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Celtic F.C. Women
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| clubname | Celtic FC Women |
| image | Celtic FC.svg |
| image_size | 200px |
| fullname | The Celtic Football Club |
| nickname | The Ghirls |
| founded | 2007 |
| ground | New Douglas Park, Hamilton |
| capacity | 6,018 |
| chrtitle | Patron |
| chairman | Elaine C. Smith |
| manager | Grant Scott |
| league | SWPL 1 |
| season | 2024–25 |
| current | 2025–26 Celtic F.C. Women season |
| position | SWPL 1, 4th of 12 |
| pattern_la1 | _celtic2526h |
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| pattern_ra1 | _celtic2526h |
| pattern_sh1 | _celtic2526h |
| pattern_so1 | _celtic2526hl |
| leftarm1 | FFFFFF |
| body1 | FFFFFF |
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| shorts1 | FFFFFF |
| socks1 | FFFFFF |
| pattern_la2 | _celtic2526a |
| pattern_b2 | _celtic2526a |
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| website | https://www.celticfc.com/celtic-fc-women/ |
Celtic Football Club Women is a professional women's football team that plays in the Scottish Women's Premier League, the top division of women's football in Scotland. The team competes as Celtic FC and is normally referred to as the 'women's first team' within the club.
History
For the first 120 years of its existence, Celtic only fielded male football teams. In the early 1960s, Rose Reilly was noticed by a Celtic scout who wanted to sign her, but the scout found out she was female and withdrew the offer. A women's team was established in June 2007 when Celtic took over Arsenal North L.F.C., founding a Girls and Women's Football Academy at the same time.
Celtic reached the 2008 Scottish Women's Cup final (doing so in their inaugural season, as the men's team had done 119 years earlier), losing 3–1 to Hibernian after extra time. The team's first silverware arrived two years later as Spartans were beaten 4–1 in the final of the 2010 Scottish Women's Premier League Cup.
Celtic were ejected from the 2012 Scottish Women's Cup: they had tried to force the postponement of a quarter final with Glasgow City, but the SWF did not accept Celtic's reason and instead awarded the tie to Glasgow. In August 2013, Celtic faced being thrown out of the national Cup for the second successive season, following a complaint from beaten second round opponents Forfar Farmington: Celtic won the match 5–2, but had named former player Emily Thomson as a substitute in a bid to cup-tie her for the season at her new club, rivals Glasgow City.
At the end of the 2014 season, Celtic saw an exodus of established first team players and promising young prospects, with a number of players making apparent their frustration at the lack of ambition on Celtic's part, as the club had been looking to cut back their involvement in the women's game. Having already lost players of the calibre of Leanne Crichton, Jen Beattie, Christie Murray and Joanne Love, that year the likes of Gemma Fay, Rhonda Jones, Chloe Arthur and Heather Richards also headed for the exit door, while Scotland legends like Julie Fleeting and Suzanne Grant had not committed for the following season (the latter pair did both stay on, but left in 2015).
Celtic reached their second SWPL Cup final in 2017 and their third in 2018, but were beaten by Hibernian on both occasions; the latter match at Falkirk Stadium finished 9–0, and head coach David Haley said of his beleaguered players: "I'm sure they're as embarrassed as I am". Later that month Haley stood down from first team coaching to concentrate on running the girls' academy. Former Glasgow City coach Eddie Wolecki Black was appointed from Motherwell as his replacement.
In December 2018, Celtic announced that their women's team players would be employed as full-time professionals, with the transition beginning in the 2019 season. In doing so, they became the first ever professional women's football team in Scotland. Among Wolecki Black's first three signings for the team was his wife, Emma Black. Wolecki Black left his position at the end of the 2019 season, with the club stating in January 2020 they would make further investment to bolster the team's now confirmed status as a fully professional operation.
Fran Alonso was appointed head coach in January 2020, having previously worked under Ronald Koeman at Everton and Mauricio Pochettino at Southampton. In June 2021, Celtic achieved their best showing in the SWPL to date by finishing in runners-up for the third time, but by a margin of only three points to Glasgow City. This saw them qualify for the following season's Champions League for the first time; Celtic were subsequently eliminated from the Champions League at the first qualification round, losing 2–1 to Levante. In December 2021, Celtic won the SWPL Cup by defeating Glasgow City 1–0 in the final, their first trophy since winning the same competition in 2010. Caitlin Hayes scored the winning goal with a header from a Sarah Harkes free-kick, in a match that Celtic dominated and were unlucky not to score more. This was followed by a first ever Scottish Cup victory, beating Glasgow City again, this time 3–2 after extra time.
