Table Manners with Jessie and Lennie Ware - Bonus Episode: Lionesses - Ellen White and Lyn Hale
Episode Date: July 31, 2023Surprise!! A little added bonus before we take a break for the summer! You all know Mum & I LOVE football, and the World Cup is on right now, so this was mega. Our first footballers on Table ...Manners!! This special episode in partnership with The National Lottery is in support of Good Causes and specifically women’s football. We chat to two Lionesses (or goddesses as mum calls them) , England legend Ellen White MBE & one of the England National teams legacy players, Lyn Hale.We hear all about celebratory meals, which football club has the best catering, how women’s football has changed & what food is most enjoyed after retirement! Thanks to National lottery players, over £50m has been raised for women’s football over the past 10 years alone - which has gone towards a variety of initiatives not only to inspire women to play the game at grassroots clubs across the country, but also to support up and coming athletes at an elite level.What a joy to spend a whole hour talking about football…. Thanks to the National Lottery for setting us up.The Lionesses… we are rooting and roaring for you! X Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome back to a Good Causes special of Table Manners, made possible by the National
Lottery. You may remember that last year we had the wonderful Jack Munro and Noreen Gleaves
on to talk about the National Lottery's supported Jubilee Big Lunch. Well, we've partnered with
the National Lottery again this year on the eve of the Women's World Cup.
Woo!
This is the first time we've ever had a footballer on, Mum.
Or footballers.
Not only got one, we've got two, and we have a Euro 2022 winner.
Well, they're both legends, aren't they?
Well, yeah, now they are, absolutely.
Today we've got two, well, I call them goddesses,
but they're lionesses, Jess.
Ellen White, the star striker from the England 2022 Euros,
and an OG lioness.
Does that mean old girl?
What does OG stand for?
Original gangster.
Not an old girl, Mum.
I don't think she'd like that.
Well, what's an OG? Well, she is an old girl, Mum. I don't think she'd like that. Well, what's an OG?
Well, she is an old girl.
Original gangster.
I've never ever heard that.
You're an OG, Mum.
We've got an OG, Linus, Lynn Hale,
who debuted for England in 1972.
Lynn was a trailblazer in the women's game
and you might have seen her parading around a packed Wembley last year
as she was honoured as one of the FA's official legacy players which came as no surprise as Lynn is a
true footballing legend. I think I listened to her on the radio when the Euros were happening last
year and it was fascinating to hear about the sexism she encountered. She's not only won the
FA Cup a stunning seven times but she's also one of the first women to represent England women at an international level.
Over to Ellen White, MBE.
She's won league titles, FA Cups and WSL Cups
with the likes of Arsenal and City, Man City.
The less we talk about those teams, the better.
She won the England International Player of the Year
in 2011, 2018 and 2021.
Jessie, when she first started playing,
she was such a talent,
the boys wouldn't let her play with them.
Oh yeah, what, was that when she was nine years old?
Yeah.
Intimidated.
Too good.
Oh, I love it, I love it.
Boys can't take it, can they, Jess?
Now, as we mentioned,
this episode is made possible by the National Lottery,
who have contributed to the dreams of athletes like Ellen.
And we just want to thank the National Lottery, who have contributed to the dreams of athletes like Ellen. And we just want to thank the National Lottery players.
Over £50 million has been raised for women's football over the past 10 years alone,
which has gone towards a variety of initiatives,
not only to inspire women to play the game at grassroots clubs across the country,
but also to support up-and-coming athletes at an elite level.
Mum, if you'd had that National Lottery player funding,
do you think you could have been a great centre-mid?
No, darling, but I did play cricket.
I didn't play football.
Pardon?
I was a very, very, very good longfielder.
I don't even know what a longfielder is.
Is that because you just had to sit, stand at the back
and wait for the ball to come to you?
Yeah, but I've got a very long throw.
Sorry, pardonnez-moi.
If you watch my throw, it's fabulous.
I played in the girls' cricket team at school.
Thank you to the National Lottery players for letting me discover that my mum is an OG cricketer.
Who knows where I'd be now, darling?
Well, it's not just football.
