Richard Dunn’s remarkable journey took him from Yorkshire building sites to boxing’s biggest stage amid the upheaval of the 1970s, writes JOHN WIGHT
ONE hundred years ago today, one of the earliest floodlit matches recorded on film was played on a Thursday night at Deepdale, Preston.
Two years after the Armistice ended the Great War, over 10,000 paying spectators raised over £600 for unemployed servicemen — and they came to watch two teams of women play football.
Titled “Soccer by Searchlight,” British Pathe described the occasion as a “novel game played for ex-service unemployed fund won by Dick Kerrs Ladies’ (sic) Football Team.”
GEOFF BOTTOMS recommends an inspiring, political and bittersweet account of the munitions factory workers who are the fore-runners of the modern women’s game
JAMES NALTON writes how at the heart of the big apple, the beautiful game exists as something more community-oriented, which could benefit hugely under mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani


