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  • First team

    Aberdeen fixture update

  • First team

    Keeping up with the pace // Motherwell 4-0 Kilmarnock

  • First team

    Livingston: Five-game fortnight

  • Women

    Aberdeen 2-1 Motherwell

  • Women

    Mia McArthur completes Motherwell move

  • Archive

    Jens Berthel Askou reacts to beating Kilmarnock

  • First team

    Motherwell 4-0 Kilmarnock

  • Women

    David Brownlie: Life in the Motherwell dugout

  • Women

    Next up: Aberdeen (A)

  • First team

    Jens Berthel Askou previews Kilmarnock

  • First team

    Aberdeen fixture update

    Aberdeen fixture update

    Our match against Aberdeen will now take place on Sunday 15 February. 

    Kick-off is at 2:30pm at Fir Park.

    Originally scheduled for Saturday 14 February, the fixture has been moved back 24 hours at the request of both clubs. With this fixture marking the fifth game in 14 days, both clubs agreed to move the game to the Sunday to allow the players more time to rest, recover and prepare between their midweek matches and this fixture.

    We appreciate that Sunday matches are not appreciated by all supporters, and for those that will be inconvenienced by this change, we apologise. But, with five games being played in a small timeframe, including three away matches, one of which is a nighttime kick-off which will involve overnight travel, we want to allow the players more time to recover and prepare between games.

    Your support has been greatly appreciated this season, and we look forward to seeing you at Livingston on Saturday.

  • First team

    Keeping up with the pace // Motherwell 4-0 Kilmarnock

    Motherwell’s home form has been remarkable this season, having not conceded a goal since October on home turf. Kilmarnock were the visitors, as they looked to close the gap to safety. 

    In a hectic first half, Kilmarnock did find the back of the net first through former Motherwell man Liam Polworth, but fortunately for the home side, the midfielder was in an offside position.

    Elijah Just compounded the Killie disappointment, as the Kiwi fired home the opener not long after. The game in theory ended as a contest when Killie’s Lowery was sent off for a second yellow, with Tawanda Maswanhise blasting home his 16th goal of the season just seconds later.

    From there, it was all Motherwell, and Ibrahim Said and Lukas Fadinger added a third and a fourth in the second half, as the Steelmen keep up with the pace of those above.

  • First team

    Livingston: Five-game fortnight

    Livingston: Five-game fortnight

    Motherwell begin a busy fortnight with a trip to Livingston on Saturday 31 January. 

    Kick off is 3pm.

    How to follow the game
    • Adult: £26.00
    • Concession (Over 65/Student/Disabled): £18.00
    • 16-18: £14.00
    • Under 16: £10.00

    The away ticket window in the East Stand will be open from 1.30pm on the day of the game for fans to buy in person.

    For supporters looking for purchase disabled and carer tickets, they should contact us on 01506417000 or lfcreception@livingstonfc.co.uk.

    If you are outside the UK, you can watch the game via Motherwell TV.

    Should you be in the UK, it will be live commentary only.

    Motherwell’s Fortunes

    The Steelmen’s 4-0 win over Kilmarnock extended their unbeaten run at Fir Park to nine games and also made it nine consecutive clean sheets in North Lanarkshire.

    Moving onto the 40-point mark, Tawanda Maswanhise netted his 16th Motherwell goal of the season, keeping him joint top goalscorer in the Scottish Premiership.

    It’s been one loss in Motherwell’s last 15 league matches, which came at Ibrox in December. However, the Steelmen are looking for their first win away from home since November.

    Elijah Just’s stoppage-time goal sealed the three points for Jens Berthel Askou’s side last time out in West Lothian, which made it five consecutive wins over Livingston in competitive matches.

    Opposition Report

    Livingston’s last match was action-packed. A 6-2 defeat against Aberdeen saw both manager Davie Martindale and Jeremy Bokila sent off. That defeat extended the Lions’ winless run to 23 games in all competitions.

    It’s been three draws in regulation time for Livingston in their last four matches, and they are only three points behind 11th place Kilmarnock.

    Robbie Muirhead found the back of the net for the sixth time this season last Saturday and is now Livingston’s top scorer for the season.

  • Women

    Aberdeen 2-1 Motherwell

    Aberdeen 2-1 Motherwell

    Frustrations mounted in the Granite City, as Aberdeen denied Motherwell their first point of 2026, capitalising in the final stages to narrowly secure three-points at Balmoral Stadium.

    Striker Carla Boyce levelled the scoreline after experienced Aberdeen captain Hannah Stewart broke the deadlock shortly before the half-hour mark.

