logo
'Netball? You mean football?' - Now I'm England men's netball captain

'Netball? You mean football?' - Now I'm England men's netball captain

Yahoo25-05-2025

Joining a men's netball club in England was not easy for James Thomson-Boston when he moved over from Australia nine years ago.
"When I came here I wanted to join a men's netball team, and everyone was like, 'Oh, I think you mean football?' - I was like, 'No, I mean netball'," the 32-year-old told BBC Sport.
Now, he captains the England men's team and led his side out at London's Copper Box on Sunday for game one in a three-match international series against Australia.
"Netball has always been something your sister played, or the girls played at school, or a sport you were forced to play when you were like 12," Thomson-Boston said.
But in his experience, that's changing.
Certainly his England side gave a good account of themselves in their first match of the series against the Kelpies.
Although they suffered a 63-34 loss, it was a much narrower margin of defeat aganst the most dominant side in men's international netball than in their last meeting.
The England men's team, or the England Thorns, played their first international match in October 2022, after being formed just seven months earlier.
They were defeated by hosts Australia 73-27 but it was a landmark moment for men's netball back home.
"We didn't get people saying 'Oh God, you got beaten by 60 goals'. People were like, 'It was really impressive to see you go out there, and show that the UK is developing in the netball world'," Thomson-Boston said.
Since that tour, male participation in netball has more than tripled in England. There are now over 70 clubs across the UK offering men's and mixed teams.
The England Men's and Mixed Netball Association, EMMNA, is looking to expand its National Championships given the increasing demand from clubs to be involved.
There were 14 teams involved in the first men's and mixed National Championships in 2021. This year, they have 48 teams competing, with a further 10 on a waiting list.
The men's game continues to grow around the world.
Australia, a dominant force in both men's and women's netball, has been running a Men's and Mixed Netball Championship for more than 40 years.
"People [in Australia] are encouraged from a young age to play the sport and to really see it as a viable option", Thomson-Boston said.
New Zealand, the Caribbean and Americas regions all field men's national teams, and clubs continue to emerge across Africa.
Ryan Allan, president and founder of the volunteer-run organisation EMMNA, believes the biggest barrier to the growth of men's netball in England is funding.
All the athletes in the England men's team are self-funded, with Thomson-Boston saying they play "for the pride" and "to further the sport".
Allan identifies boys aged between 11 to 16 as those who tend to have limited opportunities to continue playing because of a lack of school-based netball programmes or pathways.
Then there is the stigma of netball being a sport "that the girls played at school", which Thomson-Boston believes is changing.
"Less people are coming up to me and saying, 'Oh, I thought that [netball] was for girls'," he said. "More people are saying, 'Oh, you can play netball, you can play men's netball and you play for England'."
The narrative of women's sport fighting for recognition in a historically male-dominated space is a familiar one.
But for netball, it is quite the opposite position.
The women's game is supporting growth in the men's ranks, with the Netball Super League teams – the elite women's clubs in England – welcoming England men's players as training partners.
The benefits are mutual.
London Pulse head coach Sam Bird, with whose Super League team Thomson-Boston trains, said: "The men play a slightly different form of the game, so it's quite good for challenging us.
"If you've been playing netball as a female, coming up through the ranks, you tend to sort of play in one style. The men create an unpredictable style for us, and the girls really enjoy training against that sort of unpredictability."
Pulse defender Darcie Everitt added: "They bring a lot of strength and they also play really, really fast. As a defender, it's good to practise against that style of play. They push us even further."
The men's matches against Australia are being promoted as double-headers with Super League matches, where fans can watch both the England men and a Super League women's match with a single ticket.
Game 1 – Sunday 25 May, 15:30 BST - England v Australia, double-header with London Pulse v Birmingham Panthers
Game 2 - Saturday 31 May, 12:00 BST - England v Australia, double-header with Loughborough Lightning v Nottingham Forest
Game 3 - Sunday 1 June, 15:30 BST - England v Australia, double-header with London Pulse v Leeds Rhinos
As men's netball continues to develop, protecting the sport's identity as a traditionally female-led sport has become a key part of that journey, Thomson-Boston said.
"This was a female-led space that was for females, aimed at females," he said. "We aren't coming in to dominate that space. We just want to increase the amount of people who can see the sport".
"Because it's a female-led sport, you are always surrounded by this really inclusive feminine energy, I think, and they are the ones welcoming people in."
There has never been a men's netball World Cup - but there are ongoing discussions around a potential launch in 2027, the same year of the women's Netball World Cup in Sydney.
Could a men's World Cup run alongside the women's edition?
"The end goal would be that it runs in tandem. Everyone is in the same area, all the same energy, bringing all the netball noise!" Thomson-Boston said.
As for the Olympics, netball has yet to make its debut.
"The bigger we can make it in the next couple of years, the more chance we're going to make it to the Olympics," Thomson-Boston said. "I don't think my knees will survive until then, but who knows!"
'Two concussions in a month was scary and it's why I'm retiring'
'I was completely burnt out, I could not function'
How Panagarry turned career doubts into NSL titles