National Lottery players support a huge variety in sport,
with more than £5.7 billion billion of national lottery funding invested into grassroots sports in the past 25 years I used
to be in the girls football team at primary school I was completely mad about Manchester United and
I remember missing a penalty in the summer kind of schools game and I think I lost the game for
them it was a very Gareth Southgate moment for me and then I think I put down the ball and just watched it on the telly
but we're so interested to speak to Ellen White and Lynn Hale about their experiences grassroots
playing how it must have differed from the 70s being on the pitch to now winning the Euros and
being you know I mean it was so electric last year, wasn't it?
Fabulous.
Thank God for the lionesses.
We're winners.
The only people that can bring it home, apparently.
So there you go.
Listeners, you know how much mum and I love football.
This is really special for us to have our first footballers on.
So please indulge us a little bit.
Food will be on the menu menu but football will be the special
of the day so thank you very much to the national lottery for setting us up on our second dinner
date ellen white and lynn hale zooming in for a table manners special can't wait Ellen White and Lynn Hales we have got you on zoom to talk all about football and food thank
you so much for joining us for this special national lottery episode it's such a pleasure
to meet you you're very welcome no thank you you are first footballers yeah we've been desperate
for footballers on the podcast and we never get any and you're our first.
So we're thrilled.
But of course it was going to be women who were going to be accommodating, of course.
Of course.
How are you feeling? We're talking about this on the eve of the World Cup starting.
Where will you be watching the first match?
Me personally, we're meeting up with some of the girls from the 72 squad.
We're all meeting up in London to watch it in Box Park at Wembley.
Oh, nice.
We arranged to meet up for the first one.
So is it a big blowout meal and a few drinks?
We're staying in Hilton.
Wow, yeah.
We're going out Friday night.
Saturday we're going to Box Park and Saturday afternoon,
I don't know what we're going to do.
And Saturday evening, no doubt there'll be some drinks around.
What's your drink of choice, Lynne?
Unfortunately, Teetotal.
Before I was 18, I drank too much.
I haven't drunk since.
Really?
Absolutely, yeah.
And when did you go pro?
How old were you when you went pro?
I was never professional.
Oh, OK, let's talk about that.
I mean, you got applauded and paraded around Wembley last year
when the Lionesses won.
But let's talk about when you played football in the 1972 squad.
So you weren't even regarded as professional.
So can you set the scene about how different it was from now?
When I first started playing football, I was 12.
I actually got picked to play for England when I was 18.
It was just really basic. There was absolutely nothing. We went training on a Thursday and we
played football on a Sunday. Apart from that, that was it. Then when we got trials for England,
we went through two or three trials. Then we got picked for England. We played our match in Scotland.
We came home. We went back to our normal works, college or whatever. Went back to training on a
Thursday. We had no pre-match meals. Absolutely nothing compared to what the people have today.
Absolutely nothing. Did you get paid, Lynne? I've never ever got paid for playing football, ever. Wow. And do
you think if you'd had better funding at the time, it would have been different? You'd have been able
to train more, concentrate on your football, things like that. Well, it hadn't been legal for very long,
had it, for women to play football, right? No, it'd been banned for 49, 50 years. But to be quite
honest, that never really affected me much because we never played on decent pitches.
We always had the rec here and the common places like that to play.
We never ever, ever had any funding.
We got sponsorship from maybe the local shop, but never any money for anything.
And can I ask Lynn, and obviously Ellen, we're going to talk about your experience,
which feels very different to this,
but Lynn, how many people were coming to watch?
Were you called the Lionesses at the time?
No, no, no.
No, we were just England women.
And how many people would come to an England football match
back in 72?
In 72, when we played our first match up in Scotland,
I would have said at the maximum sort of 50 or 60.
Were they predominantly women or men?
Quite a lot were family.
Right, OK.
Mostly I would have said women.
There were some men, some men.
What did your parents say when you said,
I want to play football?
What did your dad say?
My dad was over the moon.
He was so, so pleased.
I mean, I did all sports. I did netball,
I did rounders, I ran for the county, I played badminton, but football just came naturally to me.
I never had a trainer as such. All our trainers did was they played football as men. From their
training, they came down and taught us what they knew. But your parents were supportive of you
playing football?
Oh, absolutely. My dad was over the moon
and my mum always enjoyed football as well,
so they were really, really pleased and so supportive.
I mean, obviously I was sort of quite young
and they paid for everything, my boots, my travelling, everything.
What colour was your strip?
The England one was a white shirt with blue shorts.
