Kerry Davis represented the Lionesses over a 16-year international career, winning 82 caps and scoring 44 goals while playing in the Women’s World Cup in 1995
Kerry Davis, England’s first-ever black player, has been inducted into the National Football Museum’s Hall of Fame.
Davis, 60, made her international debut in 1982 for the Lionesses, becoming the first black player to represent her country. Across a 16-year international career, the ex-forward won 82 caps and scored an impressive 44 goals.
Kerry was inducted into the Hall of Fame during the final day of the museum’s Football Writing Festival.
Her inclusion received a unanimous vote from judges who recognised her successes as a ground-breaking pioneer in English football and laying the foundations for a more ethnically diverse sporting future.