Английская Википедия:Irene González (footballer)

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Family name hatnote Шаблон:Infobox football biography Irene González Basanta (born 26 March 1909; died 8 April 1928, aged 19) was a Spanish professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper for Irene Fútbol Club, which she founded. She is credited as the first woman in Spain to play football professionally,[1][2] and among the first anywhere.[3]

Early life

González was born near Campo de la Leña near the Monte Alto neighborhood of A Coruña, Galicia, Spain, and raised in the Orillamar neighborhood.[4] As a child, she would join football matches played by boys in the streets[5] or the fields of A Estrada. Her father was a police officer who did not approve of her youthful inclination toward football,[4] and by some accounts would drag her screaming away from a match.[5][3] By 1924, her parents, brother, and nephew had died, orphaning her to the care of her older sister, Delfina, and her brother-in-law, Delfina's husband.[1]

Club career

Local men's clubs

At the age of 15, González played as a centre-forward for local men's club Barcelona FC, unaffiliated with the Catalan club,[1][3] as well as with local club Racing Coruñés.[1] She later switched to goalkeeper and competed for minutes with Rodrigo García Vizoso, who would later join professional clubs Deportivo de La Coruña and Real Madrid.[1][3] Vizoso recalled in 2008 that González would also attend his matches and cheer for him from behind his goal.[5]

González faced regular misogynistic criticism, including slurs.[5]

Irene Fútbol Club, 1925–1927

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González dressed like Ricardo Zamora in 1925. A print of this photograph was posted in a shop window on A Coruña's Calle Real.[1]

González launched Irene Fútbol Club in January 1925, at the age of 16, and served as the team's captain and promoter.[1] The club's players were all male except for herself.[3] The club toured Galicia and charged money to play matches, including friendly matches against third-division teams from Vilaboa, A Laracha, Carballo, and Betanzos,[6] and exhibitions played before Deportivo de La Coruña matches in the Parque de Riazor.[1]

The magazine Galicia covered the club in February 1925 with an anonymous commentary endorsing exercise among women, which was the subject of criticism and fears of the masculinization of women.[1] González was photographed in 1925 leaning against a goalpost dressed similarly to her goalkeeping inspiration, Ricardo Zamora, in a white turtleneck sweater and black knee-length shorts, a football under her foot. The photograph was posted in a shop on Calle Real in A Coruña, a report of which published in the newspaper El Orzán drew notoriety to González and her club.[1][6]

González organized an 18-team tournament from June to September 1925.[3][6]

By 1926, Irene FC matches — marketed as children's events — drew enough attention that Racing de Ferrol charged for tickets for a match on 24 May 1926 between Irene FC and the club's reserves at Campo de Futbol O Inferniño. Irene FC lost 7–1 but were celebrated by the crowd and Racing's board, and the match was covered by the periodical El Pueblo Gallego.[1][6]

González's last played match on record was on 1 May 1927.[1]

Playing style

Accounts of González's goalkeeping complimented her height, agility, and positioning, and noted her fearlessness in making diving saves and departures from the goal.[5][3] She was reportedly vocal, even vulgar, in commanding her defensive line,[5] and kept a doll of a footballer in her net as a ward against goals as her idol Zamora had also done.[5][4]

Illness and death

By the middle of 1927 González had fallen ill with tuberculosis, which had killed thousands in Galicia during an epidemic between 1924 and 1927.[1] Locals and Galician newspapers staged fundraisers and a charity friendly match to support her family.[1][3] She sold clothes and belongings to pay for treatment, though some of the charity helped her recover them and improve her living conditions.[5][3] Clubs in Racing, Ferrol, and Betanzos also held collections to assist her.[3][6] She was first reported dead on 9 April 1928, and confirmed by the newspaper El Eco de Santiago on 11 April 1928.[1]

Legacy

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González inspired a chant among girls in A Coruña that survived several years after her death, in which the singer tells her mother that she wants to become wealthy playing fútbol like González:[5][1][3]

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In 2022, the A Coruña city council approved a motion to rename a street in González's honor.[4]

In 2023, La Coruña hosted the inaugural Copa Internacional Irene González Basanta, an international girls' club football tournament named in her honor.[7] On 10 April 2023, the girls' academy of Real Madrid defeated their Sporting Braga counterparts 2–0 to win the first cup.[2]

See also

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Biographies and related works

  • Irene y las puertas del fútbol: Historia de una pionera, a 2020 biography by Rubén Ventureira and Juan Luis Rodríguez Cudeiro[8]
  • Todo sobre o fútbol galego, a 2012 history of football in Galicia by Carlos Freire Cordeiro[9]
  • Irene, a porteira, a 2008 documentary short film by Óscar Losada[5][10]

References

Шаблон:Reflist Шаблон:Authority control