Jump to content

Hope Powell

From LGBT History Project
Revision as of 12:30, 9 July 2012 by Ross Burgess (talk | contribs)

Hope Powell is an a former England international footballer. She is now coach of the England women's national football team and the Great Britain and Northern Ireland women's Olympic football team.

During her playing career, she won 66 England caps for England, scoring 35 goals. She made her England debut at the age of 16, and went on to play in the 1995 FIFA Women's World Cup, England's first World Cup appearance. She was also vice-captain of her country. At club-level, she played for Millwall Lionesses for nine years and won the FA Women's Cup three times, including a league and Cup double as captain of Croydon in 1996.

She received an OBE in 2002 and a CBE in 2003. It was speculated that Powell would become the first female manager in men's football when she was linked with the vacant managerial role at Grimsby Town FC in October 2009.[1]

Powell is lesbian. During her playing career she had embarked on heterosexual relationships with men, who were "intrigued" to discover that she was a footballer.[2]

She was ranked 5 in the Pride Power List 2011 and 48 in the World Pride Power List 2012.

References

<references>

  1. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/leagues/leaguetwo/grimsby/6405326/Englands-women-coach-Hope-Powell-plays-down-Grimsby-Town-link.html Steve Wilson, Daily Telegraph 22 October 2009. "England’s women coach Hope Powell plays down Grimsby Town link"
  2. http://www.thefreelibrary.com/ONE+OF+THESE+WOMEN+HAS+MARRIED+EIGHT+MEN%3b+ONE+PUTS+OUT+FIRES%2c+ONE...-a060643465 Busola Odulate and Olivia Buxton, The People, 22 February 1998. "One of these women has married eight men; one puts out fires, one buys blue movies, one is a chippie, one works with apes and one scores for England. Guess Who..."