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Sylvia Gore

Sylvia Gore
Sylvia Gore 2.JPG
Personal information
Full name Sylvia Margaret Gore
Date of birth (1944-11-25)25 November 1944
Place of birth Prescot, England
Date of death 9 September 2016(2016-09-09) (aged 71)
Playing position Midfielder
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Manchester Corinthians
1967–???? Fodens
National team
1972–???? England
Teams managed
1982–1989 Wales
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.

Sylvia Margaret Gore MBE (25 November 1944 – 9 September 2016) was an English football player and coach. She scored the England women's national football team's first goal in its first official match, a 3–2 win over Scotland in Greenock in 1972, and was involved in women's football for 60 years.

Gore was born in Prescot, Lancashire, and raised in the north-west of England. She attended Our Ladies’ Junior School and St Edmund Arrowsmith Secondary School.

Gore's father and uncle both played football for Prescot Cables and encouraged her to take up the game. The headteacher of her school vetoed any participation in the school team but she joined Manchester Corinthians in her early teens. With Corinthians, Gore played in charity matches all over the world at a time when the Football Association (FA) had banned female players from its pitches. She said:

It was incredible playing in those great stadiums. In one of them, in South America, 80,000 people watched us play. Although we were getting good crowds in England, it was so nice to play on proper football pitches, rather than on the rugby and recreation pitches we had at home.

In 1972, Gore paid around £2,000 to progress through a series of trials for the first England team. She was accepted onto the team and made history by scoring the team's first goal in its first match on 18 November 1972.

Gore was in the Fodens team, originally a works team from the Edwin Foden, Sons & Co. lorry manufacturing plant in Sandbach, which defeated Southampton in the 1974 final of the Women's FA Cup. Gore recalled:

It was the first time Southampton had ever lost in a cup game in the three seasons the national cup had been in existence. We were determined to beat them. We weren't frightened of them — even though they had six international players on their side, compared to our four. It was close though, but I think we deserved our 2–1 win.


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