At the end of the 2022–23 season, Celtic came close to winning their first Scottish title. In a three-way decider on the final day of the SWPL, Celtic had to defeat Hearts while hoping their rivals Rangers could hold Glasgow City to a draw at Ibrox. A Rangers victory would also have been enough for Celtic to clinch the championship, assuming they won their match by a margin larger than Rangers. With Celtic defeating Hearts 2–0 in front of a record attendance of 15,822 at Celtic Park, Glasgow City scored a 92nd-minute winner, taking the trophy away from Parkhead. The following week, Celtic claimed the Women's Scottish Cup for a second time, beating Rangers 2–0 in front of a crowd of 10,446 at Hampden Park thanks to goals from Natasha Flint and Claire O'Riordan.
Celtic won their first Scottish Women's Premier League title in the 2023–24 season in dramatic style on the last day of the campaign, when Amy Gallacher scored a 90th-minute winner to give them a 1–0 victory over Hibernian that put them level on points with Rangers but ahead of their Glasgow rivals thanks to having a superior goal difference.
Stadium and facilities
Celtic had used East Kilbride's K-Park Training Academy as their home ground since 2015.
From its inception in 2007, the team trained at the newly built Lennoxtown Training Centre outside Glasgow. In 2019, Celtic announced plans to redevelop their older Barrowfield training ground near Celtic Park for use by their youth academy and the women's team, including an indoor pitch and a matchday venue, augmenting the Lennoxtown base which would continue to be used by the men's first team squad.
In July 2021, it was announced that the Women's team (as well as the men's B-team) would play the majority of their home fixtures in 2021–22 at Airdrie's Penny Cars Stadium.
In September 2024, the club announced the permanent move for the women’s team from the Albert Bartlett Stadium in Airdrie to New Douglas Park in Hamilton. This move comes after the women’s team qualified for the UEFA Women’s Champions League and their home in Airdrie did not meet the UEFA requirements. The club also explained this move is a pivotal step in the continued development of the women’s team. The move also presents a great opportunity for the club to enhance the match day experience.
Players
Current squad
Player of the Year
| Season | Name | Nationality | Ref | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 |
|---|
Technical staff
| Position | Name |
|---|---|
| Manager | SCO Grant Scott |
| Assistant Manager | SCO David Haley |
| Goalkeeping Coach | SCO Scott Fox |
| Performance Analyst | SCO Daniel Byrne |
| Physiotherapist | SCO Katie Singer |
Achievements
- Scottish Women's Premier League
- Scottish Cup{{cite web|url=https://www.rsssf.org/tabless/scot-womcuphist.html|title=Scotland (Women) - List of Cup Winners
- SWPL Cup
European history
| Season | Competition | Round | Opposition | Home | Away | Aggregate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021–22 | UEFA Women's Champions League | R1 semi-final | Levante | 1–2 | ||
| R1 third-place play-off | FC Minsk | 2–3 | ||||
| 2023–24 | R1 semi-final | Brøndby | 1–0 | |||
| R1 final | Vålerenga | 2–2 | ||||
| 2024–25 | R1 semi-final | KuPS | 3–1 | |||
| R1 final | Gintra | 2–0 | ||||
| R2 | Vorksla Poltava | 2–0 | 1–0f | 3–0 | ||
| Group stage | Chelsea | 1–2 | 3–0 | N/A | ||
| Real Madrid | 0–3 | 4–0 | N/A | |||
| Twente | 0–2 | 3–0 | N/A |
f First leg.
Managers
Former Dundee United player John Holt was the team's manager in their inaugural 2007–08 campaign. Robert Docherty took charge between 2008 and 2012 and was succeeded by Peter Caulfield, who spent six months in position. David Haley was then head coach for five years until stepping down in 2018 to head the club's women's academy. Edward Gallagher, the Girls' Academy Manager was then appointed Interim 1st Team Manager. He was replaced by former Glasgow City manager Eddie Wolecki Black, who left 18 months later.
Fran Alonso became the first person to manage a full-time Celtic Women team and led the team through a transformation. Celtic won the Scottish Cup twice, the League Cup once were SWPL runners-up twice under Alonso.
In January 2024, Elena Sadiku became the head coach of Celtic. She went on to coach the team to their first-ever SWPL title, won on the final day against Hibs. Sadiku was replaced by Grant Scott in December 2025.
- John Holt: 2007–2008
- Robert Docherty: 2008–2012
- Peter Caulfield: 2013
- David Haley: 2013–2018
- Edward Gallagher (Interim): 2018
- Eddie Wolecki Black: 2018–2019
- Fran Alonso: January 2020–December 2023
- Elena Sadiku: January 2024–December 2025
- Grant Scott: December 2025–present
References
References
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- [https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/4308623/2023/03/16/sporting-lisbon-athletic-bilbao-wrong-name/ From Sporting Lisbon to Athletic Bilbao — why do we get foreign clubs' names wrong?], Michael Cox, The Athletic, 16 March 2023
- (25 March 2007). "How the original Gregory's Girl lived her dream of dreams". [[The Independent]].
