Celebrating £1799.00 Success Awarded to Rugby Town Girls and Women FC to Grow Grassroots Football Participation in Rugby.
Football in Rugby received a boost today as Rugby Town Girls and Women FC were awarded a £1799.00 grant by the Premier League, The FA, and Government’s Football Foundation.
The £1799.00 grant, part of the Foundation’s Return to Football Fund, is helping Rugby Town Girls and Women FC to restart following the lifting of government restrictions on grassroots football. The grant was made possible thanks to funding from The FA and Sport England through the Football Foundation.
This money will be used for a program aimed at bringing new players into the game and supporting our returning players after a challenging 2020/21 season.
Rugby Town Girls and Women FC hopes that its new program will enable it to significantly grow participation in football for girls and women in Rugby.
Claire Angus, RTGWFC Vice-Chair, said: “The club is delighted to be awarded this Return to Football Fund grant. With the fantastic growth our club is seeing, this grant will allow us to ensure we have the volunteers, equipment, and environment to continue to meet our high standards and that we offer all our members a fun, supportive and safe environment for them to enjoy their sport. ”Robert Sullivan, Chief Executive of the Football Foundation, said: “This grant award to Rugby Town Girls and Women FC towards, amongst other things, FA courses for their coach volunteers and additional equipment is vital for the local community in Rugby as they get back to playing football. Our Return to Football fund is supporting clubs across the country, helping them to kick-start our national game again locally and try to recover from the effects of COVID-19. ”
“This is part of our wider ambition to transform our grassroots game and unlock the power of pitches, something we hope to get back to in full force as restrictions are lifted.”
The £2.1M Return to Football Fund is directly targeted at groups of people whose participation has been affected most by COVID-19, offering Clubs up to £2,500 each.
The grant comes as part of an investment of more than £16m that has been made available to help clubs prepare for the restart of grassroots football following the COVID-19 pandemic. In March, the Foundation declared “Game On” and announced three funds to get football’s 12 million grassroots players back on the pitch.
The Football Foundation is the UK’s largest sports charity and exists to improve the experience of playing football for everyone, by championing fair access to quality facilities.
For more information, please contact:
- Claire Angus at claire@rugbytowngirlsfc.co.uk
About the Return to Football Fund
Delivered by the Football Foundation, in partnership with the FA and made possible with Sport England funding from the National Lottery, this £2.1m fund is targeted to support clubs in the highest areas of deprivation in England, disability football and groups underrepresented in football, including women and girls, to support the return to football or activities aimed at bringing new players to the game.
About the Football Foundation
The Premier League, The FA, and Government’s Football Foundation is the largest sports charity in the UK. It champions and supports fair access to quality football facilities for everyone, regardless of gender, race, disability, or place.
The Foundation receives money from the Premier League, The FA, and the Department for Digital, Culture, Media, and Sport, through Sport England. This is matched with partnership funding and awarded as grants to create outstanding grassroots facilities that enable better games and attract more players, helping to transform communities.
Since 2000, it has awarded more than 17,600 grants to improve facilities worth more than £710m – including 942 artificial grass pitches, 6,426 natural grass pitches and 1,200 changing facilities. This has attracted an additional £940m of partnership funding – totaling over £1.6bn investment in grassroots football so far.
Through the Foundation, the Premier League, The FA, DCMS and Sport England have come together to create the National Football Facilities Strategy (NFFS) that will guide work over the next 10 years to transform many more local facilities. Local Football Facility Plans (LFFP) are being created to identify priority projects where demand is greatest, and the impact will be strongest and help stimulate the action required to deliver them.
Visit footballfoundation.org.uk for more information on the Foundation.