    Motherwell grew into the contest, and controlled the majority of the second-half, but failed to find their clinical edge, as Mya Christie scored a late decisive winner to earn all three-points.

    Head Coach Iain Robinson welcomed Rangers loanee Sophie Townsley to the starting XI for her first competitive start for the women of steel, with matchday addition, Mia McArthur securing a place on the bench.

    The hosts netted the breakthrough midway through the first-half, with an enticing delivery across the face of goal evading Tegan browning and Lucy Ronald at the back post, before falling kindly to Stewart, who fired home the rebound after her initial attempt rattled the crossbar.

    Boyce pulled Motherwell level in the opening minutes of the second-half, with a composed and perfectly-weighted finish to lift over the Aberdeen stopper.

    Despite Motherwell’s control in the game, Christie netted the decisive winner in the final stages of the game, with the midfielders mis-hit delivery from the right-flank, sailing unorthodoxly back towards goal, beating goalkeeper Emma Thomson.

  • Women

    Mia McArthur completes Motherwell move

    Mia McArthur completes Motherwell move

    Defender Mia McArthur has completed a loan deal from Rangers until the end of the season.

    The youngster will be immediately available for selection ahead of this afternoon’s Scottish Women’s Premier League fixture with Aberdeen.

    Despite her youthful age, the 18-year-old defender has already gained a wealth of senior experience, regularly featuring for SWPL 2 side, Gartcairn across the opening to the 2025/26 campaign.

    “I’m really pleased to be here at Motherwell,” McArthur said.

    “They have brought through, and given a platform to several young players in recent years, and I felt that it would be the perfect environment for me to develop.

    “I can’t wait to get started.”

    The 18-year-old’s performances on the domestic footballing scene have continued to catch the eye internationally, with McArthur regularly selected to represent the Scotland under-19 squad.

    “We’re really pleased to welcome Mia to the club,” Robinson noted.

    “She is a very exciting young player, which we felt could come in and instantly add competition for places.

    “We are looking forward to continuing her development this season.”

  • Archive

    Jens Berthel Askou reacts to beating Kilmarnock

    Jens Berthel Askou reacts to defeating Kilmarnock 4-0 at Fir Park.

  • First team

    Motherwell 4-0 Kilmarnock

    Motherwell stretched their advantage to five points from fifth placed Hibernian with a 4-0 win over Kilmarnock, stretching their unbeaten run on home soil to nine games. 

    The Fir Park men toiled early on to tame a committed Killie side, who were denied the opener after VAR’s intervention. Elijah Just’s superb finish after 30 minutes settled the Steelmen. And when Neil McCann’s side were dealt a double blow on the stroke of half-time, with Tom Lowery red-carded before Tawanda Maswanhise claimed his 16th goal of the season, it was really game over.

    Dominating the second half, Ibrahim Said made it 3-0 before Lukas Fadinger added a late fourth to make it a richly rewarding afternoon for the 6700 ‘Well fans.

    Continuing their league campaign following last week’s success in the Scottish Cup, five changes were made to the team. Calum Ward returned between the sticks, with captain Paul McGinn brought back into the backline. Emmanuel Longelo, Lukas Fadinger and Elijah Just were also handed starts.

    Matty Connelly, Johnny Koutroumbis, Liam Gordon, Luca Ross and Apostolos Stamatelopoulos dropped to the bench, which consisted of four Motherwell FC Academy graduates: Connelly, Zander McAllister, Rocco McColm and Ross.

    Eythor Bjørgolfsson was named amongst the substitutes following his move to the club earlier in the week, as the Norwegian looked to make his debut.

    With Scottish Cup progression secured last week, Motherwell were looking to make it nine games unbeaten at Fir Park. Coming up against a Kilmarnock side who hadn’t won in 16 matches and who hadn’t won at Fir Park since December 2020, the pressure and expectation were firmly on Jens Berthel Askou’s side’s shoulders.

    The Ayrshire side’s positive start was rewarded when they found the net after 13 minutes. Marcus Dackers lob allowed Liam Polworth to step beyond McGinn before rounding the grounded Ward and rolling the ball into an empty goal. The former ‘Well player’s celebrations lasted for a couple of minutes before VAR’s lengthy review judged the Killie man to be marginally offside.

    Despite that let-off, the Steelmen were still on the back foot, and the gangly Dackers rose unchallenged to nod the ball narrowly wide.