So pretty much the same as it is now and did you have three lions? No we just had a WFA badge on it
okay not three lions and it was nowhere near the quality of what the women play in now ours was
like a thick cotton. Can I just ask which football team were you supporting when you were young and
who do you support now? When I was growing up and it was Manchester City my favourite player then was Francis Lee.
Oh yeah Franny Lee. Yeah brilliant and now I still I love the women's football I suppose I
should support Man City but I think Arsenal are a pretty good outfit. Men's team I want to say
Man City but you've got to say Southampton,
even though they're in the mess they're in because it's your hometown.
That brings Ellen in nicely, Man City and Arsenal.
You've played for both of them, haven't you?
I have, yes.
How are you, Ellen? Firstly, congratulations. You've got a 12-week-old, I think, in another
room very nearby. You are both kind of doing a lot for the World Cup in promo.
So I appreciate you being here and congratulations on being Euro 2022 winners.
I mean, that was just phenomenal.
Yeah. Oh, no, thank you.
Yes, it's obviously a little bit different, obviously having a little girl, but it's amazing now.
It was a crazy summer, ridiculous last year to think it was a year ago now yeah it's just
unbelievable what we achieved it's something that uh yeah I've dreamed since I was a little girl
really where will you be watching the first game I'll be at BBC in Salford actually uh so I'll be
on you being a pundit we're doing a little bit on BBC five live and then we're not doing the England
game but then I'll be doing the group game after that so I'll be watching keen fan in my England shirt definitely what will you be eating and
snacking on it's gonna be in the morning isn't it so oh yeah of course because it's New Zealand
Australia isn't it so coffee obviously definitely coffee I do like a bacon sandwich to be fair now
now I've retired I can eat what i want it's so
nice oh i want to know about this so how yeah how different is it and also you are a new mum so
you're probably carb loading the whole time because you're just exhausted oh yes was it incredibly
strict when you were playing professionally like i mean what would your day look like and how kind
of strict did you have to be with food it's got more yeah strict or or I'd say
like uh the funding obviously got a lot better like nutrition wise having nutritionists and
obviously a lot more research into the physiology of what works for you to help you perform to the
best of your ability yeah when I was initially kind of growing up and going through the ranks
I was kind of pretty much eating anything and everything. It wasn't until probably when I was at Notts County, like 2014 was when I became professional that, you
know, you really started to kind of hone in on, on all the nutrition and everything like that.
But yeah, say, say if I was at England, I'd wake up and have like porridge or something like that.
If we were training in the mornings, uh, carbo load, get ready for the session.
Would you add protein to that too, just to have the protein in there or was it not as important was it
more important to have carbs yeah i'd have like maybe like a smoothie or something like protein
i'd probably have after training okay but yeah i'd probably have like yeah porridge with like
fruit and honey that type of thing um so i could get through the session and run as much as i
possibly could and then yeah i'd probably load up on the protein and everything kind of at lunchtime.
So a lot of like, I love chicken and like rice and then, yeah, like a protein shake, something like that.
Loads of veggies and like loads and loads of fluids really to replace what you've kind of lost at training.
So now it would be a bacon sarnie and a coffee and sitting and watching.
And that sounds quite, you seem quite happy with that, to be honest. I am. You're quite looking forward to that bacon sarnie and a coffee and sitting and watching and that sounds quite you seem quite happy with
that to be honest i am quite looking forward to that bacon sarnie and ketchup i think before i
retired i was like oh i'm gonna do triathlons i'm gonna be this like insane runner and do all this
stuff but i'm like nah i'm gonna have a baby i'm gonna eat a bacon sandwich and eat crisps and have
a diet coke watching some tv so and i'm all right with that i'm pretty happy with that good on you i mean lynn what were you obviously there wasn't any funding like there is now and so diet and training was there anybody
in your camp that would be trying to direct you with that or was it very much you were left to
your own devices we all left our own devices were you sensible or i mean sensible i mean in that
time i feel like people weren't so obsessed with there was
not the same kind of interest in nutrition then I presume no then we left our own devices but the
fact was round about when I was playing football it was just the case of that we were very active
and we didn't sit in pubs and we didn't go down that culture so we kept ourselves fit we trained
once a week then it went to twice a week and most of us would go out two or three times on top of that
and just go and kick a ball.
