Maddy Cusackâs legacy will be âa voice for girlsâ
Maddy Cusack always loved football.
Her sister Olivia remembers how sheâd often rope her siblings in for a kickabout, using them for target practice.
It is a memory that comes back to her as she stands in the park in Derby where Maddy loved to train.
âItâs a sacred place for us really,â says Olivia Cusack. âBecause it holds so much love and a lot of memories.â
Maddy went on to played for Sheffield United Women from 2019 and became the first player to represent the club 100 times.
A vigil later will mark one year since the day Maddy was found dead at her home, aged 27.
Her family said her spirit had âbeen brokenâ by the sport she loved.
Maddyâs club was cleared of any wrongdoing by an external investigation, and a Football Association (FA) inquiry launched in January is ongoing.
An inquest to establish the circumstances around Maddyâs death has been adjourned until the FA reaches its conclusions.
While her family continues to wait for answers, they are turning their attention to her legacy.
âItâs been a year since we lost Maddy,â says Olivia. âA year since our lives completely got turned upside down.
âI have to trust that she can see what weâre doing and is proud.
âThatâs the main motivation.â
Maddyâs family has previously spoken about her facing financial pressures and balancing a full-time marketing job in Sheffield Unitedâs offices with her role in the squad.
The FA hasnât said exactly what itâs looking into, but wanted to assess whether it needed to take any action.
âWe asked for a thorough investigation,â says Olivia.
âThatâs definitely what theyâve done as itâs been a while now.
âI hope the FA do the right thing.
âItâs important we donât skim over what happened.â
Regardless of the outcome, the 25-year-old says thereâs no way things can stay the same in womenâs football.
âIâd like to think that after whatâs happened to my sister, thereâs no way there canât be any change.
âMaddy ultimately lost her life and her spirit to football and itâs important that nobody else goes through that.â
Maddyâs family has launched a foundation in her name to support women and girls in football and hopes to be a voice for them too.
âYou canât bury your head in the sand,â says Olivia.
âYou need to stand up for these girls and stand up for Maddy ultimately as well.
âWe just really wanted to find what was missing and give these girls a voice.â
They recently hit a ÂŁ50,000 milestone, something Olivia says she ânever even dreamed ofâ.
âIt made me really proud,â she says.
âI thought, we could really change the game here and change young girlsâ lives.â
âIâm going to be like Maddyâ
Some of the money raised goes towards supporting girls like eight-year-old Neveah, who idolised Maddy.
Neveahâs mum, Beth, tells Newsbeat the love started when she was assigned the same number football shirt.
âSheâd see Maddy play and say, âMum thatâs me â Iâm number eight, Iâm going to be like Maddyâ.â
Last year, Neveah was a mascot for Sheffield United and chose to walk out with Maddy, which Beth says helped to âgrow her love of footballâ.
When Maddy died, Beth says Neveah âtook it really hardâ and, in December, the foundation offered to pay for her to have new boots â something the family had done for Maddy every Christmas.
Since then it has also sponsored her kit.
âShe was very touched by that,â Beth says.
âWe always get in touch with the family because she likes to tell them how many goals sheâs scored for Maddy.â
Although Neveah is sometimes the only girl on the pitch, she is generally supported and encouraged in the sport, says Beth.
But she knows that might not always be the case, and that is why the work of the foundation is so important.
â[Girls] need to know that support is available for them,â she says.
âI just hope Neveahâs journey through football, however long it is, continues to be positive.â
Olivia says her sister was âloved and adored and an inspiration to so manyâ.
âMy main focus with the foundation is to carry that on for as long as I can and to bring her to life for as long as I can as well.â
There will be a vigil for Maddy later and she will also be remembered at a match between Sheffield United and Derby County â the club Maddy supported â on Saturday.
âShe wouldâve been there for sure,â Olivia says of her big sister. âWith a beaming smile.â
A spokesperson for Sheffield United told Newsbeat they were pleased to mark the anniversary with the match.
âThe thoughts of everyone associated with Sheffield United Football Club remain with the Cusack family, as well as Maddyâs friends, colleagues and team-mates,â they added.
The FA said it would not be appropriate to comment while it was still investigating.
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