    It took until midway through the half for the home side to find their passing rhythm, and McGinn’s header from Callum Slattery’s free kick gave Kellie Roos his first real action.

    The Killie keeper needed stronger hands a couple of minutes later when he beat away a powerful drive from Maswanhise as the Fir Park men started to make their presence felt around the opposition box.

    And on the half hour patient passing around the visitor’s penalty area paid off. A delightful exchange at the edge of the box with Lukas Fadinger sent Just clear, and his rising left-foot finish sent the ball high past Roos.

    As Motherwell went chasing a second, they had another lucky goal escape after 36 minutes. Former Fir Park defender Dominic Thompson whipped in a free kick, and Tyreece John-Jules’ powerful header sent the ball beyond Ward only to see it rebound off the face of the crossbar.

    Neil McCann’s afternoon got worse in a mad minute spell just before the half-time whistle.

    Already on a yellow card, Tom Lowery’s desperate lunge at Maswanhise earned him a red card. And the Killie midfielder had no sooner headed up the tunnel when Maswanhise, at the edge of the six-yard box, swept home yet another tempting Tom Sparrow cross to double Well’s lead.

    That left Motherwell with a two-goal and a man advantage for a second half they controlled.

    Ten minutes into the second half, Longelo’s cross found Said six yards from goal, and he let the ball bounce before hammering it past the helpless Roos.

    With the points in the bag, the Well boss made a double substitution, giving Johnny Koutroumbis and, more crucially, Eythor Bjorgolfsson 30 minutes of game time. Looking at a possible pairing up front, Apostolos Stamatelopoulos joined the Norwegian for the final 20 minutes at the expense of a superb Just.

    After a couple of scares around his goal in the first half, Ward was rarely troubled but he made a terrific one handed save ten minutes from time to deny Brad Lyons and keep a clean sheet for eight consecutive home game.

    A minute later it was 4-0. Bjorgolfsson claimed a loose ball in the box and laid it off to Fadinger, who fired across the keeper and into the far corner of the net.

    The Norwegian striker was making the most of ‘Well’s advantage and surging forward from the middle of the park he fed the ball to Slattery and his thumping strike from 30 yards was beaten away by Roos to deny Well a fifth goal.

    Motherwell Team: Ward, Sparrow, O’Donnell, McGinn, Longelo, Priestman, Fadinger, Slattery, Just, Maswanhise, Said.

    Motherwell Subs: Connelly, Koutroumbis, Gordon, McGhee, McAllister, McColm, Ross, Stamatelopoulos, Bjørgolfsson.

  • Women

    David Brownlie: Life in the Motherwell dugout

    David Brownlie: Life in the Motherwell dugout

    The physical and mental demands of football management are vast and often underappreciated in the unpredictable and volatile environment of professional football.

    The responsibility and importance of protecting countless years of history and preserving a long-standing reputation of a club can weigh heavily, and fundamentally requires a talented and trusted person by your side as an Assistant Manager.

    A fresh chapter awaited the women of steel after Iain Robinson was unveiled as the Head Coach of Motherwell Women last month. From the first day at the helm, Robinson immediately recognised the perfect candidate to stand by his side.

    On the books of Queens Park, David Brownlie burst onto the footballing scene at an early age before joining Rangers at 14 following the conclusion of the 2011-12 season.

    After spending four-years in Glasgow, Brownlie departed for Ross County in 2016. A brief loan-spell with Elgin City followed before joining Airdrieonians on a permanent basis.Brownlie continued to rack up appearances across the Scottish footballing pyramid, with tenures at Stranraer, East Kilbride and Linlithgow Rose before concluding his playing career in the Glasgow Southside with Pollok FC.

    After departing Newlandsfield, Brownlie sought to utilise his vast experience, and integrate himself as a football coach, achieving his UEFA C-License in 2022 before upgrading to the UEFA B-License in 2024. Brownlie will then undertake his UEFA A-License qualification process this year.

    “After hanging up my boots, I knew I wanted to stay in the game,” Brownlie said.

    “Having worked under various Managers, I was fascinated by their approach and thoughts towards football. Some were similar, but others varied and saw the game in a completely different way.

    “I wanted to implement my own style and philosophy on the game, so I started the process of attaining my coaching badges whilst working towards my degree in Football Coaching and Development from Edinburgh Napier University.”

    Graduating after the summer of 2023, Brownlie sought to experience his first academy coaching role, joining the Rangers academy before soon settling into the position of coaching the girls U17/18s academy team alongside Iain Robinson.

    “Myself and Iain really adapted seamlessly into working alongside each other,” Brownlie added.