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ryan Reynolds, Hugh Jackman join Australia SailGP team as co-owners
Ryan Reynolds, Hugh Jackman join Australia SailGP team as co-owners

Associated Press

time26 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Ryan Reynolds, Hugh Jackman join Australia SailGP team as co-owners

Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman become co-owners of the Australia SailGP team on Thursday. The 'Deadpool & Wolverine' stars joined driver and CEO Tom Slingsby in leading the team's rebrand after several successful seasons, winning three championships in its four seasons. The team will be called the BONDS Flying Roos, with the Australian underwear company BONDS as its title partner. 'We're incredibly excited to set sail together in this new adventure,' Reynolds and Jackman said in a joint statement released through SailGP. 'Hugh brings a deep love for and pride in his home country, as well as being an avid fan of sailing. He will also be bringing his overly clingy emotional support human along for the ride. Apologies in advance to Australia. No comment on whether we're writing this in our BONDS. No further questions.' It's the latest sports venture for Reynolds, who along with fellow Hollywood actor Rob McElhenney is a co-owner of Wrexham, one of the world's oldest soccer clubs. Reynolds and McElhenney were also part of an investment group that acquired Colombian club La Equidad earlier this year. The BONDS Flying Roos SailGP Team is expected to make its debut at the Mubadala New York Sail Grand Prix starting June 7. Slingsby, an Olympic gold medalist, said in a release that Jackman and Reynolds bring 'unmatched star power, a love for storytelling, and a sharp sense of (humor) that fits perfectly with our team.' 'With BONDS joining as our Title Partner and the launch of the BONDS Flying Roos,' Slingsby added, 'we're building something distinctly Australian; a team driven by spirit, resilience, and national pride.' ___ AP sports:

Can Tijjani Reijnders' arrival boost Manchester City's 2025/26 title odds?
Can Tijjani Reijnders' arrival boost Manchester City's 2025/26 title odds?

New York Times

time28 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Can Tijjani Reijnders' arrival boost Manchester City's 2025/26 title odds?

For more stories like this, click here to follow The Athletic's sports betting section and have them added to your feed. It's been nine years since Manchester City last found themselves as an afterthought in a league title race. The 2024-25 season was a long, trophy-less season for Pep Guardiola's men. Nothing seemed to go right as injuries, ageing players and sudden drops in form combined to leave the Citizen's 13 points off Liverpool's title-winning tally of 84. Advertisement As long as Guardiola is at the helm, a double-digit gap between his team and pole position will be unacceptable. City started to bridge that gap in January, using the winter window to primarily focus on fixing a leaky defence. It seemed to work as the Citizens allowed the second-fewest expected goals (xG) in the Premier League since the start of 2025, only bested by a defensively solid Arsenal. However, the players targeted by City so far during this summer window are more impactful on the other end of the pitch. AC Milan's Tijjani Reijnders has just completed his move to Manchester, while Wolves' attacking left-back Rayan Aït-Nouri and Lyon's midfield maestro Rayan Cherki are poised to follow him. The bookmakers still believe there is much more needed from City to improve their chances of usurping Liverpool as champions of England. Even with the addition of Reijnders, Guardiola's side remain firmly behind Arsenal (5/2) and the Reds (21/10) with odds of just 13/5. So, do the bookmakers know something we don't? Or is City's ongoing overhaul about to provide considerable value? You have to hand it to Guardiola. He watched in horror as his once impenetrable defence got ripped to shreds in the early part of the season, only to sign a 'not-defender' a few months later. That isn't a malfunctioning chart; the Dutch midfielder just isn't all that interested in defending. If you want a deeper dive into what exactly Reijnders does bring to the table, our own Sam Lee has already written a comprehensive tactical breakdown. What we'll focus on here isn't the what of Reijnders but the why. As in, why does Guardiola want to sign not one, but potentially two all-out attacking midfielders — Cherki's radar looks almost identical — after watching his defence struggle to cobble itself back together? Advertisement The answer is simple: City have always won due to their devastating attacking prowess. Last year was the first time in six seasons that the Citizens didn't lead the league in xG. During the 2023-24 season, Liverpool's xG tally topped City by over seven goals (87.8-80.5). This year, that gap nearly doubled as City created only 68.1 xG to Liverpool's 82.2. For a club that once created nearly 23 more expected goals than the next closest side in the 2019-20 season, this decline has caught Guardiola's attention. The need for reinforcements who can turn things around is apparent, and Reijnders' numbers speak for themselves. The irony is that despite all the focus on the new signings, the most intriguing reason to lay money on City's 13/5 title odds is a player who joined the team last summer: Sávio. Michael Imburgio's DAVIES model attempts to capture one of the most difficult aspects of football: measuring the impact of every touch a player takes on his team's ability to score a goal. When analysing the DAVIES rankings of the most impactful players in the league last season, you get a relatively unsurprising list. Liverpool's Mohamed Salah ranks first, followed by Chelsea's Cole Palmer, Newcastle's Alexander Isak and City's Erling Haaland. The fact that Haaland leads City in the DAVIES score isn't very shocking. What does raise an eyebrow is who sits third in the table: Sávio. In nearly every category the model measures — box activity, shooting, final ball dribbles and carries — the Brazilian winger made a significant contribution to the City attack last season. If the number a sophisticated model churns out is too ambiguous for you, there are other advanced metrics that show Sávio might be a future superstar. The 21-year-old is the third-best player in the team in passes into the penalty area per 90 minutes, behind only Kevin De Bruyne and Jérémy Doku. Sávio was also second on the team in carries into the penalty area and touches inside the box, once again trailing Doku. Advertisement So, if Doku is leading all these categories, why the excitement for the Brazilian and not the Belgian? It's because Doku often uses mesmeric dribbling to get into dangerous areas only to misplay the final ball. It's why Sávio not only has a much higher DAVIES score — 3.32 to Doku's 1.33 — but also ranked second on the team in shot-creating actions, trailing only De Bruyne. Interestingly, one of the main reasons the 21-year-old likely didn't see more of the action: he couldn't score. While Reijnders scored 15 goals off just 9.9 xG, Sávio only managed a paltry two goals off 6.5 xG last season. Reijnders' additional impact in the final third certainly will add value to City's title odds as well as the contributions of Cherki and Aït-Nouri if they end up in Manchester. But the new faces aren't the reason to be optimistic about the Citizens. It's a familiar face that could supercharge their upcoming season. Betting/odds links in this article are provided by partners of The Athletic. Restrictions may apply. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication. (Photo of Tijjani Reijnders: Giuseppe Meazza / Getty Images)