So how would you celebrate a win?
Would you go to the pub and eat something there
or obviously you were teetotal by that point?
It was difficult because such a big age difference between us all.
We would go away, usually we'd be taken on a coach
and on the way back we'd
stop at a pub the parents or someone would go in and get a drink and we'd have crisps and maybe a
pie or something but if it was a home match before the match we just have sort of a normal breakfast
and then after the match it was your roast dinner very different scenarios there then I guess what
would you be having after your match then, Ellen?
Would you still be pretty focused, right?
Was there ever, if you'd done a win, you had a few days off,
would you allow yourself to be able to have a roast?
Was that even allowed to be on the menu?
Yeah, no, even at England camp now,
we're very lucky to have a chef that travels with the team now.
Amazing.
You need to have those meals, don't you?
After a game or maybe kind of
in between kind of games there'll be roast on there'll be a barbecue yeah like after a game
you can have pizza and you need to replenish yourselves you need to get as much food in as
possible um so after a game is the best possible time to have like a pizza or a burger or something
like that um and they seem to be okay with that. Did you have any kind of meal rituals?
You were so close
and it seemed like there was such a sorority between you.
But were there any kind of memorable meal moments
together with the lionesses
or any particular rituals you had?
We had a little bit of downtime.
So Jill, as you know, Jill Scott.
Yeah.
She likes to have a bit of fun
and promote positivity, Jill.
She is the
the essence of positivity so she did a thing where you're in partners you had 10 pounds to go and
dress the other person and we had a barbecue so basically dress them in whatever you wanted
we'd all come out and then you go have a barbecue have a little bit of downtime have a little bit
of fun and see who stitches each other up basically just to have a bit of a laugh who got the short straw ellatoon was dressed in a red lobster blow-up outfit for 10 quid that's good yeah i know pretty
decent that i dressed who i had demi stokes i went on i think it was like amazon and got her a prom
dress she looked lovely with the hat and everything um so yeah I think I was apprehensive to start with.
I was like, I can't do this.
But it was really fun actually
to go outside your comfort zone,
something different.
And then we all came together
and had like a barbecue.
So it was fun.
Ellen, which football team that you've played for
has the best grub?
Oh, that's a great question.
I'd have to just say England, to be honest.
Really?
Do you know what?
I've only been at one club
that's had food provided that
was when i went to man city all the other clubs i provide i had to bring my own food so it's not
but that's not the same for the men is it no no no but you know what that's really interesting i
don't know if either of you have been to see dear england yet it's at the national theater it's
about gareth southgate's building of the england team and it's really yet it's at the National Theatre it's about Gareth Southgate's building of
the England team and it's really fascinating it's about kind of masculinity it's about how he brought
psychology and a female psychologist psychotherapist and Alex Scott is a character in it
and she says something to Gareth Southgate about being like you know we're only allowed on the
pitch when all the boys have gone and
Gareth goes thank you for making me aware of this do you feel like now that you've won the Euros
things have really changed for women's football in case of support and attention and respect you
get the fact that I mean seems like City were already giving you meals I find it really funny
that you would have to bring your own packed lunch to Arsenal I mean any way that I can dig Arsenal um that's perfect for me
so there you go yeah yeah it's obviously taken a while obviously you know Lynn and the 1972 women
and those women that have come after Lynn as well they've really kind of broke down a lot of
barriers smashed down barriers they've had to kind of fight and you know they've really kind of broke down a lot of barriers, smashed down barriers. They've had to kind of fight and, you know, they've really paved the way for us to allow us and the next generation to be able to succeed and to have food provided a club, to have facilities, to have funding.
And I think they've helped us, obviously, to win the Euros.
They're a part of that.
And I think, you know, it has changed a lot of perceptions.
that and I think you know it has changed a lot of perceptions and it's only been the last kind of couple of years especially with England that we were allowed to train on the on the main pitch at
St George's Park essentially we always said oh it's the men's pitch Serena came in and was like
why are we not training on that pitch and they were like uh she's like I'm training on that one
that that's where I'm training that's where my team's training. So it took a lot for opinions to change,
for someone to come in and fight.
And it feels like it's just been a constant battle,
smashing down barriers all the time.
But I feel like times are starting to change.
And especially, you know,
I'm really passionate about like grassroots football,
for instance.
