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Australia men's national cerebral palsy soccer team

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
National association football team

Australia
NicknamePararoos
AssociationFootball Australia
ConfederationAFC (Asia)
Sub-confederationAFF (Southeast Asia)
Head coachKai Lammert
CaptainDavid Barber
MostcapsChristopher Pyne (104)
Top scorerDavid Barber (70)
FIFA codeAUS
Firstcolours
Secondcolours
Websitewww.pararoos.com.au

TheAustralia men's national cerebral palsy soccer team represents Australia in international7-a-side (CP) competitions. Officially nicknamed thePararoos, the team is currently controlled by the governing body for soccer in Australia,Football Australia (FA), which are a member of theAsian Football Confederation (AFC) and the regionalASEAN Football Federation (AFF).

Since the team's foundation in 1998, they have represented Australia at theParalympics on one occasion in 2000 and participated in nineIFCPF/CPISRA World Championships from 2001 to 2019. Australia achieved their highest result in their debut CPISRA campaign in 2001, beating the United States 1–0 to be positioned 5th out of the total 13 teams qualified.[3] The Pararoos are currently ranked 10th in the IFCPF rankings.[3]

The team consists of neurologically impaired athletes with ataxia, hypertonia or athetosis, playing a similar formatted game toAssociation Football, with smaller squads, fields and differing throw-in and offside rules.[4]

History

[edit]

Foundation (1998)

[edit]
Pararoos squad in training camp

Following the introduction of 7-a-side football in the1984 Summer Paralympic games, Australia lacked a governing body to oversee and funding to develop a Paralympic football team.[5] In 1998 theCerebral Palsy Australian Sport & Recreation Federation (CPASRF) and the Australian Paralympic Committee (APC) collectively established a 7-aside football team in preparation for the countries homeSydney 2000 Paralympics.[6] The team managed by Cornelius Van Eldik and coached by both Russell Marriott and David Campbell lost all three games in the group stage of their debut Summer Paralympic campaign.[7]

In 2001, the team participated in their firstCerebral Palsy International Sports and Recreation Association (CPISRA) World Games, defeating both Belgium, Scotland andEngland to finish 2nd and 3rd in both group phases. The team went on to defeat the United States 1–0 to finish the tournament in 5th.[3] In 2005, an agreement was made between CPASRF and APC, to pass the control of the team toFootball Australia (FA) who were the governing body of both theAustralian men's andAustralian women's football teams at the time.[6]

Paul Brown (2006 – 2013) era

[edit]
Head Coach, Paul Brown

In March 2006, Paul Brown and Kai Lammert were appointed as the head coach and assistant coach of the Paralympic team respectively.[8] This appointment was in preparation for the2007 CPISRA World Championships, which was the qualifying event for the2008 Beijing Paralympic games. The team finished 11th in the CPISRA championship rankings and subsequently failed to qualify for the Paralympic games, after heavy defeats from bothEngland andBrazil.[3]

Following the team's poor performance in the championships, Brown travelled across Australia to help strengthen state programs, and monitor progress of players. Additionally, Brown conducting three national camps across the 12 months period prior to the2011 CPISRA World Championships, which was the qualification event to the2012 London Paralympic games.[9] Although defeatingSpain 4–2, in the opening game of the 2011 CPISRA World Championships, the Pararoos lost toBrazil,Netherlands andEngland to finish in 11th place and subsequently did not qualify to the2012 London Paralympic games.[3]

As part of the Australian Sport Commission's (ASC) introduction of theWinning Edge Policy on the 23 June 2014, the Pararoos' funding was cut by $175,000,[10] with the commission deciding that funding should be prioritised to sports that have the greatest chance of success.[11] Following this decision, head coach Paul Brown launched an online petition for the reinstation of the government funding, with over 82,000 individuals signing the change.org appeal. However, Matthew Favier the ASC Sport director at the time reiterated the commission's decision stating that the “ASC did not believe the team would qualify for Rio”.[12]

In January 2015, the governance of the sport was passed over from theCPISRA to the newly createdInternational Federation of Cerebral Palsy Football (IFCPF) [1]. Paul Brown stepped down from his position as head coach in March 2015.[6]

Kai Lammert (2015 – present) era

[edit]

