katie Zelem, Emily Ramsey, Naomi Hartley, Fran Bentley, Millie Turner, Kirsty Hanson and Ella Toone who were all previously part of the club’s Girls’ Regional Talent Club and Centre of Excellence.

United’s first game was a behind-closed-doors friendly against Liverpool on 15 July. The game had to be abandoned after goalkeeper Siobhan Chamberlain was taken to hospital with a suspected serious neck injury which was later confirmed not as serious as first thought.[6]

FA Women’s Championship[edit]

Matches[edit]

On 1 August 2018, the FA Women’s Championship announced the fixtures for the 2018–19 season.[7] The team confirmed promotion to the FA WSL on 17 April 2019 after victory over Aston Villa with three games to spare. Three days later, they clinched the Championship title with a win at home to Crystal Palace.

Date Opponents H / A Result
F–A
Scorers Attendance League
position
9 September 2018 Aston Villa A 12–0 James (2) 10′, 23′, Sigsworth (5) 25′, 33′, 35′, 49′, 61′ Zelem 28′ (pen.), Hanson (2) 54′, 59′, Green 66′, Toone 68′ 1,165 1st
20 September 2018 Sheffield United H 3–0 Zelem 12′ (pen.), Hanson 40′, Arnot 64′ 2,003 1st
23 September 2018 London Bees A 5–0 Green (2) 17′, 55′, James 27′, M.Turner 44′, Toone 78′ 642 1st
30 September 2018 Durham H 0–0 2,244 1st
14 October 2018 Charlton Athletic H 3–0 Zelem 16′, Sigsworth 64′, Arnot 75′ 2,349 1st
28 October 2018 Leicester City A Postponed following the Leicester City F.C. helicopter crash the previous day
4 November 2018 Tottenham Hotspur H 4–1 James 10′, Sigsworth (2) 19′, 41′, Devlin 81′ 2,367 2nd
18 November 2018 Crystal Palace A 5–0 Arnot (2) 17′, 55′, Green (2) 59′, 83′, Greenwood 75′ (pen.) 975 2nd
25 November 2018 Millwall Lionesses H 8–0 James 16′, Green (3) 32′, 38′, 49′, Zelem 36′, Toone 58′, Sigsworth 71′, Greenwood 79′ (pen.) N/A 1st
2 December 2018 Lewes A 2–0 Green 48′, Toone 81′ 1,958 1st
9 December 2018 Durham A 1–3 Toone 43′ 912 1st
6 January 2019 London Bees H 9–0 Devlin (2) 2′, 56′, Toone (2) 29′, 66′, Arnot 40′, Green 42′, James (2) 68′, 72′, Zelem 78′ 1,889 1st
13 January 2019 Charlton Athletic A Match abandoned at 1–0 on medical grounds following injury to Kerr
10 February 2019 Aston Villa H Rescheduled due to Aston Villa’s FA Cup commitments
13 February 2019 Leicester City A 7–0 Toone (4) 15′, 17′, 66′ (pen.), 88′, Hanson 52′, Greenwood 54′, Johnston 85′ (o.g.) 824 2nd
20 February 2019 Sheffield United A 4–0 Zelem 1′, James 27′, Toone 41′ (pen.), Green 51′ 1,008 2nd
10 March 2019 Leicester City H 6–1 Green 17′, James 22′, Hanson 44′, Toone 48′, Sigsworth (2) 67′, 84′ 1,554 2nd
24 March 2019 Charlton Athletic A 2–1 Zelem 57′ (pen.), Sigsworth 63′ 732 1st
31 March 2019 Tottenham Hotspur A 5–1 Zelem (2) 3′, 10′ (pen.) Green 46′, Sigsworth 81′, Galton 87′ 1,607 1st
17 April 2019 Aston Villa H 5–0 M. Turner 6′, Greenwood 21′ (pen.), Sigsworth 35′, Toone 49′, Devlin 73′ 1,401 1st
20 April 2019 Crystal Palace H 7–0 James (4) 9′, 83′, 85′, 90′, Arnot 33′, Galton 35′, Sigsworth 46′ 2,112 1st
28 April 2019 Millwall Lionesses A 5–0 Zelem 7′ (pen.), A. Turner 12′, Devlin 23′, Harris 29′ (pen.), Sigsworth 77′ 1,920 1st
11 May 2019 Lewes H 5–0 James 12′, Sigsworth 34′, Galton 68′, Palmer 75′, A. Turner 79′ 3,702 1st

League table[edit]

Source: FA WSL
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Number of goals scored
(C) Champion; (P) Promoted
Notes:
  1. ^ Dependent on obtaining a licence.

Women’s FA Cup[edit]

Manchester United entered the Women’s FA Cup in the fourth round with the rest of the top two tiers and were drawn against WSL side Brighton & Hove Albion.[8] Lauren James’ brace earned United a 2–0 win[9] to put them in the draw for the fifth round. They were drawn against fellow Championship side London Bees who United had already scored 14 goals against across their two league meetings. United progressed to the quarter-finals with a 3–0 win, held at back-up venue Ewen Fields,[10] and were drawn against Reading to set up the second cup meeting between the two teams after Reading triumphed in the WSL Cup Group Stage earlier in the season. The WSL side triumphed for a second time, taking United to extra-time after a goalless 90 minutes before eventually winning 3–2 with Rakel Hönnudóttir’s late winner coming in the 120+2 minute.[11]

FA Women’s League Cup[edit]

Group stage[edit]

Manchester United were entered into Group Two North for the 2018–19 FA WSL Cup alongside WSL sides Liverpool, Everton and Reading and fellow Championship side Durham.[12] They played two games at home and two away, winning three including both away ties to Merseyside teams.

Source: thefa.com
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Number of goals scored

Knockout phase[edit]

The draw for the quarter-final was made on 18 December, with Manchester United the only team from outside of the FA WSL to qualify from the group stage. They were drawn against West Ham United who had finished second in Group Two South behind defending champions Arsenal.[13] After beating West Ham 2–0, United progressed to the semi-finals and were drawn against Arsenal. The tie was televised nationally on BT Sport as Arsenal won 2–1 to progress to their seventh final in eight years.

Squad statistics[edit]

Numbers in brackets denote appearances as substitute.
Key to positions: GK – Goalkeeper; DF – Defender; MF – Midfielder; FW – Forward

Transfers[edit]

In[edit]

Loans out[edit]

References[edit]

External links[edit]

  • Official website (in Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Japanese, Korean, and Spanish)