
No TST glory for Wrexham Red Dragons in North Carolina
Despite goals from Marc Albrighton and Aaron James, Wrexham lost out 6-2.
Wrexham had lost their final group game 3-1 to Pat McAfee's CONCAFA SC. The Dragons, who had beaten Como and Despemendidos in their previous games to make sure of a top-two group finish, had ex-Reds striker Jake Hyde again on the scoresheet.
Wrexham Red Dragons' women's side lost all three of their group encounters.
Against Ultrain FC, they got off to a flying start only to suffer in Target Score Time as the opposition staged a stunning comeback to win 5-4.
In the women's opener, amid extremely heavy rain at Wakemed Soccer Park, former Canada international Lindsay Agnew put Wrexham ahead before Nicole Baxter and Havana Solaun (2) scored to ensure Wrexham Red Dragons entered Target Score Time with a healthy lead.
Needing one goal to win, while Ultrain had to hit five – with one player removed from each team every three minutes – but Wrexham couldn't see it out as the opposition sneaked a 5-4 victory.
Drunken Monkeys prevailed 5-0 in the next match-up and Wrexham ended their programme with a 6-3 loss to Kansas City II.

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BBC News
7 hours ago
- BBC News
Women's football in Wales - from a 50-year ban to Euro 2025
Wales are days away from playing at their first major tournament - the Women's Euro 2025. Thousands of fans have flown out to Switzerland to rally around them as they play their opening game against the Netherlands on Saturday. But their road to success is perhaps even more impressive when you widen the lens and look back at the women whose shoulders the players stand upon, and what they went through to get football in Wales dates to the late 19th Century before momentum picked up during World War One - but an almost 50-year ban followed, relegating its players to the sidelines. Formed in 1895, the touring British Ladies Football Club first made its mark in Wales as one of the earliest women's teams in the world. Based in London, they visited Wales several times, drawing in large crowds and interest in the sport. Enthusiasm grew during the World War One as women stepped into jobs typically carried out by men and began forming football teams to compete against one matches, often staged to raise money for the war effort, were played at Wrexham's Racecourse Ground. One of the most notable matches was that of the munition factory team Dick, Kerr Ladies FC from Preston, who brought in a crowd of 53,000 to Everton's Goodison Park on Boxing Day in 1920. Momentum soon halted in 1922 when the Football Association of Wales (FAW) imposed a ban on women's football, prohibiting matches from being played at any FAW-affiliated followed the lead of the English Football Association, which claimed the game was "quite unsuitable for females and ought not to be encouraged". But some have suspected the reason to be discomfort among the male administrators at how quickly the sport was gaining football was pushed to the sidelines for decades, with the ban remaining in place in Wales until 1970. Wales' very first game at association level was not until 1973, against Ireland. Former player Michele Adams was just 15 when she made her debut at the match, and recalled the team borrowing a kit from the Swansea men's team. "They used to play in red in those days," she said. "It was absolutely pelting it down... as the pitch got heavier and the rain came down, the kit just grew on us."Michele recalled having their own kit by the next game against England, which they received sponsorship for. "Travel was adhoc, we spent three days on a bus to Italy for one match," she said. "It was the enthusiasm of the coach and the manager at the time which determined how well we did."Michele went on to play for Wales for 23 years and earned 28 caps. She was involved in lobbying for recognition of the women's game in Wales alongside fellow former internationals Karen Jones and Laura McAllister, which led to the first official Wales women's team affiliated with the FAW being introduced in 1993. Their first qualifying match against Switzerland for Euro 1995 was played at Cwmbran Stadium, and attracted a crowd of just 345. Former Wales international Kathryn Morgan, 49, said she was rejected from every boys club in Merthyr and the very first time she played an 11-a-side game was at the age of was chosen to play for Wales at the age of 18, something she said she was beyond proud of, but looking back described it as "completely amateur"."We had the minimum. At the start you don't really care about that, but we dealt with everything else." "You tell your parents I will be rich and famous, I will buy you a mansion. They are still in the same terraced house, still waiting," she laughed. Morgan said as time went on the team started comparing their investment to other national teams like Scotland, who despite being the same size had more funding. "We started pestering the FAW, asking questions, why can't we have that... but we were swiftly told that you need to be grateful and there is no room, really, for giving your opinion." "Some people unfortunately lost their place in the national team because of that," Morgan added. "I felt that at that time, if they only invested in the players they had, we would now be 10 years on than where we are now. "The more investment we've had, the reality is that is what gets us over the line. Investment creates success, and that's a story in itself." Former Wales captain Laura McAllister has been a driving force in helping shape women's football in Wales. In 2023 she made history as the first Welsh person elected to the Uefa executive committee and subsequently became the first and only female her success, she recalled her interest in football being seen as unusual growing up as "you were regarded as an anomaly in the 80s and 90s"."Like lots of girls in my generation, you were seen as an oddity," she said. There were no female footballers in the limelight when she was growing up, McAllister added, so all of her idols were Cardiff city players on the men's team."I was part of a football family, my grandfather was a Cardiff City fan, so it was normal to me, I remember going to games as just a toddler."Growing up in Bridgend, McAllister said she played football with boys as she was a good player, but she believes it wouldn't have been the case for those who weren't considered good the age of 12 she stopped playing formally as there just weren't clubs for girls, an issue which she says persists today. While women's football is a much different picture today, McAllister believes women are still playing catch up for the ban imposed over a century ago."No-one could be happier than me to see Wales on the global stage, but let's not think battles are over, there is more work to do. "Qualification doesn't fix the nationwide deficit," she said. "It doesn't make up for the lack of investment and abandonment." Wales are the lowest ranked team in the Women's Euro 2025, but McAllister says women's football would be a very different place if the ban was never enforced. "You just have to look at Scandinavian countries and their success, where they have embraced women players as the norm."No cultural differences, no cultural rejection or opposition to them playing. "Women still don't have equality in the game. The sign of success will be when an average girl or woman can have access to grassroots football like the average boy or man."We have just as much to give as men." There is no taking away from the magnitude of Wales' historic Euro 2025 qualification. But to solidify equality in women's football over the next 50 years, it seems there is plenty more to be done.