Former assistant manager Kai Lammert was named as the new head coach of the Pararoos in March 2015.[6] During his first months within the job,Football Australia (FA) partnered with theAustralian Sports Foundation (ASF) to develop a tax-deductible scheme to raise much needed funds to support the team, in preparation for future football tournaments.[13] With no funding being provided from ASC, the team was able to qualify and travel toArgentina for the inaugural2017 IFCPF Championships, through crowd sourced funding.[13] The Pararoos ending up finish 10th following a 2–1 defeat to host countryArgentina.[3]

In 2018, the team came 2nd in the IFCPF Asia-Oceania Championship after a 7–0 defeat toIran in the final, to qualify for the renamedIFCPF World Cup in Spain. The Pararoos went on to finish 10th in the IFCPF World Cup, after a 4–2 loss toCanada.[3]

As part of theFIFA Forward 2.0 initiative in 2019, the FA received funding to help Australia's preparations for future international competitions. While also allowing the team to play their first official match in Australia since the2000 Paralympic games.[14] The game took place on the 30 November 2019, atCromer Park Sydney, against world number 12,Canada.[15] The Pararoos won the game 5–0, with almost 1200 fans in attendance, being a record for 7-a-side football outside of the Paralympic Games.[15] The game also broke the record for the highest merchandise spend per fan of any Australian national game over the 2019 calendar year. As part of the FIFA initiative 100% of the revenue made on the day was reinstalled into supporting the team.[15] The game also celebrated the 100th match for Pararoos captain David Barber, who holds the record for the most appearances for the Australian Paralympic team.[15]

Team Image

[edit]

Colours

[edit]

The Australian Paralympic soccer team uniform is traditionally the exact same as theAustralian men's football team. This features a yellow jersey accompanied by yellow shorts and green socks. While alternatively for the away kit, the shirt and shorts are turquoise, and the socks are yellow.[6] The Australian kits have been supplied byNike, since 2004.[16]

Sponsorship

[edit]
PeriodKit ManufacturerShirt Sponsor
1998 - 2004Adidas
2004 - 2017

Nike

2017-2019Zest Care[17]
2019 -2022

Nickname

[edit]

The Australian Paralympic team's nickname, the “Pararoos” is used to informally refer to the team, in the media and in conversation. Similar to otherAustralian national representative sporting team nicknames, the term is aportmanteau word combiningParalympic andKangaroo.[18]

Recent results and fixtures

[edit]

2019

[edit]
Argentina  v Australia
9 July 20192019 IFCPF World CupArgentina 1-4 AustraliaSeville,Spain
17:00AESTReport
Australia  v Spain
11 July 20192019 IFCPF World CupAustralia 2-0 SpainSeville,Spain
19:00AESTReport
Australia  v Thailand
13 July 20192019 IFCPF World CupAustralia 5-0 ThailandSeville,Spain
17:00AESTReport
Australia  v Germany
16 July 20192019 IFCPF World CupAustralia 1-2 GermanySeville,Spain
19:00AESTReport
Australia  v Canada
18 July 20192019 IFCPF World CupAustralia 4-2 CanadaSeville,Spain
4:00AESTReport
Australia  v Canada
30 November 2019FriendlyAustralia 5-0 CanadaSydney,Australia
17:30AESTReport

2022

[edit]

International competitions were cancelled throughout 2020 and 2021 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.[19]

Australia  v Iran
5 May 20222022 IFCPF World CupAustralia 0-2 IranBarcelona,Spain
23:30AESTReport
United States  v Australia
7 May 20222022 IFCPF World CupUnited States 5-1 AustraliaBarcelona,Spain
20:30AESTReport
Australia  v Canada
10 May 20222022 IFCPF World CupAustralia 3-3 (a.e.t.)
(4-5p)
 CanadaBarcelona,Spain
20:30AESTReport
Germany  v Australia
13 May 20222022 IFCPF World CupGermany 1-2 AustraliaBarcelona,Spain
20:30AESTReport

