Weâre proud to present the next Queenballers Original interview with KlĂĄra CahynovĂĄ. Captain of the Czech national team, record holder for most appearances, and one of the strongest voices of Czech womenâs football today.
âWe were just girls who wanted to play football," said in exclusive interview for Queenballers Patricia Gregory, the founder of women's FA and mother of the women's football. During her last visit to Prague, she spoke about how she fought in the late 1960s for women to be allowed to play football and what it means to her today to see a packed Wembley.
Felicia SchrĂśder is undoubtedly one of the brightest talents Swedish football has produced in recent years. Despite interest from abroad, including clubs in England, she has chosen, for now, to stay at Häcken. With her goal in the first leg of the final, the 18-year-old drew level with Michaela KhĂ˝rovĂĄ and now has the chance to finish as the top scorer of the UEFA Womenâs Europa Cup. For Queenballers, SchrĂśder opened up about her decision to stay in Sweden and how the competition has helped her develop as a player.
Ashley Lawrence believes womenâs football in England is more advanced than France but that all of Europe is moving in the right direction. In an interview with Queenballers contributor Ayisha Gulati, Ashley Lawrence described how her life has changed since transferring to France.
From a small village near Pilsen to Slavia Prague, PSG, Tottenham and making history at Arsenal. In the fifth episode of QB Originals, we sit down with Barbora VotĂkovĂĄ, one of the most influential Czech players of her generation.
BK Häcken secured a convincing 3:0 win in the first leg of the UEFA Womenâs Europa Cup semi-final and head into the home return leg with a comfortable advantage. Vice-captain Tabby Tindell spoke to Queenballers about how the team is feeling ahead of the second leg and highlighted the players they will be relying on the most.
Despite winning the first leg of the semi-final of UEFA Womenâs Europa Cup in Prague 3â2, Hammarby were not satisfied with their performance, according to Elin Sørum. Their motivation for the return leg is clear: to win â and deliver the result they promised to Bajens, the Hammarby fans.
The first leg of the UEFA Womenâs Champions League quarter-final did not go as Lyon had hoped, as they fell to a defeat away at Wolfsburg. They now head into the home leg needing to overturn a one-goal deficit if they want to reach the semi-finals. Queenballers had the opportunity to speak with OL Lyonnes players Ingrid Engen and Jule Brand, discussing the pressure of being favourites and whether this season feels different for them.