Sue Buckett Explained

Sue Buckett
Birth Name:Susan Buckett
Birth Date:1 January 1944
Birth Place:Wokingham, England
Height:1.62m (05.31feet)
Position:Goalkeeper
Years1:1966–1986
Clubs1:Southampton Women's F.C.
Years2:1986–1999
Clubs2:Red Star Southampton
Nationalyears1:1972–1980
Nationalteam1:England
Nationalcaps1:29
Nationalgoals1:0

Sue Buckett (born 1 January 1944) is a former England women's international footballer.[1] [2] She represented England at senior international level and spent most of her career at Southampton Women's F.C. Buckett won the Women's FA Cup eight times between 1971 and 1981 and was the first ever goalkeeper to save a penalty in the competition's final.

Club Career

Buckett won the WFA Cup eight times with Southampton and was captain in six of their winning finals. Her first winners medal came in 1971 when they beat Stewarton Thistle 4-1 at Crystal Palace National Sports Centre. Buckett has the distinction of being the first ever goalkeeper to save a penalty in a WFA Cup final which she achieved in 1975, when she saved a penalty taken by Eileen Foreman of Warminster. Southampton won the game 4-2. Her eighth and final success in the competition came in 1981 when Southampton defeated reigning champions St Helens at Knowsley Road. She reached the final again in 1992 with Red Star Southampton, but they lost 4-0 to Doncaster Belles in the final at Prenton Park. Buckett was also an unused substitute in the 1999 final when the renamed Southampton Saints were beaten by Arsenal.[3] [4]

International career

Sue Buckett made her first appearance for England in their first ever official match. England played against Scotland on 18 November 1972 in Greenock, winning 3–2.[5] In November 2022, Buckett was recognized by The Football Association as one of the England national team's legacy players, and as the 1st women's player to be capped by England.[6]

Honours

Southampton

References

  1. Web site: FA should honour female England players who were not given their caps due to 'penny-pinching'. James. Gray. July 12, 2022. inews.co.uk.
  2. News: Legacy numbers introduced for England women's team . BBC Sport .
  3. Book: Slegg Chris . Gregory Patricia . A History of the Women's FA Cup Final . 2021 . thehistorypress . 9780750996594 . 33-64 69-73 121-123 148-151.
  4. Web site: Sue Buckett . Womens Football Archive . 13 November 2024.
  5. News: O'Neill . Jen . 40 years ago today: Scotland 2-3 England . 2 September 2022 . . 12 June 2019.
  6. ENGLAND PLAYER LEGACY AND RESULTS ARCHIVE . 18 November 2022 . 27 April 2023 . The Football Association.