The Mariners will make a bid to enter a W-League team next season but say success is dependent on an "immediate upgrade" to Central Coast Stadium.
The Gosford-based outfit's W-League team folded at the end of 2009 due to lack of funds and is the only A-League club in Australia without a topflight women's side.
On Saturday the club formally advised Football Federation Australia (FFA) of its intention to re-apply for a W-League licence for 2017/18.
The Mariners’ Chief Executive Officer, Shaun Mielekamp, said the club had been "working hard behind the scenes for the past 18 months" to make it a reality but said it would require an improvement in facilities.
Mielekamp added: “Now is when the hard work starts and real foundations need to be built.
"For this to happen we will need to attract the right commercial and community partners to not only ensure viability and longevity but help us create something that all football fans from the Harbour Bridge to the Swansea Bridge can be proud of.
“A vital step for us to ensure we obtain a W-League licence is the immediate investment into improving the facilities at Central Coast Stadium. We have held good talks and are very keen to see those talks quickly turn into progress so it isn’t a barrier that is out of our control that would hold us back."
The Mariners said their W-League team will provide a pathway for women footballers on the Central Coast, Northern Suburbs and North Sydney regions.Carly Carmichael who has been named the Mariners Westfield W-League Coordinator.
Carmichael, who has been a member of the club’s Community Department for the past five years, is a passionate supporter and player of women’s football on the Central Coast and will lead the club’s bid for a Westfield W-League team to be included as early as 2017.
“The appointment of Carly Carmichael to the role is very exciting to see such a great opportunity go to one of our most senior and experienced staff members,” Mielekamp said.
“The goal of our W-League team is to become the most entertaining, innovative and community minded female sports brand in Australia.
He added: “The ongoing efforts from Mariners Academy Director Ken Schembri and everyone involved with the Central Coast Mariners Academy Women’s program was the final piece of the puzzle for us to now see how in collaboration with our other academies there is truly an exciting model that we look forward to presenting in intimate detail to the FFA.
“I would also like to thank and acknowledge the hard work of Rory Grace, Kym Griffen and Wayne O’Sullivan plus many more fantastic football people in North Shore Mariners who I am yet to meet. Without their involvement, we would never have had the confidence to not only progress our W-League aspirations but plan for a very successful and community minded arm to the organisation."
MAIN PHOTO: The Central Coast's 2009 W-League team.
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