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Following 6th place at the 1994 World Aquatics Championships in Rome, Italy, they won the women's Water polo World Cup at home in Sydney, Australia, in 1995. In 1996, the women won the silver medal in the Olympic Year Tournament behind the Netherlands, then finished with bronze in the following year's World Cup in Nancy, France.
This article lists various water polo records and statistics in relation to the Australia women's national water polo team at the Summer Olympics. The Australia women's national water polo team has participated in 5 of 5 official women's water polo tournaments. [1]
In September 2023 she played for the Australian Women's U20 team in the 2023 World Aquatics Women's U20 Water Polo Championships in Portugal. [14] At 19 years of age, Green was made the youngest member of the Stingers' 2024 world championships team, and the youngest member of the Stingers ever. [6] [15] She plays for the team as a utility ...
The U.S. has been the dominant force in women’s water polo for more than a decade, winning gold medals in the 2012, 2016 and 2020 Olympics (postponed a year due to COVID).
Matilda Emily Kearns (born October 2, 2000) is an Australian Olympic water polo player who plays for the Australian national team. [1] Her father, Phil Kearns AM , a former Rugby Union player for the Wallabies , and her mother Julie Kearns.
Charlize Andrews (born 26 December 2001) is an Australian water polo player.. In 2022, Andrews debuted in Australia's women's national water polo team in connection with the FINA Water Polo World League Intercontinental Cup in Peru. [1]
The forerunner of the current national Water polo championship was the Australian Water Polo Club Championship, which was contested annually from 1975 until 1990 for men, and from 1984 until 2003 for women. [4] Today, the Australian Water Polo League (AWL) is Australia’s premier domestic water polo competition.
Wakefield is a member of the Australia women's national water polo team. She is a goalkeeper. [1] [9] She wears several different numbers including 1, 13 and 18. [1] She took up the sport when she was twelve years old at school. [1] In 2006, at the Australian Country Championships, she competed for the Queensland open women's team. [6]