goalkeepers

Female goalkeepers development – from being trolled to loved

McCaldon works with Republic of Ireland number one Brosnan at Everton.

From his experience in the women’s game, McCaldon believes a host of factors have come together to develop the modern goalkeeper.

Only in recent years have goalkeeping coaches worked with female players on a full-time basis.

Former England international Karen Bardsley trained alongside men in college and felt it was beneficial to her, but the growing availability of top-class coaching designated for female goalkeepers has been a game-changer.

“The profile of the women’s game is also getting bigger, so there’s more of a player pool,” McCaldon told BBC Sport.

“There’s more resources for female goalkeepers in regards to strength and conditioning exercises, sports science and nutritional research.

“If you package all of it and other holistic stuff like yoga or meditation, you are only going to get better.

“It’s a natural thing that’s happened because of the investment in the women’s game. It wasn’t there when I first started.”

Skinner, before he moved to Manchester United, recruited Hampton for Birmingham City’s academy and would later hand her a first-team debut in 2017.

He went on to work with Earps at United, before American Tullis-Joyce emerged with an impressive first season as the club’s number one.

According to Skinner, a period of “progressive professionalism” has influenced the development of female goalkeepers.

“The athleticism of female goalkeeping has got a lot greater and the development of sport science has improved that,” said Skinner.

“Phallon [Tullis-Joyce] is unique because of her athletic prowess. She has the ability to move around the goal really quickly.

“The other aspects of goalkeepers are developing – tactical knowledge, building structural knowledge and being able to adapt.

“Everyone prides themselves on short passes as a goalkeeper but – and you can see the way Hampton does this – the distribution is now really key.”

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Emiliano Martinez: Unai Emery coy on Aston Villa goalkeeper’s future

Aston Villa boss Unai Emery said “we will see” about Emiliano Martinez’s future after the goalkeeper’s tears at the end of their win over Tottenham.

The 32-year-old looked emotional at full-time after Champions League-chasing Villa’s 2-0 win in their last home game of the season.

Martinez, a two-time winner of the Best Fifa Men’s Goalkeeper award, has played 211 times for Villa since a 2020 move from Arsenal.

Asked about Martinez’s future, Emery was non-committal, saying: “We will see.

“Of course, it is the last match here [this season], and I don’t know.

“We will see about the team, the players, but of course, they are responding on the field.”

Aston Villa moved into the top five with the win over Spurs, but with Manchester City having a game in hand they most likely need to beat Manchester United next Sunday and hope for other results to go their way to secure back-to-back seasons in the Champions League.

“Of course, then we will see about everything, how we are going to try to get better for the next season,” Emery said.

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