FGR team closure 'sends message women not valued'
· Yahoo Sports
Forest Green Rovers' decision to close their women's side suggests that female football is "not valued", according the team's former captain Hattie Jones.
The Gloucestershire club finished second in the South West Regional Women's Premier Division last campaign, narrowly missing out on promotion to the fourth tier by just one point.
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Yet the team will not return next season as the club's ownership looks to "concentrate resources" towards getting the men's side back into the English Football League, after relegation to the National League in 2024.
"It sends [the message] is women's and girls' football valued?" Jones told BBC Radio Gloucestershire.
"We were getting to the point where maybe we thought that it was - the Lionesses [England's women's team], they've had a massive influence on that.
"Forest Green over the last few years have done a lot to get the women's team to where we are and so connected to the men's team.
"But if you think about how this is then going to impact many, many young girls that are playing, I think the message is we're not valued, 'we don't really care, we do it because we have to'."
Forest Green said they hoped they would be able to fund the women's team to return in the future.
BBC Radio Gloucestershire has approached the club for further comment.
Jones joined Forest Green in 2021 and was their top scorer during her first campaign.
She was made club skipper in 2023 and had already decided the 2025-26 season would be her last with the club, prior to the closure being announced.
Jones said the news came as a "shock" to everyone on the team.
The closure also includes ending the partnership with Hartpury University's elite training centre for girls aged nine to 16.
"It's difficult because we all can understand that football is a business, difficult decisions around finances do have to be made," Jones said.
"Sadly in this instance it's come at our expense."
Jones added that some players on the team were looking at ways they could continue to play together going forward.
"I've had a lot of outreach locally from other clubs which is lovely and that goes to show how closely the women's football environment and the girls' pathways are locally - that we've had loads of clubs reaching out on social media and some of our old coaches as well about opportunities next season," Jones said.