World Cup Diary: How 'Reckless' Raso became a 'mature' Matilda, Arnold has no shootout fears

By News / Wire

Things could not be going much better for Hayley Raso.

The winger has just scored her first two Women’s World Cup goals, the Matildas are into the round of 16 – and she’s off to Real Madrid when the tournament ends. 

But Raso, who is fiery and physical on the field but a cool head off it, is taking it all in her stride.

“To score my first World Cup goal was really special for me, a moment I’ve dreamt of, so that was amazing,” Raso told reporters on Friday. 

“But all my focus is here and getting the job done here, (although) I have a lot to look forward to when this is over.”

Raso joked that time would come “after August 20, of course” – the date of the World Cup final.

If the lightning-fast winger can maintain her current form at her third World Cup, there’s plenty of reason to believe.

The 28-year-old’s first-half double against Canada set Australia on the path to a thumping 4-0 win over the Olympic champions that steered them into Monday’s last-16 clash with Denmark at Stadium Australia.

It’s the latest step in a journey that began at Canberra United and has included stints at Portland, Everton and Manchester City, as well as overcoming a horror back injury in 2018 that threatened her playing future.

“I’ve been around for a long time, I’ve been in the national team for a long time,” the 28-year-old said. 

“What comes with that is experience, maturity.

“I’ve been overseas, I’ve been developing my game. I’ve grown a lot as a player. 

“I’m taking everything in my stride. I’ve got a lot of confidence.”

Raso doesn’t hold back physically, with or without the ball, but says she has tempered her approach since her Matildas debut in 2012.

“When I first got into football and was in the Matildas I was, I guess, quite reckless,” she said. 

“I’ve matured a lot in my game, in the fact that I try not to be too reckless.

“Yes, I throw myself around into tackles but it’s just the way I play. 

“It’s about giving 100 per cent and being strong. I’m small but I’m quite strong on the ball, so hopefully I can hold my own out there.”

Long-time teammate Alanna Kennedy shared a dressing room with Raso at WSL club Manchester City.

She isn’t surprised by how the winger has stepped up.

“The motivation of a home World Cup for anyone is that there’s just such a huge opportunity. No one wants to shy away from that, Hayley included,” Kennedy said.

“Her impact on the game (against Canada) was huge and I’m really happy for her.”

Mary Fowler of Australia (L) celebrating her goal with her teammates Ellie Carpenter (C) and Caitlin Foord of Australia (R) during the FIFA Women’s World Cup Australia & New Zealand 2023 Group B match between Canada and Australia at Melbourne Rectangular Stadium on July 31, 2023 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Richard Callis/Eurasia Sport Images/Getty Images)

Arnold ‘comfortable’ with penalty pressure

If Australia’s Women’s World Cup fate comes down to penalties, goalkeeper Mackenzie Arnold is more than ready to handle the pressure.

And the Matildas custodian insists she won’t be affected by a crackdown on goalkeepers distracting penalty takers.

Arnold starred in a shootout against Thailand in the semi-finals of the 2018 Asian Cup and is confident she can repeat those heroics if required in Monday’s round-of-16 clash with Denmark or later in the tournament.

“I don’t feel much pressure with penalties, I feel quite comfortable,” Arnold said. 

“I’ve been involved in a couple of penalty shootouts at a high level with the Asian Cup and thankfully successfully. 

“Historically, we haven’t gone too well in penalties, luck hasn’t usually been on our side with that. 

“But we’ve been practising and I’ve been talking with my coaches, just getting little things right for penalties. But we try not to … focus on that too much. 

“The pressure at the time, it’s a real build-up. So when it comes, it come. But I feel quite confident with a penalty shootout.”

Rule tweaks came into play on July 1, underlining that goalkeepers cannot come off their line early and “must not behave in a way that unfairly distracts the kicker”.

Those stipulations might affect Argentina’s Emi Martinez or Socceroos stopper Andrew Redmayne, but not Arnold.

“I have never really come off my line like that, so it hasn’t really affected me too much,” she said. 

