Legacy on show - Sydney Harbour Bridge

The legacy of Australia鈥檚 pioneering female footballers will be writ large on Sunday as thousands of football fans descend on Sydney Harbour Bridge marking a watershed moment for the women鈥檚 game in Australia. 

The celebration of football, culture and community invites everyone to walk, jog or dance across the bridge to the , just 25 days before kick off in the FIFA Women鈥檚 World Cup 2023鈩.

In a significant coincidence, this month also marks exactly 35 years since Australian women had their first taste of a World Cup experience. 

If this Unity Celebration in June 2023, is a celebration of how far the sport has come along Australia鈥檚 World Cup history time-line, the June of 1988 is surely where it all began, in FIFA鈥檚 test event. 

The 1988 FIFA Women鈥檚 Invitational Tournament was earmarked as a 鈥榩ilot鈥 Women鈥檚 World Cup with FIFA to then decide if the women鈥檚 game warranted the same showcase event as their male counterparts. 

Matilda cap #26 Renaye Iserief recalls that before that time, a World Cup tournament for women was something of a fantasy.

鈥淭here was no talk back then of World Cups or really being on the world stage, even though we were travelling to tournaments internationally. So when the 鈥榩ilot鈥 World Cup was announced, we realised that we were on this journey and it could really become a big thing鈥.

An ankle injury would cruelly rule Iserief out of the 1988 event but 35 years later, she certainly doesn鈥檛 want to miss a moment of the celebrations, the chance to recognise a legacy that she and so many others before and after, played a part in creating.

鈥淏ack then, if someone had asked me where I would like to see the game in 20-30 years, I was just hoping that women wouldn鈥檛 have to pay to play anymore, it was hard to imagine what women鈥檚 football would look like, so it鈥檚 truly incredible to see what it鈥檚 become.鈥

1988 squad China FIFA 1st tournament


Matilda cap #55 Carol Vinson would be the first player to touch the ball at the 1988 tournament in Australia鈥檚 Group B match against Brazil in Jiangmen, which kicked off a few hours before the official opening match in Guangzhou, where hosts China would play Canada.

When Matilda cap #53 Janine Riddington superbly chipped the keeper to secure a 1-0 victory, the Aussies became not just the first to touch a ball at the tournament, but could now claim the first goal, as well as the first win.

Vinson recalls how huge this was in the context of women鈥檚 football.

鈥淲e always hoped this would be big and once we got there [to China] and saw how well organised it was, I believed this could actually happen鈥.

This match also marked a personal milestone for the striker.

鈥淚t was a huge deal for me, it was the first time I represented Australia, as I鈥檇 been unfortunate before due to injury.  So to play for my country for the first time, in a 鈥榩ilot world cup' against giants of the game 鈥 and that鈥檚 on my cap, how awesome!鈥

The trial run was proclaimed a success with FIFA sanctioning the tournament and announcing the first edition would be hosted once more by China in 1991.

Team shot 1988 FIFA Invitational


Heartbreakingly, goal difference would deny the Australian women a chance to compete at the inaugural event, pipped at the post by New Zealand in the Oceania Cup qualifying tournament.

Four years later, it was announced that the second edition would be held in Sweden and for Australia, the road to qualification was once more through the Oceania Cup, where ironically, the outcome between the two Trans-Tasman rivals would again come down to goal difference, in a tournament Head Coach Tom Sermanni recalls as enormously stressful.

鈥淲e had to go to Papua New Guinea and play New Zealand and Papua New Guinea twice each in a double round robin. I remember New Zealand being slight favourites, having qualified the previous time.鈥

鈥淲e had good preparation and this time had some government funding to help, but then we had our official playing strips sent from Melbourne and they never showed up.鈥

Sermanni put in a call to Ron Smith, then at the AIS, who sent a package with a boys strip for the team to play in, meaning the Australian women ran out in that first match wearing red shirts with a blue and white stripe.

Australia completed their tournament with a +11 goal difference, meaning New Zealand would need to beat Papua New Guinea by 11 goals in the final game to secure qualification.

The thought of attending that deciding match was too much for Sermanni, who says he stayed back at the hotel with team Physio, Ed Hollis.

鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 face watching that for 90 minutes but a group of the players went and the first we knew about the result was when they came back to the hotel and jumped in the pool to celebrate,鈥 Sermanni said. 

So Australia was set for an 鈥榦fficial鈥 World Cup debut in Sweden 1995 and off went Sermanni to the FIFA Women鈥檚 World Cup Draw in Helsingborg, only to see his side placed in arguably the 鈥楪roup of Death鈥.

鈥淚t was a nightmare, USA, China and Denmark, who were all the top 5 in the world at the time鈥 he recalled.

While Australia would not win a match at the tournament, cap #66 Angela Iannotta would earn the honour of scoring her country鈥檚 first Women鈥檚 World Cup Finals goal (against China) and Sermanni was full of praise for the character of the Australian women,  pushing the vastly more experienced teams from USA and China all the way.

鈥淲hen you consider how inexperienced we were in that environment, the players did remarkably well.鈥

鈥淭he World Cup back then was a very different event to what it is today, we played in a small stadium with a track around it, travelled overnight by train for 12 or 13 hours to get to our last match and only had a total of 14 pieces of team gear and six staff along for the trip 鈥 a Manager, Doctor, Physio, Nutritionist, Assistant Coach and me, as well as Moya Dodd who was our Head of Administration.鈥

Matildas cap #42 Moya Dodd AO, would certainly have run onto the pitch in Arosvallen, V盲ster氓s for the opening match against Denmark, however an ACL injury in January 1995 dashed that dream. 

While she missed the opportunity to take the field in a World Cup during her playing career, Dodd鈥檚 service to the game saw her recognised in the recent King鈥檚 Birthday Honours and this Sunday, she will join fellow Alumni on the deck of the Sydney Harbour Bridge to celebrate the next milestone in Australian women鈥檚 football.

While many felt that an event of this magnitude was perhaps a pipe dream, for Dodd, it was an inevitable part in the evolution of the game which she is confident will continue to grow. 

鈥淲e always knew it could be phenomenal,鈥 Dodd said.

鈥淲atching women鈥檚 football grow has been like watching a movie where you know the ending. You enjoy the plot twists, but you just know that in the end the goodies will prevail.鈥

鈥淒uring this World Cup, a lot of people will be seeing that movie for the first time. And I know they鈥檙e going to love it.鈥

You can follow the CommBank Matildas FIFA Women鈥檚 World Cup journey at .