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Aston Villa W.F.C.

Women's football club from Birmingham, England


Women's football club from Birmingham, England

FieldValue
clubnameAston Villa W.F.C.
imageAston Villa FC new crest.svg
upright0.7
altAston Villa F.C. badge
fullnameAston Villa Women Football Club
nicknameThe Villans, The Villa, The Lions
short nameVilla, AVWFC
founded(as Solihull FC)
groundVilla Park (league matches)
Bescot Stadium (cup matches)
capacity42,600
11,300
ownerV Sports (90%)
Marc Zahr (10%)
chairmanNassef Sawiris
CEO
managerNatalia Arroyo
league
season
position
current2025–26 Aston Villa W.F.C. season
website
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pattern_ra1_astonvilla2526h
pattern_sh1_astonvilla2526h2
pattern_so1_astonvilla2526h2l
leftarm1BBD5F2
body169091C
rightarm1BBD5F2
shorts1FFFFFF
socks1BBD5F2
pattern_la2_astonvilla2526a
pattern_b2_astonvilla2526a
pattern_ra2_astonvilla2526a
pattern_sh2_astonvilla2526a
pattern_so2_astonvilla2526al
leftarm2000000
body2000000
rightarm2000000
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Note

Bescot Stadium (cup matches) 11,300 Marc Zahr (10%)

Aston Villa Women Football Club is the women's football team of Aston Villa, currently playing in the Women's Super League. The club has been in existence since 1973. Originally titled Solihull F.C., the team affiliated to Aston Villa in 1989, becoming Villa Aztecs, and became the official Aston Villa women's side in 1996. The club have a senior team, a reserve team and several other teams of younger age groups under a Regional Talent Club FA license.

History

Aston Villa vs Tottenham Hotspur at Villa Park

Aston Villa Women Football Club was formed in 1973 as Solihull FC. When Aston Villa asked for help in forming a ladies team in 1989, Solihull responded. The club agreed to change their name in 1996 to become the officially recognised ladies team of Aston Villa.

As Villa Aztecs, they reached the 1995 League Cup Final but lost 2–0 to Wimbledon, and played in the 1995–96 FA Women's Premier League but were relegated.

The senior team, renamed to Aston Villa Ladies F.C., continued to play mainly in the 2nd-tier Northern Division. The club won promotion twice more and played in the FA Women's Premier League National Division in 1999–2000 and in 2003–04, but ended in the relegation zone in both seasons.

The Lady Villans won the Northern Division for the fourth time UTFV in 2011 and gained promotion to the WPL National Division, which had become the 2nd tier below the FA WSL.

On 5 May 2013, the club had its greatest achievement by winning its first ever trophy, the Women's Premier League Cup, beating Leeds United Ladies 5–4 on penalties.

In 2014 they were one of ten teams who were elected to WSL2, and in 2018 to the Women's Championship.

On 4 July 2019, the team was renamed Aston Villa Women F.C., CEO Christian Purslow, said that the name "aligns more appropriately with women’s football in this country". On the same day, Chief Commercial Officer, Nicola Ibbetson, was elected to the FA WSL and Women's Championship board - making Aston Villa Women one of only two Championship clubs to have a representative on the board.

Aston Villa face Arsenal at The Emirates Stadium, 2023
Aston Villa 2–2 Tottenham Hotspur, 29 September 2024, Villa Park

In 2019–20, Villa won promotion to the WSL and entered the top flight of women's football for the first time since 2004. For the 2022-23 Women's Super League season the women played four of their eleven home matches at Villa Park, where the men's team play. For the 2024-2025 season, the club announced they would play all home League fixtures at Villa Park.

On 21 October 2025, V Sports, owners of Aston Villa, announced the sale of a 10% stake in Aston Villa Women to Marc Zahr, co-president of Blue Owl Capital.

Players

First team squad

Out on loan

Former players

Honours

Nadine Hanssen (left) in Aston Villa's 2018 game at [[Lewes F.C. Women
  • FA Women's Premier League (Northern Division) (Level 2) Winners (4): 1992–93, 1994–95, 2002–03, 2010–11
  • FA Women's Premier League Cup Winners (1): 2012–13
  • FA Women's Championship (Level 2) Winners (1): 2019–20

Non-playing staff

Corporate hierarchy

:Source:

PositionName
Executive ChairmanNassef Sawiris
Co-chairmanWes Edens
President of Business OperationsChris Heck
President of Football OperationsRoberto Olabe

Management hierarchy

PositionName
Director of Women's FootballMarisa Ewers
ManagerNatalia Arroyo
Assistant First Team CoachJessie van den Broek
Assistant First Team CoachShaun Goater
Goalkeeper CoachChris Stygal
Club DoctorFadi Hassan
Lead PhysiotherapistDan Dagia
Physical Performance LeadKirsty Frick

Regional Talent Club

The club also run several other teams under the auspices of an FA Tier Two Regional Talent Club. This centre aims to develop the talent from within the local area. The RTC teams include an under-10, under-12, under-14, under-16 and development squad

In August 2010, Aston Villa Women FC supplied eight players to a 30-strong England Under-17 training camp.

Managers

DatesName
2018–2021England Gemma Davies
2021England Marcus Bignot (interim)
2021–2024England Carla Ward
2024Netherlands Robert de Pauw
2024–2025Bermuda Shaun Goater (interim)
2025–Spain Natalia Arroyo

References

References

  1. (2024-07-19). "Villa Park to be main stadium for Villa Women".
  2. (October 2018). "2012/13 National Division table". FA.
  3. "About Aston Villa Ladies football club". AVLFC.
  4. "2010/11 Northern Division table". FA.
  5. (October 2018). "2012/13 FA Women's Premier League Cup fixtures". FA.
  6. "INTRODUCING ASTON VILLA LADIES". [[The FA]].
  7. "Villa Secure Place in FA Women's Championship".
  8. Styles, Greg. (4 July 2019). "Aston Villa Ladies become Aston Villa Women ahead of new season".
  9. "Aston Villa Ladies become Aston Villa Women ahead of new season".
  10. Zack, Spector. (2020-09-09). "Cheap football Shirts".
  11. Maher, Matt. (2025-06-30). "Explained: Aston Villa to avoid PSR 'fire sale' by striking £55m deal for women's team".
  12. Club, Aston Villa Football. (2025-10-21). "Investment made into Aston Villa Women".
  13. "Aston Villa Women's Team". Aston Villa FC.
  14. "Our 2024/25 squad numbers are locked in🔢💜". Aston Villa Women.
  15. "Who's who". Aston Villa F.C..
  16. (2023-05-17). "V Sports and Aston Villa announce Chris Heck appointment".
  17. Evans, Gregg. (12 June 2023). "Villa CEO Purslow leaves club".
  18. (2025-09-23). "Club Statement".
  19. (3 August 2010). "Training camp squad selected". TheFA.com.
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This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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