Several members of the team are students at Long Road 6th Mode School in Cambridge, and their instruction and consistency in performing at a ruthless, isolated pace is top-notch.
“We train twice a week and some of us also play matches twice a week. Traveling to and from university takes a lot of time, traveling to and from training takes a lot of time, so it’s quite difficult to balance it all.” MacLeod mentioned.
“But we’re all doing pretty well, we all manage to keep up with everything.”
Midfielder Natasha Coe adds: “Any free time I have is spent on classwork. I meet most deadlines so it’s fine and the teachers are very understanding about it too.”
Despite spending so much pace in combination, there may also be an urge to break away from each and every option and do something else.
“It’s nice to have company in and out of school. We see each other all the time, so we’re really close,” says 16-year-old forward Religion Harrison, who scored probably the most finishes at 4-1. they beat Wormsley and then the draw resulted in a 1-1 draw.
She also found the goal in a 3-0 win at Woodbridge Town in the second qualifying round, the level at which they entered the contest (alternative goals coming from Lily Horsler and Phoebe Newman) were also 16th.
Those wins have so far earned the club £7,000 and, depending on the result against Stevenage, will add an extra £6,000 to what they are expected to win, or £1,500 in the event of a tournament defeat – considerable money, to be sure. for a membership in your stage.