And I know for a fact,
there's still a lot of girls teams
that still have the awful pitches, the worst facilities. They have to play after the boys. It's still a lot of girls teams that still have the awful pitches the worst facilities
they have to play after the boys it's still a fight um so we still got a way to go but obviously
it is moving in the right direction lynn you were recognized at wembley last year and you know
ellen's just talked about you being a trailblazer, the 1972 women's team being trailblazers.
How did it feel being recognised and being in a huge stadium when you would have been around 50 people,
far less funding, far less attention, far less respect, I presume.
How did it feel to be on that stage at that time? Was it bittersweet?
Well, it was, it had taken us a long time to get the FA to recognise us.
All we ever wanted was to get a cap.
And eventually the FA gave in and gave us our caps on that night
at Wembley when they played the USA.
They gave us a shirt in the changing room.
Jill Scott gave it to us. They gave us a shirt in the changing room. Jill Scott gave it to us. They gave us a
shirt, a cap, and we walked. It was only the 72 lionesses that got their caps on that night.
It was the first, I think, 13 or 15 of us that got it. All the other lionesses were invited,
and then they walked us around the pitch. and the applause we've got from people,
I never ever in my lifetime thought I would get anything like that.
It was very, very emotional.
One of the best nights of my life
and I was so proud to have played in 72
but it took us a long time to get it
and my legacy number was the thing that I wanted more than anything.
And I got it that night.
Congratulations.
That was 50 years, Lynne.
Yeah.
Wow, goodness.
Thank God things have changed a bit.
Going back to something that Ellen said just now,
prior to them inviting us on that night,
they invited, and I don't know if you were there, Ellen.
They invited us about a year ago to walk around the pitch.
But we weren't allowed to walk on the grass.
We had to walk along the side of the grass.
And we asked why.
And they said, no, you can't walk on there.
And then halfway through, they had a draw.
And a lady won something.
And they took her on the pitch in high heels.
But we weren't allowed to walk on the grass.
And only about a month later, on the television,
you saw one of the England players walking across the pitch in his normal clothes, picking up his salver that he'd won.
There is a big difference still.
So we've still got a way to go, to be honest.
Oh, absolutely.
I would like to, Lynne, go back to the mood
when you were playing in the first England women's team.
Did you encounter a lot of sexism and discrimination?
Not when I played for England, I must admit.
When you played on your local pitches,
well, yeah, you did.
You shouldn't be there playing football.
You should be home looking after your husband.
You should be doing the washing and all this sort of stuff.
But, you know, I wasn't going to be home doing the washing up.
But to the older girls that were playing, I think they just brushed it off.
Another one, they'd turn around and say,
oh, you're going to change shirts after the match.
Oh, God. Yeah, absolutely. and then you nutmegged them ellen has it changed for you now do you still get cat calling and i think it's slightly different
now because it's social media so someone sits behind a keyboard yeah right says nasty things
yeah and i think yeah that yeah that still
happens go back in the kitchen yeah you shouldn't be playing football that type of thing it still
it still happens now but it's it's a little bit different the fact that yeah it's it's behind a
computer and it's on social media is your husband very supportive of your career does he play
football he's actually rugby or used to play a little bit of rugby and then yeah he works in
football and he loves football yeah he's literally traveled the whole world supporting me moved house
two or three times depending on where I'm playing so uh yeah he's he's been amazing so I feel I feel
very lucky um and yeah he's just a super kind of a super fan. Where were you brought up Ellen?
Uh Buckinghamshire, Aylesbury. So how did you end up playing for Manchester City?
I moved a few times, to be fair.
So I started out at my primary school team, all boys, no girls teams at the time.
Got banned when I was nine.
What did your parents say when you got banned?
I mean, it feels very dramatic to ban a nine-year-old for a talent.
Yeah, it's weird.
My dad, obviously, yeah, they yeah they did fight you know saying it was
absolutely ridiculous yeah absolutely ridiculous I don't I still don't understand the actual reason
I don't know whether it was like changing rooms I was like well I could just go into the other
changing rooms that would make more sense so yeah it was it was just such a weird one really
so it's obviously banned at that age but I was very fortunate to have been scouted by Arsenal
so I went straight to Arsenal Centre of Excellence, which is an all-female outlet.
But I still went and played boys' tournaments with my friends.