2023

[edit]
Australia  v United States
31 January 2023Closed Door FriendlyAustralia 1-4 United StatesSydney,Australia
10:30AESTLynch 3'ReportStadium:Cromer Park
Attendance: Closed Door Friendly
Referee: Dale Edwards
Australia  v United States
2 February 2023Closed Door FriendlyAustralia 0-2 United StatesSydney,Australia
10:30AESTReportStadium:Cromer Park
Attendance: Closed Door Friendly
Referee: Dale Edwards
Australia  v United States
4 February 2023International FriendlyAustralia 0-0 United StatesSydney,Australia
15:00AESTReportStadium:Cromer Park
Attendance: 1,072
Referee: Wayne Crabb

Players

[edit]

Caps and goals correct as of 17 May 2022.[20]

Cap No.PositionPlayerDate of birth (age)AppearancesGoalsDebut
49GKCosimo Cirillo18 May 2001 (age 20)41v.IranIran 3 August 2016
2GK,DF, MFChristopher Pyne3 May 1984 (age 38)10420v.NetherlandsNetherlands 27 October 1999
1DFDavid Barber (captain)13 July (age 42)10170v.NetherlandsNetherlands 27 October 1999
27DFBen Atkins26 June 1981 (age 30)728v.CanadaCanada 31 May 2008
48DFAlessandro La Verghetta6 January 2001 (age 21)72v.IranIran 3 August 2016
51DF,MFTaj Lynch15 November 2000 (age 21)161v.UkraineUkraine 13 September
46DF,MFMatthew Hearne2 July 1999 (age 22)212v.SpainSpain 31 July 2016
54DF,MFBradley Scott15 April 1988 (age 34)31v.South KoreaKorea Republic 24 November 2018
44MFAngus MacGregor13 June 1995 (age 26)121v.RussiaRussia 20 June 2015
53MFDaniel Campbell25 January 2003 (age 19)62v.United StatesUnited States 19 July 2018
17MF,FWBenjamin Roche21 November 1988 (age 33)5430v.JapanJapan 29 June 2005
50FWBenjamin Sutton8 May 1993 (age 29)41v.United StatesUnited States 11 September 2017
52FWAugustine Murphy2 May 2000 (age 22)50v.United StatesUnited States 19 July 2018

Club Officials

[edit]

Current technical staff

[edit]

Updated as of 22 May 2022.[20]

PositionName
Head CoachAustralia Kai Lammert
Assistant CoachAustralia Goran Stajic
Assistant CoachAustralia Tim Palmer
Goalkeeping CoachAustralia Liam Dedini
Team ManagerAustralia Jenny Le

Managers

[edit]
NamePeriodHonoursRef.
Australia Russell Marriott1998 - 2006Summer Paralympic games qualification:2000

Highest finish inCPISRA World Championships:5th

[7]
Australia Paul Brown2006 - 2013Highest finish inCPISRA World Championships:8th[8]
Australia Kai Lammert2013 -Highest finish inIFCPF World Championships:10th[6]

Competitive results

[edit]

Updated as of 22 May 2022.[3][20]

Paralympic Games

[edit]
Paralympic Games record
YearResultPositionPldWDLGFGA
United States1984did not participate
South Korea1988
Spain1992
United States1996
Australia2000Group stage7th300308
Greece2004did not qualify
China2008
United Kingdom2012
Brazil2016
Total0 Titles300308

CPISRA World Championships

[edit]
CPISRA World Championships record
YearResultPositionPldWDLGFGA
England20015th - 6th Playoff5th7412128
Brazil200711th - 12th

Playoff

11th63031713
Netherlands20097th - 8th

Playoff

8th6105842
Netherlands201111th - 12th

Playoff

11th63031530
Spain201313th - 14th Playoff13th6204410
Total0 Titles311311756103

IFCPF CP Football World Championships

[edit]
IFCPF CP Football World Championships record
YearResultPositionPldWDLGFGA
England201511th - 12th Playoff12th5113415
Argentina20179th - 10th Playoff10th6303819
Total0 Titles114161234

IFCPF Men's World Cup

[edit]
IFCPF CP Football World Championships record
YearResultPositionPldWDLGFGA
Spain 201911th - 12th Playoff11th63031315
Spain 202211th - 12th Playoff11th4112611
Total0 Titles104151926

IFCPF Ranking

[edit]

Updated as of 22 May 2022.

