The first female manager in men’s English professional football oversaw a 1-1 draw in a friendly at non-league Melksham
“Go Hannah Go!” reads the giant cardboard sign that greets Hannah Dingley as she heads down the tunnel a touch embarrassed an hour before kick-off at the Oakfield Stadium, home to eighth-tier Melksham Town. It is an unlikely spot for a slice of footballing history to be made but it is here, at the end of a new-build housing estate in this Wiltshire town familiar with life as a thoroughfare, where Dingley became the first female to lead a men’s team in the professional English game. On the night Forest Green Rovers drew 1-1 but it is an evening when the score feels rather secondary.
A beefy but warm security guard, who got the call at 2.30pm, stands at the gate of the turnstiles. “It’s all gone a bit Pete Tong,” he says. Such is the interest, there is personal security for Dingley too. It is 5.30pm and Alfie Sparks, Forest Green’s first-team analyst, is setting up his camera from a vantage point on halfway. Dan Connor, the goalkeeping coach, arrives and soon afterwards Dingley enters, hopping out of a hatchback before accepting the offer of a cup of tea from the Melksham chairman, Darren Perrin, who was up until the early hours fielding media requests from international media. “Tonight was a quiet one until a few things happened yesterday,” Perrin says.
More Stories
RFL warns clubs that planned coup will financially cripple the sport
Fifa’s Gianni Infantino defends ‘crucial’ relationship with Donald Trump
Ryan Garcia to headline Saudi-backed boxing card in New York’s Times Square