WSL relegation fight: 'No place to hide' for Reading as Leicester hope to secure safety

By Emily SalleyBBC Sport
Kirsty Hanson of Aston Villa celebrates after scoring the team's third goal during the FA Women's Super League match between Reading
Reading have won just three WSL games this season

"If we're safe, that's all that matters." Safety will be the driving motivator for managers Kelly Chambers, Willie Kirk and Vicky Jepson on the penultimate weekend of Women's Super League action.

Chambers' eight-year stay in the league with Reading could come to an abrupt ending this weekend.

If they lose against Jepson's struggling Tottenham on Saturday and if 11th-placed Leicester beat a West Ham team lacking in confidence, the Royals will be relegated.

However, victory for Reading means Kirks' Foxes would, with a draw or defeat on Sunday, find themselves at the bottom of the table heading into the final game.

Women's Super League table - bottom six

'There'll be no place to hide'

Chambers, who has been at Reading for more than 20 years - both as a player and in various coaching roles - says her side need to continue to prove the doubters wrong.

"I think, if we're all brutally honest, many would have predicted us to be in the position we are in. Some have said it from the moment we were promoted," Chambers said.

"But time and time again we've proved what we're about and on Saturday we need to do it again."

Reading, who were promoted to the WSL in 2015, have not won in seven matches, with their last league victory coming against West Ham in early March.

Chambers says the threat of relegation can be hard on players, but she has instructed them to look no further than Saturday's crunch fixture.

"This Saturday there will be no place to hide," Chambers said.

"When you're a player in these circumstances, you cannot overlook the stresses they're going through as well. From 'what does next season look like?' [to] contracts, the media. But I've said to them we just have to focus on the Tottenham game, and the rest will fall into place."

A win against Reading at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in a double-header fixture with Spurs' men's team would ensure WSL football next season for Tottenham.

Jepson said: "We know what's at stake in terms of WSL status but it's in our hands to make sure we get the job done. We're confident and determined to be off the mark and ready to go."

'The players respond better under more pressure'

Carrie Jones of Leicester City Women celebrates
Leicester picked up vital wins against Reading and Liverpool in April

When Kirk took over from Lydia Bedford as Leicester manager in November, the Foxes had no points from their opening six matches.

By Christmas time, there had been no improvement and Leicester looked like firm favourites to go down.

Fast forward five months and Kirks' team have picked up 13 points along the way, and if they win their two remaining games - against West Ham and Brighton - they will have secured their WSL status for a third successive season.

"We've got ourselves into a good position knowing that, at Christmas, a lot of people kind of counted us out," Leicester defender Ashleigh Plumptre said.

Leicester, depending on Reading's result on Saturday, could confirm their safety at King Power Stadium, which should act as an "added incentive" to Kirk's players

"The fans have been fantastic and it would be so nice to confirm our WSL status in front of them," Kirk said.

"Mathematically, if we find out at the full time on Sunday that we've stayed up, it'd be fantastic."

Even if Leicester do find themselves at the bottom of the table by Saturday evening, it's not something that Kirk is worried about.

"What I've found is the more pressure we've put on the players the better that responded," he said.

"It gives us an opportunity to climb up even more places if Reading beat Tottenham, because Tottenham are in touching distance. So if we are being greedy we might prefer that."

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