‘So much emotion’: Photo shows big change coming to Australia
Australia is undergoing a massive change to its sporting landscape – and one Matildas fan’s stadium photo says it all.
This is just the beginning.
A record home crowd for a Matildas game of 50,629 piled into Marvel Stadium in Melbourne on Friday night – and the crazy scenes have not been lost on football commentators.
Australia has caught a bad case of Matildas fever ahead of the Women’s World Cup, beginning on Thursday night when Australia faces Ireland.
It helps that the record crowd travelled back from the stadium with the joy of watching Australia win 1-0 against a French team ranked No. 5 in the world.
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With the roof of the Docklands stadium closed, spectators have described the scene as deafening when Mary Fowler slotted the winner in the 66th minute.
The win has in many ways been overshadowed by the spectacle unfolding off the pitch as the crowd shattered the previous record for a Matildas game. The previous record was set in 2021 when 36,109 watched the Matildas take on the United States.
And the record will last just under a week with next week’s tournament opener at Sydney’s Accor Stadium already sold out.
Australian sports presenter Neroli Meadows was among those to be taken aback at how significantly the landscape has changed for the Matildas ahead of an event widely accepted to be the biggest event Australia has hosted since the 2000 Olympics.
“We’re getting somewhere,” she wrote with a photo showing the heaving crowd outside the stadium.
This little soccer playing kid who was the only girl in the team is filled with so many emotions right now!!!!!! pic.twitter.com/NweiD1ihP5
— Neroli Meadows (@Neroli_Meadows) July 14, 2023
She was far from the only one coming to the same conclusion about the bright future for women’s professional football in Australia.
The Australian taxpayer is going to make sure of it with $230 million set to be spent on a “Legacy 23” plan to continue to drive the sport across all aspects of the sporting landscape.
The event, described by Football Australia CEO James Johnson as a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity”, is expected to have a global audience of more than one billion people.
The expected crowd of 80,000 for Australia’s World Cup opener will be something else.
Another reminder tonight of how far womenâs sport has come in AUS in recent years
— Glenn Mitchell (@MitchellGlenn) July 14, 2023
50K+ watching a friendly between the @TheMatildas & France at Marvel Stadium
86K at the MCG in 2020 to watch @AusWomenCricket win the T20 World Cup
Unimaginable crowds not that long ago ð
Wild the MCG near empty. Marvel stadium completely full for actual football. Never thought Iâd finally see the day this happens. Will be the super super regular occurrence come 5 - 10 years time.
— Ash (@UTDAsh___) July 14, 2023
A sell-out crowd (50k+ expected) to watch the #Matildas host France at Marvel Stadium before the World Cup gets underway.
— Sacha Pisani (@Sachk0) July 14, 2023
What a time to be alive.#FIFAWWCpic.twitter.com/DPbkhDk9nL
A glorious crowd and atmosphere at Marvel Stadium for Australia v France #Matildas#WorldCup#France#AUSpic.twitter.com/Dfj72mRgdK
— Nick Quinn (@Quinny_1) July 14, 2023
No crowd at the G. Is everyone at Marvel Stadium #mcg#marvelstadiummelbourne
— Loui (@Magpies035) July 14, 2023
Matildas prove a 50k sell out at Docklands stadium still exists. Last week the AFL had sell outs of 43k and 39k at their venue
— Corbin Middlemas (@CorbinMiddlemas) July 14, 2023
There were numerous cases of football being the hottest ticket in town on Friday night with the crowd easily surpassing the 38,030 people that watched the Demons-Lions match at the MCG.
There was one sight that was particularly poignant, considering the spiking popularity the Matildas are riding right now.
Just got asked if goals scored outside the ring are worth two in the last 5 minutes of each half #AUSvFRApic.twitter.com/eTT0mfkSgr
— georgia (@georgjar) July 14, 2023
After the game, Australian captain Sam Kerr, who was subbed out after 62 minutes, was happy with the hitout.
“It was always going to be an important game, they’re a great team and I thought we put in a great performance,” she said.
“But this is all about the journey and all about building confidence for next week.”
Asked what she learned from the performance, Kerr said: “We’re bloody quick.”
“We’ve been waiting for this moment for a very long time and it’s a dream come true bringing the World Cup to Oz and this crowd’s been amazing and this is why we do it — for the fans,” Kerr added.
“It’s been an unbelievable week and hopefully an unbelievable month to come.”