Irene González (footballer)
Irene González Basanta (born 26 March 1909; died 8 April 1928, aged 19) was a Spanish professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper for Irene Fútbol Club, which she founded. She is credited as the first woman in Spain to play football professionally,[2][3] and among the first anywhere.[4]
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Irene González Basanta | ||
Date of birth | 26 March 1909[1] | ||
Place of birth | A Coruña, Spain | ||
Date of death | 9 April 1928 (age 19) | ||
Place of death | A Coruña, Spain | ||
Position(s) | Goalkeeper | ||
Youth career | |||
Barcelona FC | |||
Racing Coruñés | |||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1925–1927 | Irene Fútbol Club | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 20 April 2023 |
Early life
González was born near Campo de la Leña near the Monte Alto neighborhood of A Coruña, Galicia, Spain, and raised in the Orillamar neighborhood.[5] As a child, she would join football matches played by boys in the streets[1] or the fields of A Estrada. Her father was a police officer who did not approve of her youthful inclination toward football,[5] and by some accounts would drag her screaming away from a match.[1][4] By 1924, her parents, brother, and nephew had died, orphaning her to the care of her older sister, Delfina, and her brother-in-law, Delfina's husband.[2]
Club career
Local men's clubs
At the age of 15, González played as a centre-forward for local men's club Barcelona FC, unaffiliated with the Catalan club,[2][4] as well as with local club Racing Coruñés.[2] She later switched to goalkeeper and competed for minutes with Rodrigo García Vizoso, who would later join professional clubs Deportivo de La Coruña and Real Madrid.[2][4] Vizoso recalled in 2008 that González would also attend his matches and cheer for him from behind his goal.[1]
González faced regular sexist criticism, including slurs.[1]
Irene Fútbol Club, 1925–1927
González launched Irene Fútbol Club in January 1925, at the age of 16, and served as the team's captain and promoter.[2] The club's players were all male except for herself.[4] The club toured Galicia and charged money to play matches, including friendly matches against third-division teams from Vilaboa, A Laracha, Carballo, and Betanzos,[6] and exhibitions played before Deportivo de La Coruña matches in the Parque de Riazor.[2]
The magazine Galicia covered the club in February 1925 with an anonymous commentary endorsing exercise among women, which was the subject of criticism and fears of the masculinization of women.[2] González was photographed in 1925 leaning against a goalpost dressed similarly to her goalkeeping inspiration, Ricardo Zamora, in a white turtleneck sweater and black knee-length shorts, a football under her foot. The photograph was posted in a shop on Calle Real in A Coruña, a report of which published in the newspaper El Orzán drew notoriety to González and her club.[2][6]
González organized an 18-team tournament from June to September 1925.[4][6]
By 1926, Irene FC matches — marketed as children's events — drew enough attention that Racing de Ferrol charged for tickets for a match on 24 May 1926 between Irene FC and the club's reserves at Campo de Futbol O Inferniño. Irene FC lost 7–1 but were celebrated by the crowd and Racing's board, and the match was covered by the periodical El Pueblo Gallego.[2][6]
González's last played match on record was on 1 May 1927.[2]
Playing style
Accounts of González's goalkeeping complimented her height, agility, and positioning, and noted her fearlessness in making diving saves and departures from the goal.[1][4] She was reportedly vocal, even vulgar, in commanding her defensive line,[1] and kept a doll of a footballer in her net as a ward against goals as her idol Zamora had also done.[1][5]
Illness and death
By the middle of 1927 González had fallen ill with tuberculosis, which had killed thousands in Galicia during an epidemic between 1924 and 1927.[2] Locals and Galician newspapers staged fundraisers and a charity friendly match to support her family.[2][4] She sold clothes and belongings to pay for treatment, though some of the charity helped her recover them and improve her living conditions.[1][4] Clubs in Racing, Ferrol, and Betanzos also held collections to assist her.[4][6] She was first reported dead on 9 April 1928, and confirmed by the newspaper El Eco de Santiago on 11 April 1928.[2]
Legacy
Irene era la capitana en un mundo de hombres, y en una época en la que el fútbol no era profesional y apenas había desarrollo técnico y táctico, demostró que, en igualdad de condiciones, había fútbol mixto.
Irene was the captain in a world of men, and at a time when football was not professional and there was hardly any technical and tactical development, she showed that, under equal conditions, there could be mixed (gender) football.
— Esther Sullastres, goalkeeper for Sevilla FC and Spain[5]
González inspired a chant among girls in A Coruña that survived several years after her death, in which the singer tells her mother that she wants to become wealthy playing fútbol like González:[1][2][4]
Mamá, futbolista quiero ser
para jugar como Irene que juega muy bien
Mamá, cuando sea mayor
ganaré mucho dinero jugando al fútbol
Mamá, a footballer is what I want to be,
to play like Irene, who plays so well.
Mamá, when I am older,
I will make lots of money playing football.
— Galician children's chant
In 2022, the A Coruña city council approved a motion to rename a street in González's honor.[5]
In 2023, La Coruña hosted the inaugural Copa Internacional Irene González Basanta, an international girls' club football tournament named in her honor.[7] On 10 April 2023, the girls' academy of Real Madrid defeated their Sporting Braga counterparts 2–0 to win the first cup.[3]
See also
- Women's football in Spain
- Bans of women's association football in Spain
- Dick, Kerr Ladies F.C., a contemporary women's football club in England, and Lily Parr, its star striker
- Karbo Deportivo, based in La Coruña and now Deportivo de La Coruña's women's section, which won the first three editions of the Campeonato de España in 1983 to 1985
Biographies and related works
References
- Dorrington, Nick (26 April 2019). "The Ballad Of Irene González". Howler. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
- Cudeiro, Juan L. (17 May 2021). "La mujer que abrió las puertas del fútbol" [The woman who opened the doors of football]. El País. A Coruña. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
- "Las juveniles del Real Madrid ganan la primera Copa Irene González Basanta". TeleMadrid. 10 April 2023. Retrieved April 20, 2023.
- "Irene González, la primera futbolista profesional". Sportfem. 3 September 2021. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
- Oliver, Juan (22 January 2022). "Irene González Basanta, la guardameta gallega que desafió hace un siglo los clichés del deporte en España" [Irene González Basanta, the Galician goalkeeper who challenged the clichés of sport in Spain a century ago]. Público. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
- Alfeirán, Xosé (5 March 2018). "Irene González, la primera guardameta" [Irene Gonzalez, the first keeper]. La Voz de Galicia. Retrieved 21 April 2023.
- "Fernando Taboada, presidente del Orzán, presenta la I Copa Irene González Basanta". DxT Campeón (in Spanish). 30 March 2023. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
- "'Irene y las puertas del fútbol', el libro que recupera la historia de una pionera". Marca (in Spanish). 15 December 2020. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
- Xosé María Lema Suárez (29 February 2020). "A Ausencia do Fútbol Modesto na exposición do Gaiás" [The Absence of Modest Football in the exhibition of Gaiás] (in Spanish). Retrieved April 21, 2023.
- "Irene González, la gallega que jugaba al fútbol en falda". RTVE (in Spanish). 17 August 2018. Retrieved 20 April 2023.