Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
Monday, April 13, 2026
HomeOpinionGet behind our history makers

Get behind our history makers

IF you weren’t on the Matildas bandwagon after Saturday night, you’ve surely got to be by now.

The marathon, three hour quarter final clash with France will no doubt have etched a whole host of new names into Australian sporting folklore.

Names like Arnold and Vine will forever live alongside household names like Aloisi, Schwarzer and Redmayne for their heroics in penalty shootouts.

It was a huge occasion for a couple of reasons.

The win sealed Australia’s place in the World Cup semi-final, taking place at Stadium Australia tonight, the furthest the country has ever gone on the international stage, including the Soceroos.

It also banished a few demons from the 2019 World Cup, where the Matildas were sent packing by Norway after a heartbreaking loss on penalties.

But above all, it’s the way the Matildas have transcended sporting codes and inspired a whole generation that made Saturday night’s win all the more sweeter.

It wouldn’t be a stretch to say that most of the general public would have struggled to name at least one player in Australia’s first ever Women’s World Cup squad back in 1995.

Today, though, Sam Kerr is arguably the face of Australian football. When Australia was in contention to host the 2022 Men’s World Cup, AFL legend Ron Barassi was on the back page of the Herald Sun crushing a soccer ball.

That was in response to the prospect of FIFA using the MCG to host World Cup games, taking the hallowed ground off the hands of the AFL for a whole season.

On Saturday night, though, we saw AFL teams huddled around TV screens post game and coaches delaying press conferences to watch the shootout on their phones.

Even fans gathered in concourses at the MCG, the SCG and Optus Stadium as Cortnee Vine stepped up to spot.

There’s also great footage of an entire flight cabin tuning in to watch the Matildas reach the final four.

No one has united the country quite like this since Cathy Freeman at the Sydney Olympics.

Even the Socceroos in 2006 didn’t really have the backing like the Tillies have. So to those of you out there who still might be on the fence, flick on the TV tonight and tune in.

Get out to the pub or to Festival Plaza, don your Green and Gold and help pull the girls over the line one last time.

To the rest of the world, Australia has arrived.

And we’re not going anywhere.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Local voice leads charge for foster care overhaul

ANDREWS Farm advocate Lisa O’Malley has ramped up her pleas for a state government overhaul of the foster and kinship care system following March’s...

Stolen ute linked to Nuri crime series

POLICE are seeking the assistance of the public to help locate a stolen ute linked to a series of crimes in the Nuriootpa area. The...

Driver dies after crash at Nuriootpa

A 47-year-old Greenock man has died following a crash at Nuriootpa late last month. A truck and a ute collided at the intersection of...

Building skills and futures through apprenticeships and traineeships

Apprenticeships and traineeships continue to provide meaningful pathways into employment, particularly for those looking to build practical skills and gain real-world experience. These programs...

AFL’s great headache

At the beginning of August 2024, the headline blazoned across numerous papers read "AFL's head not in game - Concussion study stalled", referring to...

Inside Gawler’s lead treasure box

ON 14 November 1874, the Gawler community placed a small lead box in the foundation of the McKinlay Monument. In December last year, 151...

Fantastic finish for volleyball season

THURSDAY April 9 marked the culmination of the summer 25/26 season, featuring six excellent matches. Finals are played to the best of three sets...

Deadly tragedies on the playing field

SPORT has been an enjoyable activity for most people for over a millennium, but it does have its dark side, with deaths a chilling...

Letters to the editor

The hard work begins State elections will always be about you - the 27,000 members of our community who call it home. Over the last week...

Club notes

Barossa Valley Squash At the end of this round, the pennant is halfway through. Red Bull remain narrow leaders heading into the next set of...

LookBacks

150 years Gossips … The amount of vile gossiping that goes on in small communities - like Gawler, for instance (not that I would institute...