- Montgomery, Laura. (9 August 2007). "Women's football: SFA in charge as Celts join up". Glasgow Evening Times.
- (8 June 2007). "Celtic women's academy is hailed". BBC Sport.
- [https://www.heraldscotland.com/default_content/12779153.not-just-mans-game-celtic/ Not just a man's game at Celtic], The Herald, 8 June 2007
- (18 May 2008). "Cup returns to Edinburgh". The Herald.
- Wright, Angus. (19 May 2008). "Hibernian Ladies 3 - 1 Celtic Ladies: Women's team show male counterparts how it's done". The Scotsman.
- (13 May 2010). "Celtic secure women's League Cup". BBC Sport.
- (17 October 2013). "Celtic 'concern' after being thrown out of Scottish Cup". BBC Sport.
- (3 August 2013). "Celtic FC Women's Team could be thrown out of the Scottish Cup following player registration farce". [[Daily Record (Scotland)]].
- [https://thecelticstar.com/the-mistakes-of-celtics-lost-decade-must-not-be-repeated/ The Mistakes of Celtic’s Lost Decade Must Not Be Repeated], The Celtic Star, 8 December 2021
- (12 December 2014). "Mass exodus at Celtic as 'ambitious' players head for pastures new".
- Campbell, Alan. (11 December 2014). "Scotland captain Gemma Fay leads exodus out of Celtic". Herald Scotland.
- Southwick, Andrew. (20 May 2018). "SWPL: Hibernian thrash Celtic 9-0 to win third Women's Premier League Cup in a row". [[BBC Sport]].
- (30 May 2018). "Celtic Women's team latest news". [[Celtic F.C.]].
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- (27 July 2018). "Eddie Wolecki Black: Celtic Women take head coach from rivals Motherwell". [[BBC Sport]].
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- Dewar, Heather. (24 December 2018). "Celtic Women going full-time hailed a 'potential game-changer' for Scottish game". [[BBC Sport]].
- Frith, Wilf. (21 December 2018). "Celtic Women sign trio". [[She Kicks]].
- (7 January 2020). "Celtic women's team go professional".
- (7 January 2020). "Celtic Women turn professional for 2020".
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- Connellly, Tony. (6 June 2021). "Fran Alonso overwhelmed with pride after Celts clinch Champions League dream". Celtic F.C..
- Schöggl, Hans. (6 August 2020). "Scotland (Women) 2009".
- King, Ian. (6 August 2020). "Scotland (Women) 2010".
- "Summary – SWPL1". Soccerway.
- (2 July 2021). "Women's Champions League: Celtic debut against Levante as British clubs discover opponents". BBC Sport.
- (18 August 2021). "Women's Champions League: Celtic lose 2-1 to Levante to be eliminated". BBC Sport.
- Cuddihy, Paul. (5 December 2021). "Silverware success as Celtic FC Women lift the SWPL Cup". Celtic F.C..
- Cuddihy, Paul. (6 December 2021). "Fran Alonso: Winning SWPL Cup is my favourite moment in football". Celtic F.C..
- [https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/61627306 Depleted Celtic beat Glasgow City 3-2 to win Women's Scottish Cup], Andrew Southwick, BBC Sport, 29 May 2022
- Clive Lindsay. (21 May 2023). "City clinch title with dramatic last-gasp winner". BBC Sport.
- Thomas Duncan. (28 May 2023). "Celtic beat Rangers to claim Women's Scottish Cup". BBC Sport.
- Canavan, Amy. (19 May 2024). "Celtic leave it late to spark SWPL title bedlam". BBC Sport.
- "New home will give Celtic women's team a platform for season ahead". Celtic F.C..
- "Celtic pitch plans for Barrowfield training ground expansion".
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- Armstrong, Gary. (5 June 2019). "Celtic announce major east end re-development plans".
- (5 June 2019). "Celtic to redevelop Barrowfield training ground".
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- (27 September 2024). "A new home for Celtic FC Women". Celtic FC.
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- "KEEN-AN ABLE".
- (2 May 2022). "Skipper Callum McGregor is top Bhoy at Celtic awards night". Celtic FC.
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- Booth, Samantha. (20 February 2008). "Girls Will Be Bhoys At Celtic Ladies FC". Daily Record.
- (25 July 2013). "Celtic Ladies head coach Peter Caulfield departs SWPL club". Scotzine.
- (30 May 2018). "Women's football: David Haley to step down as Celtic head coach". BBC Sport.
- (22 December 2025). "Grant Scott replaces Elena Sadiku as Celtic boss".
- (14 January 2020). "Fran Alonso to manage Celtic Women after Lewes exit". BBC Sport.
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