Soccer

5 talking points before new Women’s Super League season kicks off at Chelsea

The Blues are bidding for a sixth successive league title.

WSL champions Chelsea open their 2024-25 campaign against Aston Villa on Friday, their first match under new boss Sonia Bompastor
WSL champions Chelsea open their 2024-25 campaign against Aston Villa on Friday, their first match under new boss Sonia Bompastor (Bradley Collyer/PA)

The Women’s Super League returns with the 2024-25 season’s first round of fixtures being kicked off by champions Chelsea hosting Aston Villa on Friday evening.

Here, the PA news agency looks at some of the talking points heading into the opening matches.

Change at Chelsea

While Chelsea embark upon a familiar quest, bidding for a sixth successive league title, there is the major difference that they will do so without Emma Hayes, whose 12-year tenure at the helm ended in the summer as she took charge of the United States.

Former France international Sonia Bompastor, a Champions League winner during her time in charge of her previous club Lyon, is Hayes’ successor – one of four changes of boss at WSL clubs since the end of last term. Villa are another side working under new management in Dutchman Robert de Pauw.

A thrilling 2023-24 title race saw Chelsea take the crown on goal difference ahead of Gareth Taylor’s Manchester City, who start with Sunday’s trip to Jonas Eidevall’s Arsenal, last season’s third-placed finishers. WSL all-time top-scorer Vivianne Miedema is in line to face her old club at the Emirates Stadium having left the Gunners and joined City in the summer. Chelsea’s new signings include England right-back Lucy Bronze.

United look to bounce back

Mary Earps is among the players to have left Manchester United during the summer
Mary Earps is among the players to have left Manchester United during the summer (Martin Rickett/PA)

Manchester United made history last season by claiming their first major trophy in the FA Cup, but it proved a disappointing league campaign as they slipped from a final position of second in 2022-23 to fifth.

The transfer activity that has followed has featured some significant outgoings in Mary Earps, fellow England internationals Katie Zelem and Nikita Parris, their top scorer last term, and Lucia Garcia, while Elisabeth Terland, who netted 13 WSL goals for Brighton last term, is among those to have joined Marc Skinner’s squad.

Their attempt to bounce back commences with a meeting with West Ham at Old Trafford on Saturday, while Matt Beard’s Liverpool, the side that beat them to fourth place in May, begin on Sunday by hosting Leicester – newly managed by Frenchwoman Amandine Miquel – at their new home, St Helens’ Totally Wicked Stadium.

Big names at Brighton

The other team with a new manager are Brighton, with former Australia player Dario Vidosic now in charge, and although Terland and England forward Katie Robinson have departed the club, new recruits include two Lionesses in Parris and Fran Kirby, a star for so many years at Chelsea.

It will certainly be interesting to see what it all adds up to for the Seagulls, who host Everton in their opener on Saturday and are looking to improve on coming ninth in 2023-24.

Enter Eagles

Laura Kaminski oversaw Crystal Palace’s promotion to the WSL last season
Laura Kaminski oversaw Crystal Palace’s promotion to the WSL last season (Rhianna Chadwick/PA)

The new club in the division are Crystal Palace, whose WSL debut fixture is away against Tottenham on Sunday.

Boss Laura Kaminski’s CV includes three seasons as as an assistant at Spurs, during which they went up to the top flight in 2019, before she guided the Eagles to promotion last term in her first year in the job.

The WPLL era

There is also a new, independent entity overseeing both the WSL and Championship from the start of this season – what is now known as Women’s Professional Leagues Limited (WPLL).

Nikki Doucet, former general manager of Nike Women UK and Ireland, is the chief executive of the new body, which has been backed by a £20million interest-free loan from the Premier League. While no longer in charge of the divisions, the Football Association has a special share and representation on the WPLL board.