“I have had a couple of conversations with my goalkeeper coach and (Matildas coach) Tony (Franken) as well just to narrow down little things and what would best suit my ability to cover most of the goal.”

Arnold has been open about her newfound confidence since starting to use hearing aids, apart from when playing and training.

“It’s hard for me to say if that has really had an impact on my confidence or my performance,” she said.

“I wasn’t too happy with my performance against Nigeria. I didn’t wear my hearing aids that whole day and I was thinking that maybe my brain wasn’t stimulated enough – I’m not sure. 

“A lot of things I do tie back to my hearing now. I do feel a lot more confident within myself when I have them in and I feel like I’m a lot more alert and connected. 

“Whether that has a connection with how I play or not, I’m not too sure, but I would like to think it does.”

Why the Young Matildas captain swapped soccer for the NRLW

The former captain of the Young Matildas scored twice last weekend.

The only difference was Sheridan Gallagher wasn’t lining up for Australia, she was playing in the NRLW.

While many of her former teammates are gearing up for the pressure and expectation of Monday’s World Cup round of 16 meeting with Denmark, Gallagher is adjusting to life with a ball in her hands rather than at her feet.

The 22-year-old signed with the Newcastle Knights’ NRLW side earlier this year after two seasons at the Western Sydney Wanderers in the A-League Women.

“I’ve played with a lot of those girls and it makes me feel very honoured to be able to sit there and watch them achieve their goals,” Gallagher told AAP.

“I wasn’t surprised at all with the Canada result.

“I think they’re a world-class team and they’re good enough to beat teams like that.”

Gallagher has played with the likes of Mary Fowler and Clare Hunt, but harbours no regrets over her decision to switch codes just as women’s football looks set to explode.

She captained Australia at last year’s FIFA Women’s U20 World Cup before deciding she needed to take herself out of her comfort zone.

Moving between the two rugby codes and Aussies rules is common among female athletes, but swapping soccer for league?

“I wanted to challenge myself with the switch,” said Gallagher, whose Knights side face Parramatta on Sunday.

“I sort of sat there and thought I’d achieved a lot in soccer and I wanted to know what was else out there to achieve.

“I was a bit on autopilot in soccer. You do that for 17 years of your life and you go through the motions.

“Making the transition, I had to turn the brain back on and hone in on the skills.”

Gallagher has swapped the role of striker for that of a league winger and has already shown her potency for scoring with a double in last weekend’s loss to North Queensland.

She could well make the switch to the forwards in the future and says she hasn’t ruled out juggling both codes.

“I still think there’s still a lot more to achieve in soccer,” she added.        

The Crowd Says:

2023-08-06T07:52:36+00:00

Lionheart

Roar Rookie


They've beaten two technically good teams, Costa Rica and Norway and gave Zambia, who were pretty ordinary to be honest, a big towelling. They haven't had any difficult, pressing and disruptive opponents like Australia's first two matches and looking at the draw, may have missed those teams now. They'll feel confident if they come up against Spain again, possible, but every game's a challenge for every team now. Tonight's match (US SWE) should tell us a bit.

2023-08-06T03:17:53+00:00

Para+Ten ISUZU Subway support Australian Football

Roar Rookie


The Matildas if they meet Japan wherever that may be in the tournament we have to match them technically. Oh my, how good were they last night? The passing accuracy, individually so skilled, in tight one-touch triangles, with total possession football, finding gaps between the lines. If there is a weakness it is the air. If our Sam Kerr is playing against them there may be a goal there. However, we will have to resort to a 4-4-2 system on the night. If we are to win the match.

2023-08-06T03:01:05+00:00

Para+Ten ISUZU Subway support Australian Football

Roar Rookie


Thank you Chris for your reply. :thumbup: Yes, the Chinese and Indians are an interesting demographic; both have ambitions to win the FIFA World Cup one day. Especially the People's Republic of China. India's obsession with Cricket is enormous, as we all know, however, I did read somewhere that FIFA plans to help the Indian Football Association to make greater inroads into the sporting market over there, especially since they are now the largest populated country on the planet. One has to wonder why FIFA increased the World Cup finals from 32 participants to 48. My theory is to help the PRC and India get to experience the Men's FIFA World Cup finals. I should think when that does happen the digital and TV viewership will go through the roof.

