She Kicks Magazine
·1 Juni 2026
Petition to ‘Save Plymouth Argyle Women’ gains thousands of signatures

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Yahoo sportsShe Kicks Magazine
·1 Juni 2026

An online Football petition calling on Plymouth Argyle Women to be protected from sweeping cuts has gathered thousands of signatures, after the club decided not to renew most of the squad’s contracts this summer. The campaign asks Plymouth Argyle’s board to reverse the move and keep the senior women’s side properly funded within the club.
That matters because this is not a team on the margins of the pyramid. Argyle were runners-up in the FA Women’s National League Southern Premier Division last season, reached the FA WNL Cup final and were one game from promotion to WSL 2.
According to the Plymouth Herald’s report, the petition was launched after Plymouth Argyle informed the majority of the women’s squad by mass email on Saturday afternoon that their contracts would not be renewed because of budget costs. The decision came days after head coach Marie Hourihan resigned.
The petition, published on change.org under the headline “They gave everything for the badge. Argyle gave them an email. Save PAWFC”, argues that the cuts threaten both players’ livelihoods and the future of women’s football in the city. It urges the board, and owner Simon Hallett, to reassess the club’s financial priorities and explore alternatives including sponsorship, local partnerships and fundraising rather than effectively dismantling the senior team.
The wording is blunt for a reason. “Save Plymouth Argyle” is not being used here as a slogan about sentiment alone; it is a demand to keep a competitive women’s side alive inside the Argyle structure.
That fits a wider pattern She Kicks has been tracking: clubs talk about integration, pathways and sustainability, then retreat when the women’s side requires sustained resource rather than one-off visibility. Plymouth Argyle had previously framed the women’s operation as part of a more integrated long-term model, which makes the present reversal hard to separate from questions about strategic commitment.
This matters beyond Devon. Below the WSL, women’s teams often sit in the most fragile part of a club’s financial planning, even when results justify stronger backing. She Kicks has already looked at how funding still fails to reach enough of the grassroots and lower-pyramid game in stories such as Sport England’s football fund, and how pay and resource gaps remain embedded across the wider structure in our coverage of women’s league salary gaps.
Luke Pollard, the Plymouth Sutton MP and an Argyle supporter, said he was “shocked and disappointed” by how the squad were told and called it bad news for both the club and football in the city. Per BBC Sport’s wider coverage of the fallout in women’s football, the issue is not only the cuts themselves but the now-familiar gap between public commitment and operational reality.
Clubs will always point to sustainability. Fine in principle, but that only holds if the women’s team was ever being treated as a core part of the football operation rather than an expendable cost line. If a side can finish near the top of its division, reach a cup final and still find its future abruptly downgraded, then performance alone clearly does not secure protection.
That is why this case also echoes broader scrutiny of how clubs allocate money and status across their organisations. The numbers differ from the top end of the game, but the underlying question is familiar from She Kicks’ reporting on club investment and women’s team wages: when a club says it backs the women’s side, what does that support actually survive?
The immediate pressure point is simple. Supporters have created momentum, local political criticism is now public, and the board must decide whether the petition changes anything material or merely documents anger after the fact.
According to the club’s earlier plans for a more integrated women’s structure, the next phase was supposed to bring stronger alignment with the men’s club and FA Women’s National League requirements. If that framework now ends with mass releases and a campaign to save the team, the contradiction will be hard to explain away.
The signature count is easy to track. The club’s next decision matters more.







































