Diana Matheson retires a two-time Olympic medal winner and Concacaf champion
Diana Matheson’s biggest moments on the football pitch were as big as they come. Whether it was her assist in the FIFA Women’s World Cup USA 2003 Quarter-finals to knock out the defending runners up China PR or her last-minute, winning goal against France to capture a historic bronze medal at the Lo…
Diana Matheson’s biggest moments on the football pitch were
as big as they come. Whether it was her assist in the FIFA Women’s World Cup
USA 2003 Quarter-finals to knock out the defending runners up China PR or her
last-minute, winning goal against France to capture a historic bronze medal at
the London 2012 Olympic Games, Matheson was always at the heart of Canada
Soccer’s Women’s National Team’s greatest achievements.
She won back-to-back Olympic bronze medals, a Concacaf Championship, a Pan American Games gold, and finished a Canada-best fourth place at that FIFA Women’s World Cup USA 2003. In all, she played at four FIFA Women’s World Cups, three Olympic Games, won medals at six Concacaf tournaments, and made more than 200 international “A” appearances. This year, she hangs up her boots after 18 years with Canada Soccer’s Women’s National Team.
That historic goal at the London 2012 Olympic Games,
however, will forever be remembered as her signature moment.
Thank you Diana #CANWNT pic.twitter.com/BVWDmoyh4l — Canada Soccer (@CanadaSoccerEN) July 7, 2021
With just 10 seconds left in the match, Matheson scored the
winning goal that secured Canada Soccer’s first of back-to-back bronze medals,
also the country’s first in a Summer Olympic Games team sport in 76 years. She
scored on a rebound, just moments after she played Sophie Schmidt into the box
and Schmidt’s shot deflected off a defender into her pathway. A nation erupted
back home and Canada Soccer’s Women’s National Team celebrated their first
Olympic bronze medal moments later when the referee blew the final whistle.
Said Matheson later that year, “this has been one of the
most incredible years of my life. I still look back on what we were able to
accomplish as a team in London and what it has meant to all of Canada and for
the growth of soccer in the country.”
Matheson played at the senior, professional and
international level for 20 years, also winning Canada Soccer’s National
Championships with Oakville SC in 2002 and the Norwegian Toppserien in 2012
with Lillestrøm SK. She reached the Norwegian Cup final in 2009, was one of the
first Canadians to feature in UEFA Women’s Champions League in 2009-10, and
reached the NWSL Cup in 2016 with the Washington Spirit. Over the course of her
career, she also played with Toronto Inferno, Ottawa Fury, Seattle Reign and
the Utah Royals / Kansas City. At the university level, she was a standout at
Princeton University.
With Canada, she was just 18 years old when she made her
debut in the youth program in 2002 and still 18 when she made her international
“A” debut on 18 March 2003 with Canada Soccer’s Women’s National Team. She
scored her first goal on 15 June 2003 against Mexico and then got that historic
assist on Charmaine Hooper’s winning goal at USA 2003, beating the giants China
PR to reach the FIFA Women’s World Cup Semi-finals for the first time.
She made 206 international “A” appearances, scored 19 goals and 25 assists. She once set a Women’s National Team record by playing 45 consecutive international “A” matches and was Canada’s co-leader with 16 international matches at the Olympic Games. Alongside Sinclair, she was also one of only two Canadians to score in three different decades (2000s, 2010s, 2020), with her last goal scored in her last international match on 10 March 2020.
“Representing Canada has been the greatest honour of my life
and I can’t believe my playing days have come to an end,” said Diana Matheson.
“I’m so grateful for all the incredible people I have met along every step of
the way and for the Canadian fans for being such a huge part of the journey. I
know this will be an emotional time for me, but I’m truly excited for what’s
next and for continuing to be a part of the growth of women’s soccer in
Canada.”
“Diana has had a massive impact on Canada Soccer’s Women’s
National Team program,” said Bev Priestman, Canada Soccer’s Women’s National
Team Head Coach. “Not only has she been a great leader for this team both on
and off the pitch, she also inspired an entire nation during her incredible
career. The winning goal at the London 2012 Olympic Games will forever be a
turning point moment in the history of this program. We all wish her the best
in her next adventure.”
Along with all her goals and records, Matheson has already
been honoured twice as part of the London 2012 Olympic team, first as the
Canadian Press Team of the Year in 2012 and later as celebrated by the Canadian
Olympic Hall of Fame in 2019. Named to Canada Soccer’s All-Time XI women’s team
in 2012 as part of Canada Soccer’s centennial celebrations, she received the
Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal in 2012 and had a street in Oakville named after
her in 2017. Three times a runner up in voting for Canadian Player of the Year,
she was an NWSL Best XI midfielder and Washington Spirit team MVP in 2013. She
also led Canada in minutes played three times and ranked second with 16,715
career minutes played with Canada Soccer’s Women’s National Team.