2023-08-06T01:55:11+00:00

Chris Lewis

Roar Guru


Interesting comment. Not sure Indians and Chinese love sport as much as the previous waves of migrants do. But i do notice a lot more Indian people at sport, mostly AFL and cricket, so there is hope that many will support football as the biggest team sport of all.

2023-08-06T01:52:35+00:00

Chris Lewis

Roar Guru


yep, football is very big in Australia. hence, the interest in the WC.

2023-08-06T00:47:02+00:00

Chris Lewis

Roar Guru


I thought japan looked good early. Big match tonite Sweden v USA, on 7mate. First and third from last WC.

2023-08-06T00:11:42+00:00

Redondo

Roar Rookie


Amazing, especially 53.9 million Chinese viewers of one game.

2023-08-05T23:45:54+00:00

Roberto Bettega

Roar Rookie


At this stage of the tournament, and given what we've seen to date, we can certainly say that they can mix it with any team.

2023-08-05T22:57:49+00:00

Para+Ten ISUZU Subway support Australian Football

Roar Rookie


Yes, Waz, and the nation is growing in population, with more football-loving migrants coming to make Australia home. We should look at building a couple of new 40K+ rectangle stadiums where they are needed, to spread the game across the nation. A real football legacy for Australian football and its future growth in the country. The target is 2030 WC.

2023-08-05T10:58:00+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


Hopefully not as far as our Matildas, but they did look good. I went to a fan zone tonight at Darling Harboir and they were the preferred team

2023-08-05T10:38:52+00:00

Lionheart

Roar Rookie


how far will they go?

2023-08-05T10:22:02+00:00

Brainstrust

Roar Rookie


Japan have made a come back after too much respect of seniority for old players in the team held them back. This team is technically good, younger and more mobile.

2023-08-05T10:18:49+00:00

Brainstrust

Roar Rookie


Only an AFL slave would want a world cup at that time. The availability of stadiums is not the issue, its the presence of AFL slaves in the government that is the issue. Already Queensland chief slave of the AFL is busy spending 7 biliion on AFL stadiums.

2023-08-05T09:56:08+00:00

Waz

Roar Rookie


Agree. I wonder if we could get away with a November/December event to increase availability of stadiums?

2023-08-05T09:53:45+00:00

Roberto Bettega

Roar Rookie


Japan has just beaten Norway 3-1. They were very impressive, absolutely dominated Norway.

2023-08-05T09:10:24+00:00

Para+Ten ISUZU Subway support Australian Football

Roar Rookie


Yeah, that was so funny. :stoked:

2023-08-05T09:05:23+00:00

Para+Ten ISUZU Subway support Australian Football

Roar Rookie


And just imagine if it was the Men's world at this precise moment. Australia/Japan/NZ must bid for the big one.

2023-08-05T08:56:48+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


Wow! Those figures are amazing -Channel 7 blew their opportunity to show more games. The highest rating show on Channel 7 this year - The Matildas.

2023-08-05T06:33:12+00:00

Lionheart

Roar Rookie


I’ve never thought of Raso as reckless but she sure takes a lot of knocks. She’s always gotten straight back up from her knocks and got on with the job at hand, no nonsense. The story with her ribbon is interesting, doubting herself her grandmother made her a ribbon and told her it was her power. She always wears a ribbon when she plays (called ribbons Raso at Roar). Interesting that the girls picked in this story, Raso, Kennedy and Arnold all played in the National girls football championships in 2010 when Raso (also played 2011) was named player of the tournament. I’ve always rated her as our best player, but I’m biased. keep an eye on below deck health guys

2023-08-05T03:13:52+00:00

Brainstrust

Roar Rookie


Line marking conspiracy theorists need to watch the Bledisloe cup match. Maybe Wallabies need to do this as a ploy in the future, all over the All Blacks with line markings from the womens world cup.

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