The Football League Paper

EFL TO HONOUR FALLEN HEROES

League mark end of Great War

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THE EFL are joining forces with the Premier League, the FA and the PFA under the banner of ‘Football Remembers’ to mark the Armistice Centenary and Remembranc­e weekend.

On November 11, 1918, the Armistice was signed, signalling the end of World War One. One century on, England’s four football bodies will be part of the nationwide commemorat­ions, with EFL clubs, Premier League clubs and the English national teams paying tribute through a variety of activities.

Remembranc­e Sunday coincides with the Armistice Centenary, and a range of Football Remembers activity will take place over the weekends leading up to November 11 to mark the efforts of servicemen and women, past and present.

Bespoke commemorat­ive coins from the Royal British Legion will be used for the coin toss at every EFL, Premier League and FA Cup match to pay tribute and say thank you to all those involved in the First World War.

In the build-up to Remembranc­e weekend, Football Remembers will also be backing a number of related projects, including For Club and Country, for which EFL and Premier League clubs across the country will plant trees at their stadiums and training grounds, serving as living legacies to the hundreds of footballer­s who served and fell in the First World War.

Through For Club and Country, which is run in partnershi­p with the Woodland Trust and the National Football Museum, the FA and England planted trees at St George’s Park in memory of the 14 internatio­nals who served in World War One.

Projects

Launched in March and continuing through to November, the Tull100 project is using the story of Walter Tull to inspire a series of inclusion projects at football clubs and community organisati­ons around the country. Walter Tull was one of the first black heritage profession­al footballer­s and in 1917 he became the first black heritage Infantry Officer in the British Army.

The four football bodies are sponsoring The Greater Game at Waterloo East Theatre, a play that tells the story of Clapton Orient and the men who swapped the football fields of London for the battle fields of the Somme in 1916.

In addition, Football Remembers will be promoting the Games of Remembranc­e which see the British Army and German Army football teams compete.

Two fixtures will take place in Nottingham on Thursday, November 8 with Notts County hosting the women’s game at noon and Nottingham Forest hosting the men’s match at 7pm.

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