Manchester City have won the Women's Super League title, ending a wait stretching back to 2016. The BBC reports that a late goal from Rebecca Knaak against Liverpool proved the defining contribution of their campaign, securing victory in that fixture and, ultimately, the championship itself.
The win over Liverpool extended City's lead at the top of the table and, according to the BBC's coverage, confirmed them as champions before the season's close. It is the club's first WSL title in nine years — a considerable gap for a side that had previously established themselves among the dominant forces in the English women's game.
Knaak's winner was part of a broader run of goals that carried City through the final stretch of the campaign. The BBC highlighted a selection of the strikes that defined their title-winning season, suggesting a side capable of producing decisive moments across a range of matches, not merely grinding out results through organisation alone.
City's 2016 title had arrived during a period when the WSL was still developing its professional infrastructure. The years since have seen the league grow considerably in depth, with Chelsea in particular sustaining a formidable domestic record across multiple seasons. That City have now broken through to claim the title against that competition adds weight to what their squad has achieved this season.
Whether the club can now sustain a title challenge into the following campaign will depend on matters that remain unresolved — squad investment, European commitments, and the decisions of key players among them. For now, the focus is on a title that has been a long time coming.