Daily Mirror
9 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Diogo Jota team-mates break down in tears during first match after tragic death
Ruben Neves and Joao Cancelo both remained team-mates of the Liverpool star with the Portugal national team, with Al-Hilal midfielder Neves a close friend having grown together with Jota in England at former club Wolves Ruben Neves and Joao Cancelo broke down in tears as tributes were paid at the FIFA Club World Cup to Diogo Jota and his younger brother Andre Silva, following their tragic deaths. Neves and Cancelo, both long-time friends and international team-mates of the Liverpool star who sadly died on Thursday following a car crash in Spain, were playing their first match since news broke of the pair's passing. But as a moment's silence was held in Orlando Florida on Friday night, both Portuguese internationals appeared devastated. Both ex-Wolves captain Neves and former Manchester City defender Cancelo had to be comforted by team-mates. After the tribute, a sobbing Neves had his face in his hands while Cancelo sank down on his haunches and wiped away tears as he tried to prepare to face Brazilian side Fluminense. The pair had both elected to play for their club, Al Hilal, in Friday's quarter-final. Head coach Simone Inzaghi had given the pair the option to miss the game if they were not feeling up to it. Both decided to play, with Neves posting a tribute on social media to Jota just an hour before kickoff. The two players had been team-mates and friends since 2016, breaking through together at Porto, before joining Wolves in the same summer and firing the Black Country side from the second tier into Europe. In an emotional message, Neves wrote: 'Bro, wherever you are, I know you'll read this, we've never been this sloppy and maybe now I regret it a little, but you know what you mean to me as much as I know what I mean to you. 'More than a friendship, we're family, and we won't stop being that just because you've decided to sign a contract a little further away from us. When I go to the national team, you will continue to be by my side at the dinner table, on the bus, on the plane... you will always be there with me, as usual. 'Let's keep laughing, making plans, sharing our life with each other. I'm going to make sure you're always present and I'll make sure that your loved ones never lack anything while you're there, far away but thinking of us, waiting for us. 'Life has brought us together and now it can't tear us apart. We've achieved some great things together, we still have a lot to go, I know we can. From today on, you will enter the field with me and we will follow our path together, on the stage where we met. 'Diogoal, you are my favourite lemonade!! Amo-te.' Neves' post came after he had initially posted on Thursday: 'They say we only lose people when we forget them. I will never forget you.' The world of football has been in mourning following the death of Jota and his younger brother on Thursday. Hundreds gathered at a wake in Portugal on Friday morning, ahead of the brothers' funeral at the Igreja Matriz de Gondomar in Sao Cosme at 10am on Saturday. Initially held in private for family it was later opened up to the public. Manchester City's Bernardo Silva and Manchester United's Diogo Dalot were both among those to pay tribute, along with a Liverpool contingent led by sporting director Richard Hughes and one of Jota's best friends in football, another ex-Wolves and Portugal star, Joao Moutinho.

Leader Live
11 hours ago
- Leader Live
Welcome to Wrexham spinoff 'Necaxa' coming out soon
'Necaxa' will be a spinoff off the hugely-popular FX Networks show and will follow the trio's exploits of being a part of the ownership group who are looking to turn the fortunes of Mexican side Club Necaxa around. According to FX's website, the series will focus on 'Eva Longoria setting out to reignite the soul of one of Mexico's oldest and most storied football clubs, Club Necaxa — enlisting the help of fellow owners Rob McElhenney and Ryan Reynolds, fresh off their headline-making revival of Wrexham AFC." It adds; 'Necaxa is a gripping bilingual docuseries chronicling a turbulent, transformational time marked by staff shake-ups, career-defining injuries and the relentless grit of a football team determined to defy expectations and deliver hope to its city of Aguascalientes, Mexico. 'Once a powerhouse in Mexican football, Club Necaxa has spent decades navigating instability including relocations, relegation battles and near-constant reinvention. "Though its legacy has flickered in and out of the national spotlight, a passionate core of diehard supporters continues to believe, clinging to the dream that their beloved 'Rayos' will one day rise again.' A premiere date of August 7 has been announced for American viewers via Hulu. Read more A release date for viewers in the UK should follow soon after on Disney Plus, same as it did for Welcome to Wrexham. Desperate Housewives star Eva Longoria was spotted at a Wrexham match with Rob and Ryan last August. The trio watched on as the Reds returned to EFL League One for the first time in 19 years and beat Wycombe Wanderers 3-2. All three of them currently own a stake in Club Necaxa, which people will no doubt fall in love with the way they did with Wrexham.