Picture of Olympic logo

8289 Olympic News Story

0.000.00%
jp flag iconLast trade - 00:00
Consumer DefensivesAdventurousSmall CapTurnaround

Soccer-Australia's Matildas ready to live up to Taylor Swift-like hype in Paris

By Ian Ransom
       MELBOURNE, July 2 (Reuters) - Having enjoyed a fan
frenzy to rival a Taylor Swift tour, the Australian women's
soccer team are ready to live up to the hype and grab a first
Olympic medal for the nation at Paris, according to forward
Michelle Heyman.
    The 35-year-old will be suiting up for her second Olympics
and times changed since she enjoyed a run to the quarter-finals
at the 2016 Rio Games.
    Eight years ago the "Matildas" toiled in obscurity between
major tournaments, battling for sponsors and media coverage,
with fans struggling to name any player apart from captain Sam
Kerr.
    But after hosting last year's World Cup and going all the
way to the semi-finals, they head to Paris after a run of 14
sold-out matches in the hulking stadiums of their home nation.
    Heyman missed the World Cup after spending years in the
international wilderness but plunged head-first into
Matildas-mania with her recall to the squad in February.
    "It's wild," she told Reuters.
    "Off the field, it's just completely chaos, like it is wild
to know how big the Matildas name is.
    "It's like being Taylor-bloody-Swift to know that you can't
walk down the streets now that everyone knows who the Matildas
are in Australia."
    Last month, a crowd of 76,798 watched them beat China 2-0 in
a friendly at Sydney's Stadium Australia, a record attendance
for a women's soccer match in the country.  
    Their first Olympic group match against Germany at the
67,000-seater Marseille Stadium will offer some relief from the
intense home support.
    They can, nonetheless, count on droves of Australians
staying up on cold winter nights at home to watch their games.
    Expectations are high, even if at number 12 in the world the
Matildas are one of the lowest-ranked sides in Paris and have
been drawn in one of the tougher groups.
    Apart from Rio gold medallists Germany, the Matildas face
four-times Olympic champions the United States, and Zambia in
Group B.
    
    EXTRA PUSH
    Australia made their maiden Olympic semi-finals in Tokyo
three years ago but lost to Sweden and were beaten for the
bronze by the United States.
    The Australian men's team failed to qualify for Paris so the
Tony Gustavsson-coached Matildas will carry the country's hopes
of a first soccer medal alone.
    The players are embracing that burden, says Heyman.
    "Every team qualified for the Olympics is a top contender,
so that includes ourselves," she said.
    "Knowing that we have Australia cheering us on, that gives
us an extra push to do this for our country."
    They will have to do it without their talisman Kerr, who
suffered an ACL injury at club side Chelsea.
    Defender Steph Catley will lead the squad and Heyman will
hope to be the focal point of the attack.
    Heyman retired from international football in 2019 after
missing the World Cup squad that year but Kerr's injury opened
the door for her "second life" as a Matilda.
    She scored five goals in two Olympic qualifiers against
Uzbekistan in February and found the net again recently facing
China.
    Heyman feels she is a wiser, more rounded player than the
one who struggled with niggling injuries and quit in frustration
five years ago.
    As more of an "old-school number nine", she offers a
different threat than Kerr and is a familiar face in a squad
boasting plenty of Olympians.
    "The lucky thing with myself is that I've played with them 
for a numerous amount of years, so they kind of remember how I
used to play," she said.
    "So it's easy for me to just slip back in."
    

 (Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Editing by Peter
Rutherford)
 ((ian.ransom@thomsonreuters.com; Follow me on Twitter https://twitter.com/MyRansomNotes;
 +61 3 9286 1447;))

Recent news on Olympic

See all news