They weren't going to stop me doing that, to be fair.
So I stayed at Arsenal until I was 8 to 16,
and then I moved to Chelsea, Leeds, went back to Arsenal,
and then I started to kind of move north a bit more.
How did the other boys react to you being better than them at nine were did they
show you respect or did you feel like they found it quite hard to deal with the boys on my team
were amazing um they were like my best friends um super supportive and i know for a fact that
we turn up to play different teams and they'll be like there's a girl playing that would be
interesting and my mom and dad always laugh and say that.
I literally just ran through and just scored
and they were like, ah.
So yeah, I pretty much just let my football do the talking.
I think I was just so oblivious.
I just loved playing football.
I had the most supportive team.
I was very lucky.
So I wasn't probably too aware of what was being said.
It was probably my mum and dad
that were kind of standing back going, watch
and then she'll prove you wrong.
See, I can't remember women's
football till bend it like beckham exactly the same is that the same for you as well 100 that
was when i first knew professional football yeah existed in america me too so when was that
bend it like beckham's like was it the 90s yeah i want to say night like late 90s how old were you then
Ellen I want to say like 10 okay okay so you're already playing football yeah like that yeah
so professional football for women started in the states yeah so I didn't it didn't become
professional in England until 2014 is when I first got my professional contract but But then I don't think all the teams in the league
were fully professional.
I'd say it's only been the last few years
that every single team has got full professional outlet,
like outfield players.
Which was the last team you played for?
Man City.
And did you meet Pat Guardiola?
He did come and watch a few training sessions, to be fair.
I didn't physically meet him,
but yeah, he was very supportive.
He was really nice.
Lynne, do you think last year's Euro 2022 victory
would have been possible without the support and funding?
Resources, equipment, coaching to young players, development, all of that?
Absolutely not.
The National Lottery has put so much money into women's football.
There's no way that it would have grown like it has.
And thanks to the fact that the Lionesses won the Euros, it's only going to make more and more people want to play
football. And hopefully after the World Cup, exactly the same, because after the men won the
World Cup in 66, that's when I started. And Ellen, how important is it that that funding from
organisations like the National Lottery is used to get the next generation of girls inspired, falling in love with the beautiful game?
Even if most of us, I'm talking about like I'm a girl, mum thought that OG meant old girl, by the way.
It made me laugh a lot.
What does it mean, Jessie?
Original gangster.
Did you know you're an original gangster, Lynne?
Well, no, I had to ask somebody what OG's was.
Thank you.
I thought it was old girls.
Thank you, Lynn.
What do you prefer, Lynn?
Old girl or original gangster?
I think old girl's good enough.
Yeah.
But even if the majority will not be going pro,
I feel very excited for my daughter
to be watching the World Cup.
I mean, I remember as soon as the Lionesses won,
every parent on WhatsApp was like,
is that Girls United on Peckham Rye?
Is it available?
Is it still going on a Sunday?
Should we sign up?
It was just like this onslaught
of everyone signing their daughters up for football.
Yeah, I think it's amazing.
I think, you know, National Lottery have given like 50 million to grassroots football, which is incredible.
And I recently went to a local club right near me where I live.
And the amount of girls that play football is just amazing.
And I've recently gone back to my local primary school and I was the
only girl playing football and there was literally 25 girls I felt really like emotional I was like
oh my god this is incredible and that was before the Euros my husband works in like sports development
and honestly the amount of grassroots team who were inundated like you just said Jessie that
were just inundated with girls wanting to play football was just phenomenal. And it was almost like too much for them because it was just such like an onslaught
of just everyone wanted to play football, which is incredible. We still have a way to go, obviously,
to reach out every community, diversifying it and making it inclusive for everyone, accessible for
everyone. But it is incredible that so many young people want to play football and feel
inspired and feel empowered and like you say you don't have to be like i wasn't amazing but enjoy
it with a smile like you meet new people friends like it's an incredible feeling to be part of a
team ellen you've got a daughter haven't you yeah will you be being a pushy footballing parent
and wanting her to go into the game or would you say
you know what it's too stressful I only get to eat chicken and porridge most days just don't do it
doll I just wanted to be happy um I feel like I've met so many people already and been like oh
do you think she'll play for England and I'm like she's 12
weeks old I have no idea like she's got a decent pair of legs on her I'll give her that but yeah
does she have an England football shirt that she's been given one the lionesses have already given
her one how many baby grows did she get that were like England related do you know what none oh
there's still time babe yeah there's no she has a full england kit now so she'll be wearing that she's about to go into the three to six months so there you go
i wondered if you your first dance was to sweet caroline
yeah i mean what a song what a song it's such a good song it's kind of made me like it i didn't
like it before it became this football anthem.
