Lionesses head to Nottingham for final home qualifier

Tuesday 19 Jul 2016
England and Notts County defender Laura Bassett poses with a Lionesses fan

England Women's final home UEFA Euro 2017 qualifier will be played at Notts County's Meadow Lane stadium.

The Lionesses, who are aiming to top Group 7, will play Estonia on Thursday 15 September (7.05pm KO).

England have already qualified for next summer's tournament, which will take place in Netherlands, after beating Serbia 7-0 in Stara Pazova in June.

England v Estonia

UEFA Women's Euro 2017
Group 7 qualifier
7.05pm BST, Thursday 15 September 2016
Meadow Lane, Notts County FC
Tickets priced £7.50 adults, £3.50 children

Tickets are priced £7.50 for adults and £3.50 for children.

A family ticket is available, via phone booking only, priced £15 (two adults and two children) while group booking discounts apply.

Tickets can be bought via TheFA.com/Tickets or by calling 0115 955 7210.

England beat Estonia 8-0 in the reverse fixture in September 2015, with debut goals from Izzy Christiansen and Danielle Carter, who scored a hat-trick.

Danielle Carter scored a hat-trick against Estonia in September 2015

Notts County captain and England defender Laura Bassett said: “Meadow Lane is a fantastic stadium and I can't wait to go there with England.

“There is a real support for and interest in women's football in Nottingham. Hopefully having an international match here will help us to build on that and that we attract a good crowd too.

“We're determined to top this qualifying group to give ourselves the best possible chance of success at next summer's tournament as well as getting a win in front of our supporters in our last home qualifier.”

Matthew Alexander, chief executive of Notts County Ladies, said: “It’s an honour for Notts County Ladies Football Club to be able to welcome the national side to our stadium.

“Domestically, we have one of the highest attendances in the League and this is a fantastic opportunity to get the fans into Meadow Lane and demonstrate the support that the city of Nottingham has for women’s football.”

Nottingham was named the first ever City of Football in September 2014 by Sport England and received £1.6m to get more people in the area playing football regularly.

The pilot scheme also has particular focus on encouraging more girls and women to play football, along with promoting the local FA WSL and FA WPL clubs, and supporting the women's game as a whole.

By FA Staff