Ex-Arsenal player Jay Emmanuel-Thomas sentenced to four years for involvement in drug smuggling plot
Ex-Arsenal player Jay Emmanuel-Thomas sentenced to four years for involvement in drug smuggling plot

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Ex-Arsenal player Jay Emmanuel-Thomas sentenced to four years for involvement in drug smuggling plot

The former Arsenal player Jay Emmanuel-Thomas has been sentenced to four years in prison for his involvement in an attempt to smuggle 60 kilograms of cannabis into the United Kingdom. The 34-year-old will serve one year and seven months, having already served nine months on remand, before being released on license. The maximum sentence for cannabis importation in the UK is 14 years in prison. Advertisement At Thursday's sentencing at Chelmsford Crown Court, Emmanuel-Thomas sat behind a glass-panelled dock in a grey suit jacket, flanked by two security officials. Prosecutor David Josse KC told the court that Emmanuel-Thomas was expecting a payment of £5,000 ($6,800) for his part in getting the cannabis into the country. 'It is clear this was about money despite you being in a position where you had the privilege of playing football as a living,' the judge, Alexander Mills, told Emmanuel-Thomas. 'It is through your own actions that you will no longer be known for being a professional footballer. You will be known as a criminal, a professional footballer who threw it all away, and put others at risk of imprisonment, in pursuit of money.' Appearing via videolink from HMP Chelmsford on May 21, Emmanuel-Thomas pleaded guilty to the charge of fraudulent evasion of the prohibition on the importation of cannabis, between July 1 2024 and September 2, 2024, at Chelmsford Crown Court. The former England youth international had been detained by the National Crime Agency (NCA) in September 2024 after the cannabis was detected in suitcases which had arrived on a flight from Bangkok, Thailand to London's Stansted Airport on September 2. The suitcases belonged to Rosie Rowland, 29, and Yasmin Piotrowska, 33, the latter being Emmanuel-Thomas' partner. Having been arrested at Stansted, charges against the women, who denied their involvement at an earlier hearing, were dropped by the prosecution. In May, Josse told the court that the investigation into their involvement was discontinued after analysis of Emmanuel-Thomas's mobile phone. 'They thought they were importing gold, not cannabis,' Josse said. Emmanuel-Thomas initially denied his involvement in importing class B drugs at a hearing at Carlisle Magistrates' Court in September but changed his plea to guilty at Chelmsford Crown Court in May. Advertisement He had been playing at Scottish Championship club Greenock Morton, who terminated his contract after he was charged. After making one Premier League appearance for Arsenal, Emmanuel-Thomas left the north London side in 2011. He then played for clubs including Ipswich Town, Bristol City and Queens Park Rangers, as well as teams in India and Thailand, before joining Morton in July 2024. (Top photo of Jay Emmanuel-Thomas playing for Aberdeen:)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store