I don't know.
Lynn, was there a song that you used to play with your teammates
that would get you going?
Not really.
No, not like this does now.
You've only got to hear this now and it just brings a smile to your face.
Yeah, absolutely.
I agree.
It is magic.
Lynn, I would like to know, we ask everybody,
you're about to go to a desert island. There will be no football there and none of your favourite food. So I'd like both of you, we'll go with Lynn first, your last supper. It's a starter, a main, a pud and a drink of choice. What are you going to have on the dinner table?
This is showing my age. A prawn cocktail.
Oh, I love it
very retro
I like it
it's come back Lynn
don't worry
it's back in vogue now
everyone loves a prawn cocktail
oh that's all right then
shepherd's pie
with lots of vegetables
oh
would you have a little pickle with that
Branston pickle or ketchup?
no that's a northern thing
is it?
it is yeah we don't do that down here
chassis now you know look don't knock it until you've tried it actually do you put brown sauce
on it lynn yes yes and cheese yeah love you oh my goodness
okay fine thank you put oh it's it's difficult for i like profiteroles and i like cheesecakes
i think you can have both you can have both yeah and what's your drink of choice can i say the
make diet pepsi of course you can you can say what you like absolutely diet pepsi probably get
sent some now and ellen i'm presuming that you're not going to go with
a professional footballer diet. Let's see what you're going to give us. Starter, Maine, Pud,
drink of choice. Do you know what? I'm not a big fan of starters. Can I just go straight for Maine?
You can do what you like. You are a Euro 2022 winner. Okay. My dad's Christmas dinner.
What's so good about it?
Well, he used to be a chef, so he just goes so over the top.
The turkey, gammon.
He's had goose before.
All the roasties, mash you could think of, red cabbage, stuffing.
He hasn't done Yorkshire.
We don't have Yorkshires on a Christmas dinner, actually.
We don't either.
No.
No.
Gravy.
Yeah, it's so good. Pudding. my grandma's apple and raspberry crumble with custard oh apple and raspberry oh that's a nice idea it's a nice
combination what's the topping like is it just pure butter and sugar and flour or has it got
any kind of oats on it no it's just old school pure butter just like nice thick like crumble on
top it was so good cream or custard custard do you know what i do love custard but then have like a
scoop of ice cream as well oh a la mode they say isn't a la mode with cream and ice cream no it's
ice cream darling just ice cream a scoop oh yeah right got it got it and drink of choice ellen if i'm going a bit
fan like i'd have like a orange squash but if i was going a bit fancy i'd have like a lauren perrier
rose or something like that oh yeah me too my favorite it's so good it's so good i've missed
i've missed a little glass of that when you won did that was there a lot of champagne about
i think we saw that there was a lot they were so hung over when they it was so amazing yeah the sunglasses were out yeah like we did not know
we were going to trafalgar square we did not know that was happening and then we kind of basically
it was quite funny we got literally woke up and there's just people lining the corridors
like must have been a good night and then we had a meeting and people literally had glasses on,
head between their legs, just going,
well, this is not good.
And then we, yeah, stood out, Trafalgar Square,
sunglasses on, hungover as hell, but what a night.
And what was your hangover breakfast that you had
or couldn't you stomach anything?
I think I just had a few pastries to be fair.
Fair enough.
Yeah.
See, Lynn, you won't be having this problem at the weekend.
You'll be the friend that is getting everybody else home
and with a clear head in the morning and a clear conscience.
Absolutely.
Lynne, do you like cooking?
I wouldn't say that it's top of my list.
I cook to eat.
OK.
I love all the fancy foods, but I can't spend all the time doing it.
It just, I'd like to spend all the time doing it.
I'd like to.
My dad was a chef.
Oh, really?
Was he?
Absolutely.
And what was your favourite meal that he used to cook you? As Ellen said, his roast dinners were absolutely brilliant.
His roast potatoes were to die for.
