From one badge to another

Retirement left both searching for a new purpose – and a conversation in Leicester’s dressing room proved pivotal.

“We just looked at each other one day and stated: ‘We’re going to join the fire service,'” McManus explained. “And now we’re sat here, which is surreal.”

For both, the similarities between football and firefighting helped them transition.

“The teamwork, the pressure, it’s so similar,” Sigsworth stated. “We’d lose our minds sitting still in an office.”

The pride of representing a badge in football has been replaced at the fire service.

“It makes me laugh because Jess would score and kiss the badge – I’ve never had a job when you’re not representing a badge,” McManus stated. “We’ve changed a football badge to the fire service badge.”

Having joined a few months earlier, she was also able to help Sigsworth navigate the recruitment process, something her friend valued.

“It’s funny because she was always my captain,” Sigsworth stated. “Always helping people, always leading. She did the same for me getting into the fire service.”

Abbie McManus in her firefighter uniform alongside a colleague during firefighter training. Image source, Abbie McManus
Image caption,

McManus (left) alongside a colleague during firefighter training

They both agreed that elite sport had prepared them for emergency response work.

“We enjoy pressure,” Sigsworth stated. “In football, you’re playing in front of crowds, under scrutiny, constantly wanting to prove yourself. That mentality never leaves you.”

Even the daily routines are familiar.

“You must pass so many fitness tests to get into the fire service,” explained McManus. “We do loads of PT and the togetherness you’d have as a football team you have here.

“It’s cringy to say, but when you’re at an exhausted part of a workout, that’s when teamwork comes in. It’s the same on a job if you’re in a really hot fire, you’ve got to pull each other through. Nobody gets left behind – it’s the same at football pre-season.

“You arrive, get your kit sorted, train together, eat together.

“If we lost a football match, we’d analyse it afterwards. It’s the same here after difficult jobs. It’s like one big family.”

Still, there are parts of a match day they miss.

“That moment before you walk out,” Sigsworth stated. “The music is blasting in the changing room, everyone is shouting. I think you miss that forever.”

They did put their boots back on recently, representing the fire service in a seven-a-side emergency services tournament in Spain. They won, although Sigsworth’s brief stint in goal did not go to plan.

“We won’t mention Jess getting lobbed,” McManus laughed.

“I’m a centre-forward!” Sigsworth replied. “They stuck me in net. One girl just booted it from kick-off and I was daydreaming.”

Jess Sigsworth and Abbie McManus celebrate with their team-mates after winning the ESFL European Tournament in Salou.Image source, Abbie McManus
Image caption,

Sigsworth and McManus (centre) were part of the Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service team that won the Emergency Services Football League tournament in Salou, Spain

‘Girls can finally see a path into professional football’

Jess Sigsworth and a male firefighter outside a building with flames in the backgroundImage source, Jess Sigsworth
Image caption,

Jess Sigsworth and a colleague after a firefighter training exercise

Both have also witnessed the transformation of women’s football at first hand.

“When I joined Manchester City I was paying £380 subs just to play,” McManus stated. “Now little girls walk around wearing Ella Toone shirts. That’s the best thing ever because girls can finally see a path.”

“When we were younger, we didn’t really have professional women footballers to look up to. Now little girls can genuinely aspire to that life,” Sigsworth stated.

And after navigating retirement themselves, both players understand they can still have an identity – after football.

“Life doesn’t stop after football,” Sigsworth stated. “We got so consumed by it that we think it’s the only thing we’ll ever love. But I love my job now. I love having an identity again.”

McManus feels the same.

“If you’re retiring from football, yes you’ll miss it,” she stated. “But you can absolutely find something else to fall in love with again.”

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