Ellie Carpenter

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Ellie Carpenter
Ellie-carpenter-2017-algarve (cropped) .jpg
2017 Algarve Cup
Personnel
Surname Ellie Madison Carpenter
birthday April 28, 2000
place of birth Cowra , New South WalesAustralia
position Defender
Juniors
Years station
King Park Public School
Westfields Sports High School
Western panthers
Blacktown Spartans FC
Women
Years station Games (goals) 1
2015-2017 Western Sydney Wanderers 23 (0)
2017-2018 Canberra United 10 (2)
2018– Portland Thorns FC 24 (1)
2018-2019 → Canberra United (loan) 11 (3)
National team
Years selection Games (goals) 2
2014– Australia U17
2014– Australia U-20
2016– Australia 33 (1)
1 Only league games are given.
As of May 19, 2019

2 As of June 9, 2019

Ellie Madison Carpenter (born April 28, 2000 in Cowra , New South Wales ) is an Australian football player who is primarily used as a defender . She has been playing for Portland Thorns FC in the National Women's Soccer League since 2018 .

In her first international match for the Australian women's national soccer team on March 2, 2016, she was the first player born after the turn of the millennium on the national team.

Career

Career start

Ellie Carpenter was born on April 28, 2000 in the small town of Cowra in the Australian state of New South Wales, where she grew up on a farm. It was there that her career as a football player began when she played on her parents' farm with her older brother Jeremy, who is now a football player in Portugal. After she was the only native of a rural area player who in the U-13 program of the New South Wales Football Association was taken, she came in 2011 to Sydney , where she and her family in the suburb of Pemulwuy settled to their Better promote football career. From the program she was elected to the U-13 state team of NSW, with which she again took part in April 2012 in a national tournament organized by the Football Federation Australia against the age colleagues of the other states. In the end she won the tournament with her team and was used in all games from the start. At the same time as her football career, she attended King Park Public School in the suburb of Wakeley , where she not only belonged to the football team, but also practiced aerobics and athletics. During this time she was also a member of the school's girls' team that won the Sydney South West Championship. She was also selected to represent Sydney South West at the State Carneval , which is organized by the Primary Schools Sports Association ( PSSA for short ).

At the state championships she was also elected to the NSW schoolgirl team, which should represent her state at the School Sport Australia National Championships in Darwin . Ellie Carpenter led her team as captain after four wins, two draws and one defeat to third place in the final standings. From then on she was trained by Taryn Rockall , a former professional and Australian international , but was also part of the football department of Westfields Sports High School , based in Fairfield West . In addition, she joined the semi-professional club Blacktown Spartans FC with play in the New South Wales Premier League and once represented West NSW in the U-10-P22 team and played for the Western Panthers , which are now under known as Western NSW Mariners FC and supported by the Central Coast Mariners . With the aerobics team of her school she also took part in the state championships and won the gold medal, after which she won the silver medal with the team at the subsequent national championships in August 2012. As a track and field athlete, she broke two school records in the 100- and 200-meter run at King Park Public School, which had been in place since 2001, and also won a 100-meter run for entry into the Sydney South West State selection.

Call-ups in the U-17 and U-20 national teams

After various other successes, the then 14-year-old was appointed to the Australian U-17 national team for the first time in 2014 and, among other things, took part with the team in qualifying for the 2015 U-16 women's Asian Cup from September 2014 . There she failed with the U-17 women after a runaway victories over their peers from Vietnam and Hong Kong only in the last group game with 0: 1 against the U-17 team from South Korea and could therefore not make it to the finals in the group C as runner-up People's Republic of China . Subsequently, she took part with the U-20 selection in the same year under Ante Juric and his assistant Vicki Linton in the qualification for the U-19 women's Asian Cup in 2015 . There the Australian U-20 women qualified without any problems for the final round in China in August 2015 after winning over Hong Kong (6: 0), Singapore (19: 0) and Vietnam (3: 0). She nominated Juric for the women's soccer Southeast Asian Championship, which will take place at the beginning of May 2015, in the 22-man selection, which subsequently advanced to the semi-finals and on the way even some of them in the tournament, in which only senior national teams took part except for Australia Overpowering Thai women defeated 3-0 in the first group game. After the women suffered a 0-1 defeat in the semi-final game against Myanmar , they were able to prevail in the following game to third place with just 4: 3 against the rivals from Vietnam .

