The Mag
·19 de marzo de 2025
Newcastle United official announcement – Records will be broken at St James’ Park on Sunday

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Yahoo sportsThe Mag
·19 de marzo de 2025
Newcastle United have confirmed that records will be broken on Sunday at St James’ Park.
A new second tier attendance record will be set in the women’s game.
The Newcastle United Women’s side up against Sunderland.
With over 26,000 tickets already sold.
Official Newcastle United announcement – 19 March 2025:
‘With ticket sales ticking over 26,000, Newcastle United Women are set to make history once again at St. James’ Park on Sunday by breaking the Barclays Women’s Championship attendance record.
The Lasses take on Sunderland Women, who currently hold the record – one which has repeatedly been smashed over the last four years.
Back in October 2021, the Women’s Championship and Sheffield United Women were keen to announce their matchday attendance against Matt Beard’s Liverpool Women, with a push having been made to set a record.
Despite losing at home, the Blades could boast a 4,100 crowd, a record at the time in the women’s second tier. But while this was impressive, for context, United attracted over 7,000 for their title-clinching game against Huddersfield Women last season.
For a second time in six months, Liverpool Women were involved in more history in April 2022, and while also clinching promotion to the Women’s Super League they played in front of 5,752 fans against Bristol City Women at Ashton Gate – the first time a Women’s Championship game had been watched by over 5,000 spectators.
Current Newcastle players Rachel Furness and Charlotte Wardlaw were in that Liverpool squad and look certain to set another record on Sunday, albeit with at least 21,000 more fans cheering them on this time.
There was a boom in women’s football from the beginning of the 2022/23 campaign, largely down to the success of the England Lionesses, who won the Euros that summer.
That saw attendances boosted up and down the country, and the Women’s Championship made a major step forward by breaking the 10,000 milestone, once again thanks to Sheffield United Women.
The Blades didn’t just break that barrier, they smashed through it, recording an impressive 11,137 crowd in November 2022 – although the home side were once more on the wrong side of a defeat, losing 2-0 to London City Lionesses.
That record was not beaten for the entirety of the season, and it was only last October when a new attendance record was set.
Of course, that came in the memorable Tyne-Wear derby earlier this term in which Beth Lumsden’s brace was enough to seal all three points for Newcastle United Women at the Stadium of Light against Sunderland Women.
As Sunderland looked to push for an attendance near 20,000, which would have almost doubled the previous record, they settled for 15,387, and a large number of those supporters were in black and white.
So, with less than five days until Sunday’s return fixture on Tyneside, there’ll be eyes both on the stands and the pitch as United prepare for another historic afternoon.
Newcastle’s own record attendance in the league came against Bradford City Women in April 2022 when 24,092 Geordies were packed in to roar Becky Langley’s side on in what was their final home match of the 2022/23 campaign in tier four.
While that’s a stunning total for any divisions – especially tier four – the Lasses attracted an even bigger crowd against Barnsley Women in the Women’s FA Cup in November 2022, a game which they fell behind.
However, that record attendance of 28,565 were duly treated to some late drama with United’s top scorer at St. James’ Park, Georgie Gibson, and Sharna Wilkinson netting in the second half to send Langley’s side through.
United are close to history this weekend, not just for the club but also for women’s football as a whole.
At the moment, only Arsenal Women, Chelsea Women, Tottenham Hotspur Women, Manchester United Women and Manchester City Women have set attendances over 30,000 in the Women’s Super League, so Sunday is a chance for Newcastle to put not just themselves, but the North East football scene back on the map.