Hayley Raso
Hayley Raso | ||
Hayley Raso (2016)
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Personnel | ||
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Surname | Hayley Emma Raso | |
birthday | 5th September 1994 | |
place of birth | Brisbane , Queensland , Australia | |
size | 162 cm | |
position | Storm | |
Women | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
2011-2013 | Canberra United | 17 | (4)
2013-2014 | Brisbane Roar | 24 | (7)
2015-2016 | Washington Spirit | 8 | (0)
2015-2016 | → Melbourne Victory (loan) | 10 | (1)
2016– | Portland Thorns FC | 72 (13) |
2016-2017 | → Canberra United (loan) | 11 | (2)
2017-2018 | → Brisbane Roar (loan) | 11 | (4)
2018-2019 | → Brisbane Roar (loan) | 4 | (1)
2019-2020 | → Brisbane Roar (loan) | 8 | (4)
National team | ||
Years | selection | Games (goals) 2 |
2013 | Australia U-19 / U-20 | at least 4 (4) |
2012– | Australia | 41 (5) |
1 Only league games are given. Status: January 12, 2020 2 As of November 12, 2019 |
Hayley Emma Raso (born September 5, 1994 in Brisbane , Queensland , Australia ) is an Australian national soccer player who plays in attack. In January 2012 she won the Grand Final of the Australian Championship with Sydney FC at the age of 17. In 2012 she was used for the first time in the Australian national football team .
Career
societies
Raso reached the Grand Final for the Australian Championship in their first season with Canberra United and won it 3-2 against defending champions Brisbane Roar , where Raso played over 90 minutes but did not participate in the scoring. After the season she moved to the final opponent Brisbane Roar. In the 2013/14 and 2014 seasons she played there together with the German national goalkeeper Nadine Angerer . Together they reached the Grand Final in February 2014, but lost to Melbourne Victory FC 2-0. Raso was back in the starting line-up. After Australia's elimination at the 2015 World Cup, she switched to the NWSL participant Washington Spirit and spent the free time there at the turn of the year 2015/16 at Melbourne Victory .
National teams
Raso was first invited to a Matildas game in June 2012. On June 24, she was used against New Zealand for the first time in the national team.
In September 2013, she took part with the Australian U-20 team in the Southeast Asian Women's Football Championship in Myanmar , scoring four goals (two each against the senior national teams of Jordan and Thailand) and the final against the U-23s Team from Japan only lost on penalties .
A month later, she took part with the Australian U-19 team in the U-19 Asian Women's Cup in 2013 and scored the interim 2: 5 in the first group game in a 2: 6 against North Korea. In the 1: 2 against China in the third group game, she scored the 1: 0. Australia could then only win the game against Myanmar and was fifth not qualified for the U-20 World Cup in Canada in 2014.
She was nominated but not used for the 2014 Asian women's soccer championship , in which Australia was unable to defend the title.
In March 2015 she took part with Australia in the Cyprus Cup 2015 , where she was substituted on in three games. On May 12, 2015 she was nominated for the 2015 Australian World Cup squad . At the World Cup, where the Australians were eliminated in the quarter-finals against defending champions Japan, it was not used.
She was not nominated for the 2016 Olympic Games. In March 2018 she was nominated for the 2018 Asian Women's Football Championship in Jordan. There she was used in the three group games and scored two goals in the 8-0 win against Vietnam. Since they had scored the most goals against Vietnam, they were group winners and qualified for the World Cup in France. It was not used in the semifinals and finals. At the World Cup she was used in the four games, where she was substituted on and off twice, but with her team was eliminated in the round of 16 against former world champions Norway on penalties , in which she was no longer on the field.
successes
- 2012: Won the Australian Championship (Canberra United)
- 2017 : Wins the NWSL Championship (Portland Thorns FC)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Canberra United - Brisbane Roa 3-2
- ↑ back-of-the-net.com: "Victory crowned champions in stunning fashion"
- ↑ Melbourne Victory - Brisbane Roar 2-0
- ↑ canberratimes.com: "Raso makes right move for Matildas"
- ↑ AFC U-19 Women's C'ship 2013: DPR Korea 6-2 Australia
- ↑ AFC U-19 W'mns C'ship: Australia 1-2 China
- ↑ footballaustralia.com: "Matilda's name Asian Cup squad"
- ↑ footballaustralia.com: "Westfield Matildas name World Cup squad"
- ↑ the-afc.com: Matilda's name final squad for Jordan 2018
Web links
- Profile on the Brisbane Roar website
- Hayley Raso in the soccerway.com database
- Team profile of the Matildas on Football Federation Australia (here as midfielder)
- Hayley Raso in the database of FIFA (English)
- Hayley Raso in the database of weltfussball.de
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Raso, Hayley |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Raso, Hayley Emma (full name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Australian soccer player |
DATE OF BIRTH | 5th September 1994 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Brisbane , Queensland , Australia |