Really?
Absolutely brilliant.
Ellen, can I ask you, you benefited from funding Made Possible
thanks to National
Lottery players for two years you were supported by the Talented Athlete Scholarship Scheme it's
a National Lottery funded partnership what impact do you think that that scheme and funding had for
your career? It was amazing that funding TAS really helped me in terms of travel for extra
training sessions so it supported my strength and conditioning sessions
that I did outside of my club basically um so it really helped me learn and develop different kind
of movements and develop my strength and conditioning with with a coach but this is
something that the male team would just they'd have in-house right yeah so you had to have this
kind of funding from national lottery players to be able to access this yeah 100% so they yeah enabled me to be able to access uh this coach which was at bisham abbey which was about 45
minutes an hour away from me incredible facility so yeah i was very lucky to to kind of have coaches
that were dedicated in in helping to develop sports athletes in strength and also conditioning
type of things so basically helping me last as long as I could on
the pitch really how would you encourage women that want to have thought about playing football
but haven't found a team or what would you say to them do you know what that I've had women actually
come up to me where I live since the Euros like mums older women as well and literally they just
created a group together and went to the
local park and started kicking a ball around oh wow and I it gave me like goosebumps because I was
like that's just incredible you're you've created a little community for yourselves you're going out
you're enjoying it you're meeting new people you're playing football you're having fun you
don't have to be the best at something to to create a lovely environment so uh yeah i'd just say there's so many kind of sessions that you can do especially
for young people that you can join but there's loads of groups now available kind of facebook
or anything like that in your local area where you can join and just go and have fun and meet
new people really lynn do you think england are going to bring home the World Cup? Yeah, that's what I was going to say. Is it coming home?
Oh, you don't look...
I want them to.
I want them to, but I think the final might be a difficult one.
Who do you think is going to be in the final?
Is it the USA?
I think so.
Yeah.
I really do.
Is she still playing?
What's the name of Rapinoe?
Yeah.
She's still playing?
Yeah.
Oh, God.
It doesn't actually show they've had funding and support and it's been far more prioritized in the USA for the women's team for
far longer so I guess what England are doing and what they did last year and showed is so brilliant
but thanks to organizations such as the National Lottery and National Lottery players things can
only get better, right?
Absolutely.
It would be absolutely brilliant to just win it
and that would prove that we're going in the right direction.
Lynn and Ellen, it's been such an honour to chat to you.
You're utterly inspiring, the both of you, and I just thank you.
This has been so wonderful to talk about football for an hour
and a little bit of food.
What would you cook, Mum, for the England football team if they were going to bring it home or as a commiseration meal?
Clearly, I've got to do a big roast.
Yeah, it seems like it would go down well.
Because that's what everyone wants.
And I don't know, a nice dessert.
But I did get mixed up at the beginning and I did call you goddesses rather than lionesses.
And I think it's very apt.
So I think you're both goddesses who've done so brilliantly well for English football.
Thank you.
And I'm really proud and happy to have talked to you.
You're very sweet.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Thank you.
And best of luck.
Everyone's invested, but it feels like the team is an extension of both of you.
And so, yeah, I wish you all the best.
And thanks so much.
And I hope all the promo that you're about to have to do for the world cup i hope it's painless yeah me too
thank you no thanks so much for having us on guys yeah thank you very very much thank you our first footballers on the podcast and how interesting they were it was really fascinating
and a pleasure to hear their stories completely different experiences yes of playing football
thank you so much to everyone that's listened thank you you to Ellen White and Lynn Hale for being on this.
Good luck to the Lionesses
out in New Zealand
and Australia.
Come bring it home for us.
And thank you so much
to the National Lottery
for making this episode happen.
Remember,
every time you play
the National Lottery,
you help support
amazing good courses
all over the UK.
Thanks to the National Lottery players,
over 50 million pounds
has been raised for women's football over the past 10 to the National Lottery players over 50 million pounds has been raised for women's
football over the past 10 years it's amazing what the National Lottery does for people and it's
amazing to see what else women's football can achieve with funding like this thanks for listening
to this episode brought to you by the National Lottery and we'll see you very, very soon. Jessie. What? Sweet Caroline.
Bum, bum, bum.
Good times never seem...
Yeah, anyway.
You've got to go,
so good, so good.
Anyway, thank you so much.