This graph was using thelegacy Graph extension, which is no longer supported. It needs to be converted to thenew Chart extension.
A line chart depicting the history of the Australian Paralympic soccer teams IFCPF ranking from 2015 - 2022

 Best Ranking   Worst Ranking   Best Mover   Worst Mover  

Australia Paralympic soccer team ranking
RankYearMoveRef.
 102022[3]
102021[3]
102020[3]
 102019Increase 6[3]
 162018Decrease 1[21]
152017Decrease 1[20]
 142016Decrease 4[22]
102015[23]
102014[23]

ParaMatildas

[edit]

ParaMatildas is the Australian national football team for women withcerebral palsy,acquired brain injury and symptoms ofstroke. They won silver at the 2022International Federation of Cerebral Palsy Football Women's World Cup, with USA winning in extra time.[24]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Elo rankings change compared to one year ago."World Football Elo Ratings".eloratings.net. 14 October 2025. Retrieved14 October 2025.
  2. ^"World Football Elo Ratings".eloratings.net. Retrieved11 February 2019.
  3. ^abcdefghijkl"Home - CP Football".www.ifcpf.com. Retrieved26 July 2024.
  4. ^Reina, R., Sarabia, J., & Yanci, J. (2017). How does the ball influence the performance of change of direction and sprint tests in para-footballers with brain impairments?.PLOS ONE,12(11), e0187237.
  5. ^Moore, K. (2013). Football and the Olympics and Paralympics.Sport In Society,17(5), 640-655.
  6. ^abcdef"Paralympic History | My Football".www.myfootball.com.au. 5 August 2011. Retrieved6 March 2024.
  7. ^ab"2000 Summer Paralympics Australian Team List - Paralympics". Retrieved6 March 2024.
  8. ^abAustralian Paralympic Committee. (2006).Australian Paralympic Committee Annual Report 2005/06 (p. 21). Canberra.
  9. ^Australian Paralympic Committee. (2009).Australian Paralympic Committee Annual Report 2009/09 (p. 28). Canberra.
  10. ^Hammond, A., & Jeanes, R. (2017). Federal Government Involvement in Australian Disability Sport, 1981–2015.The International Journal of The History of Sport,35(5), 431-447.  
  11. ^Brissenden, M., & Gearin, M. (2016). AIS head defends' Winning Edge' policy in the lead-up to Rio.
  12. ^"Pararoos dreams of gold, competing dashed as $175k in funding slashed". Retrieved2 August 2024.
  13. ^ab"Meet the world-class Aussies who wouldn't be told they weren't worth paying for". 3 December 2018. Retrieved2 August 2024.
  14. ^Bason, T., Salisbury, P., & Gerard, S. (2018). Fifa. InRoutledge Handbook of Football Business and Management (pp. 423-440). Routledge.
  15. ^abcd"Australian football proudly celebrates inclusivity, equality and diversity with the Pararoos".www.fifa.com. Retrieved6 March 2024.
  16. ^"People weren't impressed with the new Socceroos kit". Retrieved2 August 2024.
  17. ^"Australia's Paralympic football team signs up Zest Care as official partner".www.insidethegames.biz. 16 March 2017. Retrieved6 March 2024.
  18. ^Stell, M., & Salisbury, C. (2015). ‘It's Bigger than the Olympics’: changing Australia through football and the 1974 FIFA World Cup.Soccer & Society,16(2-3), 245-258.
  19. ^"Determined Pararoos play out unfortunate defeat on international return | Pararoos".www.pararoos.com.au. 7 May 2022. Retrieved6 March 2024.
  20. ^abcd"Squad | Pararoos".www.pararoos.com.au. 19 July 2019. Retrieved6 March 2024.
  21. ^Football NSW. (2018). NSW players dominate Pararoos squad - Football NSW. Retrieved 25 May 2022, fromhttps://footballnsw.com.au/2018/11/21/nsw-players-dominate-pararoos-squad/#:~:text=The%20Pararoos%2C%20who%20are%20currently,on%20Thailand%20two%20days%20later.
  22. ^"Full Speed Ahead For Football's Pararoos – Coaching Life".www.coachinglife.com.au. Retrieved2 August 2024.
  23. ^ab"Petition to save the Pararoos goes viral after government decision to cut team's entire funding". Retrieved2 August 2024.
  24. ^"ParaMatildas show 'never say die' spirit as they win silver in inaugural Cerebral Palsy Women's World Cup final". ABC News (Australia).

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