In August 2015, Carpenter, who was then training at the Football New South Wales National Training Center ( FNSW NTC for short ), took part under Ante Juric in the 2015 U-19 Asian Women's Cup in China. After defeats in the first two group games against the Japanese and Chinese U-20 national teams , the 2-0 win over Uzbekistan did not help the Australians to advance further in the tournament. Following this early tournament, Ellie Carpenter, who had already proven herself several times in the course of her career, was signed by the Australian W-League club Western Sydney Wanderers in September 2015 . The change came after she had convinced the Wanderers women's trainer, Norm Boardman , with her performance in the qualifying phase for the U-19 Asian Cup and was accepted without a trial training session beforehand. In the first league game of the 2015/16 season , she was used for the full 90 minutes in a 2-2 away draw against the women of Adelaide United . Then she was used under Boardman in all other league games until the end of the season and finished seventh of nine places with her team in the final standings. After she was on the pitch in all games for the full game, various honors followed at the end of the season. She was voted “Team of the Year” by The Football Sack platform and named “Best Newcomer of the Year” by The Women's Game .

As a regular player in the league, she made her debut for Australia

Her achievements in the league were rewarded with the fact that the tenth grader of Westfields Sports High School was brought to a training camp for the first time in November 2015 by Alen Stajcic in the Australian senior women's team. Stajcic then took them into account in February 2016 when he took them with him to the final qualifying round for the soccer tournament of the 2016 Summer Olympics in Japan after he had to compensate for the injury-related loss of veteran Aivi Luik . After sitting unused on the bench in the first game against Japan , the 15-year-old played for the full 90 minutes in the following game on March 2, 2016, in a 9-0 win over Vietnam , and received in the same game a yellow card , as was the case with her first division debut . With this commitment, she was the first player born after the turn of the millennium in the Australian national team. At the same time she was the 197th called up, as well as the ninth youngest player on her debut in the Australian women's national team. After that she was again unused on the bench in the international matches against South Korea and North Korea and was used in the last game in a 1-1 draw against China over half time. For the Australians, this victory in the group stage brought their first ever Olympic participation since the 2004 Summer Olympics . She was also nominated for the tournament in Rio, where she was the youngest participant in the football tournament. But she only had a 15-minute mission in the 6-1 victory in the group game against Zimbabwe .

At the Algarve Cup 2017 she scored the winning goal for a 2-1 win against China on March 6th with her first international goal. In the 2018 Asian women's soccer championship , it was only not used in the first group game against South Korea . In the following games she was always on the field full time. By reaching the semi-finals, the Australians qualified for the 2019 World Cup, for which they were nominated on May 14, 2019. It was used in the first game against Italy , which was lost 2-1.

successes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Mini Matildas head to AFC qualifiers ( Memento of the original from March 23, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (English), accessed March 17, 2016 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / wu17s.footballaustralia.com.au
  2. ^ Westfield Young Matildas go into camp (English), accessed March 17, 2016
  3. ^ Westfield Young Matildas squad named , accessed March 17, 2016
  4. ^ Young Matildas depart for AFF Women's Championship , accessed March 17, 2016
  5. Young Matildas too strong for senior Thai side , accessed on March 17, 2016
  6. Young Matildas suffer semi-final defeat , accessed March 17, 2016
  7. ^ Young Matildas squad announced for AFC U-19 Women's Championship , accessed March 17, 2016
  8. Young Matildas downed by Japan (English), accessed on March 17, 2016
  9. Brave Young Matildas defeated by China , accessed March 17, 2016
  10. Young Matildas prove too strong for Uzbekistan (English), accessed on March 17, 2016
  11. Ellie Carpenter signs with Western Sydney Wanderers' W-League squad ( Memento of the original from March 24, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (English), accessed March 17, 2016 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.parramattasun.com.au
  12. Adelaide comeback denies Wanderers , accessed March 17, 2016
  13. 15-year-old breaks Matildas record , accessed on March 17, 2016
  14. Western Sydney Wanderers young defender Ellie Carpenter earns Matildas training camp call-up , accessed on March 17, 2016
  15. Injury to Aivi Luik opens door for Ellie Carpenter, 15, for Matildas' Olympic qualifying campaign (English), accessed on March 17, 2016
  16. WOMEN`S OLYMPIC FOOTBALL TOURNAMENT 2016 - Australia vs. Japan (3: 1 ), accessed March 17, 2016
  17. WOMEN`S OLYMPIC FOOTBALL TOURNAMENT 2016 - Australia vs. Vietnam (9-0) (English), accessed March 17, 2016
  18. From schoolgirl to record breaker: Meet Ellie Carpenter, the girl who grew up on a farm and now is helping Australia's Matildas reach the Olympics in soccer - at just 15 , accessed on March 17, 2016
  19. ^ Carpenter's bright future , accessed on March 17, 2016
  20. WOMEN`S OLYMPIC FOOTBALL TOURNAMENT 2016 - Australia vs. China PR (1: 1) (English), accessed March 17, 2016
  21. fifa.com: "Facts and Figures on the Olympic Football Tournaments"
  22. matildas.com: Ante Milicic confirms Westfield Matildas squad for France 2019