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The Australian Women's Soccer Association (AWSA) was founded in 1974 [4] and a representative Australian team competed at the 1975 AFC Women's Championship. This team was officially recognised in May 2023, with all 16 members of the squad officially awarded caps. [ 5 ]
The Young Matildas finished fifth, the highest finish place in a FIFA sanctioned competition of any Australian women's national soccer team ever. [24] The Mini Matildas are Australia's women's national under-17 team. [31] The team was established when FIFA announced that the U-17 Women's World Cup would be launched in 2008. Australia has yet to ...
The Women's National Soccer League (WNSL) was established as 1996 as the first national domestic league in women's soccer in Australia. [1] Queensland Academy of Sport (then known as Queensland Sting) became the first women's champions in Australia. [2] Following the demise of the WNSL in 2004 alongside the men's NSL, the W-League (now A-League ...
This is a list of Australia women's international soccer players who have played for the national team in an "A" international match. [1] [2] The first official international football match took place on 6 October 1979. [3] Over 230 players have represented Australia in a full "A" international match since then.
A-League Women (currently known as the Ninja A-League for sponsorship reasons), [2] formerly the W-League, is the top-division women's soccer league in Australia. The W-League was established in 2008 by Football Australia (then known as Football Federation Australia) and was originally composed of eight teams of which seven had an affiliation with an existing A-League Men's club.
The 2024–25 A-League Women, known as the Ninja A-League for sponsorship reasons, will be the seventeenth season of A-League Women, the Australian national women's soccer competition. Melbourne City are the defending premiers and Sydney FC are the defending champions.
The 2024 A-League Women grand final, known officially as the Liberty A-League Women grand final, was a championship soccer match between Melbourne City and Sydney FC at AAMI Park in Melbourne on 4 May 2024. [1] It was the 15th A-League Women grand final and the culmination of the 2023–24 season. Melbourne City came into the match as premiers. [2]
The following table shows Australia's all-time international record, correct as of 7 December 2024 (vs. Chinese Taipei).Only "A" internationals are included. Although there is some conjecture regarding the status of a number of games, the table includes all fixtures recognised by Football Australia as "A" internationals and as such is used to recognise caps, goal scorers, captaincy records, etc.