    “We’ve both shared a similar vision for how we want our teams to be structured in and out of possession, and having both coached at the academy level, we both shared a real desire to support the development and progression of the next generation of players.

    “That foundation has been absolutely vital for us going forward, and we have really stuck to our principles after joining Queens Park Women and then here at Motherwell.”

    With Robinson replacing the then departing Head Coach Craig Joyce in Glasgow after being headhunted to become the head coach of Queen’s Park, he sought to bring Brownlie alongside in the dugout.

    “After working throughout various stages of academy football, walking into the Spiders and experiencing the Scottish Women’s Premier League felt like an exciting chapter.

    “We understood and recognised the difficult nature of the league, with the constraints of part-time football competing against full-time professionals on a weekly-basis, but we wanted to build a team that stuck to our style of play of dominating the ball and seeking to play through the thirds whilst building from the back.

    “Despite the tough nature of the league, we felt we were able to really develop the structure of the team, and put in place a strong core identity at the club.”

    In their final season in charge, Robinson and Brownlie had the Spiders sat comfortably in the final promotion-playoff position in the Scottish Women’s Premier League 2 table, one point shy of Boroughmuir Thistle in second, with ambitions of restoring the club’s top-flight status.

    However, the sudden departure of Paul Brownlie after several years at the helm of Motherwell Women presented an irresistible opportunity in ML1.

    “It was an opportunity we simply couldn’t turn down,” Brownlie added.

    “From the outside looking in, Motherwell on a part-time status were able to achieve some really impressive accolades over recent years, and we were keen to try to take that forward.

    “They had competed amongst the full-time sides and achieved a top-six finish whilst working closely alongside their youth academy which from both our backgrounds is something that we felt was absolutely vital.”

    Motherwell Women return to action following the winter break this weekend, when they welcome title-chasers Celtic to K-Park. Brownlie expects a difficult contest, but has been encouraged by the performances on the training pitch.

    “We’re expecting a very difficult game with Celtic, but we have been really encouraged by what we’ve seen behind the scenes,” Brownlie noted.

    “The players have really bought into what we’re trying to do, and they are a very close-knit group, so it has been a very easy and enjoyable process working alongside them.

    “Celtic have qualities all over the pitch, both defensively and in the final third, but we have talent in the dressing room that can cause Celtic problems.

    “We head into the game this weekend with confidence, and are looking forward to seeing as many Motherwell fans as possible in the stands.”

  • Women

    Next up: Aberdeen (A)

    Next up: Aberdeen (A)

    Matchday 16 of the 2025/26 SWPL campaign awaits the women of steel this weekend, as they travel North to the Granite City, visiting Aberdeen at Balmoral Stadium on Sunday.

    Motherwell will be looking to kickstart their hunt for the final top-six place after encountering a closely-fought two-nil defeat to title-chasers Celtic last weekend.

    The women of steel will be determined to rejuvenate their recent run of form, after suffering four successive defeats.

    The Tale of the Tape 

    Motherwell 

    Head Coach Iain Robinson will be keen to secure his points since taking charge of the club, whilst simultaneously closing the deficit to closest-rivals Montrose who occupy the final top-six place in the Scottish Women’s Premier League table.

    Motherwell have maintained a strong record against the Dons, earning five straight victories, whilst going back-to-back at Balmoral Stadium. The women of steel have showcased their clinical edge in this fixture, netting 18-times in their last five meetings, whilst conceding only four.

    Motherwell will head into Sunday’s fixture with a strong line-up, with recent debutants Emma Thomson and Sophie Townsley both impressing against Celtic at K-Park last weekend.

    Aberdeen

    The Dons will also be motivated to conclude their recent winless run, after eight consecutive defeats. The hosts have scored three-times during that record, whilst conceding 24 in their own half.

    Ticket Information 

    Tickets can be purchased through the matchday turnstiles at Balmoral Stadium. Both cash and card payments are accepted.

    • Adult – £10.
    • Concession (Over-65s and Under-17s) – £5.
    • Under-11 – FREE TO ENTER.

    Additional Information – no pets allowed within K-Park.

    Matchday Travel 

    • Sunday 25th January 2025, kick off 2PM.
  • First team

    Jens Berthel Askou previews Kilmarnock

    Jens Berthel Askou discusses the latest transfer rumours surrounding his players, whilst also explaining by he has brought new striker Eythor Bjørgolfsson to the club. 

    Askou praises the recent home form his team have produced since October, encouraging that run to continue this weekend against Kilmarnock.