Amy Joan Irene Sayer (born 30 November 2001) is an Australian soccer player at Stanford Cardinal. She primarily plays as an attacking midfielder but was also deployed as a defensive midfielder in the under-20s national team. She is known for her vision, passing, all round technical ability, and her ability to play and score with both feet.
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Personal information | |||
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Full name | Amy Joan Irene Sayer | ||
Date of birth | (2001-11-30) 30 November 2001 (age 20) | ||
Place of birth | Sydney, Australia | ||
Height | 1.76 m (5 ft 9 in) | ||
Position(s) | Attacking Midfielder | ||
Club information | |||
Current team | Stanford Cardinal | ||
Youth career | |||
– 2013 | FNSW Institute | ||
College career | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
2020– | Stanford Cardinal | 33 | (5) |
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
2013–2016 | FNSW Institute | 24 | (22) |
2016–2017 | Sydney University | 4 | (2) |
2017–2018 | Canberra United | 10 | (1) |
2018–2020 | Sydney FC | 11 | (1) |
National team‡ | |||
2016 | Australia U-17 | 8 | (3) |
2016– | Australia U-20 | 17 | (13) |
2022– | Australia U-23 | 3 | (5) |
2018– | Australia | 6 | (0) |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals ‡ National team caps and goals, correct as of 8 July 2022 |
On 16 July 2018, Sayer received her first call up to the Matildas, the senior Australian Women's Team, for the 2018 Tournament of Nations.
Born in Sydney, Australia, Sayer grew up in Northern Sydney, where attended Ravenswood School for Girls and later Barker College. She was granted special permission to not attend classes due to her international team commitments and playing for Canberra United during the W-League season.
Sayer began her youth career at Northbridge FC (now known as North Shore Mariners),[citation needed] as well as playing futsal and football at the FNSW Institute.[citation needed]
Several clubs were interested in signing Sayer for the 2016 W-League season, however due to her age, she decided to stay closer to home, signing for Sydney University on a youth contract.[citation needed]
Canberra United signed several young talents to play in the 2017 W-League season. Sayer joined the club after some impressive performances for the Australian National U-20 Women's Team, along with teammates Georgia Plessas, Georgia Boric, Clare Hunt, and Karly Roestbakken.[citation needed]
On 25 November, Amy Sayer scored her first goal in the country's top division in a 3–2 home win against Perth Glory at McKellar Park.[citation needed] Sayer finished the season with one goal in 10 appearances, as well as being deployed in various positions such as an attacking midfielder and a left winger by manager Heather Garriock.[citation needed]
Sayer signed for Sydney FC on 4 September 2018 after one season at Canberra United in the W-League. On 3 November, she scored her maiden goal for her new club in her first appearance.[citation needed]
On 9 November 2018, Sayer was diagnosed with a stress fracture in her right foot.[citation needed] She was withdrawn from the Australia squad for the Seven Consulting Series against Chile, and was ruled out for at least 12 weeks.[citation needed] Her next appearance in a football match will be in January 2019, at the earliest.[citation needed]
In January 2020, Sayer was accepted to Stanford University, and joined them at the conclusion of the 2019–20 W-League, playing for Stanford Cardinal.[1]
During the 2020 season (which was played during the spring of 2021), Sayer quickly stood out, starting in 9 of her 10 appearances for the team. In these appearances, Sayer racked up a total of 679 minutes of action, playing more than 50 minutes in 8 matches.[2] Throughout the season, Sayer primarily played in the midfield, utilizing her vision to move the ball quickly and maintain possession. This style of play led to Sayer capturing one assist on the season and earning the honor of being on the 2020 PAC-12 All-Freshman team.[3] Her performances garnered the attention of the Matildas once again, leading to a call up to play with the squad in two international friendlies against Germany and The Netherlands.[4] These friendlies would take place in The Netherlands, causing Sayer to miss the middle portion of the Stanford season due to international duty.
With little time between the end of the 2020 season and the beginning of the 2021 season, Sayer picked up where she left off, making 19 appearances and starting in 7 games for the Cardinal with the majority of her minutes coming at the forward position.[5] Adapting to the new position, Sayer excelled, nabbing 2 assists as well as 2 goals, her first for the team. Her goals came in back-to-back games with the second coming against in a 3–1 victory against the 2020 Champions the Santa Clara Broncos. Sayer's performances helped the Cardinal to a 13-6-1 record and an invitation to the NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Championship, in which they unfortunately lost in the first round.[6]
Sayer made her international youth debut on 25 August 2016, in a 28–0 demolition of Palestine, played at Vietnam. She marked her debut with one goal and seven assists in the first half of the match.[citation needed] She followed the first cap with three more dominating displays against Hong Kong (14–0), Iraq (8–0) and Vietnam (6–0).[citation needed]
At the age of 14 years old, Sayer earned her first call up to the U-20 squad for the AFC Pre-qualifiers in November 2016.[citation needed] She made two appearances in two games, playing full minutes and scoring two goals.[citation needed] Following her debut tournament, Sayer was reselected in the Young Matilda's squad for the friendly series against USA and Canada in July 2017,[citation needed] and for the 2017 AFC Qualification Tournament held in China where she made four more appearances in the group stage and final series.[citation needed] She made another appearance in the 2018 friendly match against Thailand where she scored one goal.[citation needed]
On 16 July 2018, Alen Stajcic called up Sayer to the senior Matildas squad to participate in the Tournament of Nations in the United States after impressing in her maiden W-League season in with 10 appearances.[7][8][9] She earned her first international cap as a 93rd-minute substitute in the 2018 Tournament of Nations against Japan.
Sayer was called up to the Matildas squad for the second time to play matches against France and England in October 2018.[citation needed] She came on as a substitute against France but couldn't salvage a 2–0 defeat,[citation needed] while she started the second match against England in a 1–1 draw following a last minute header from Clare Polkinghorne.[citation needed]
Later in October, Sayer joined the Young Matildas on their trip to Lebanon, to play Mongolia, Lebanon and Hong Kong.[citation needed] She scored a hat-trick in the 18-0 demolition of Mongolia,[citation needed] while an assist and a goal against Lebanon,[citation needed] and one assist with a brace against Hong Kong, converting the first from the penalty spot, and the second from outside the box.[citation needed]
On 9 November 2018, Sayer withdrew from the Matildas squad in the two-match series against Chile after a stress fracture diagnosis.[citation needed]
During April 2021, Sayer made her way back onto the Matildas squad to participate in two friendlies against Germany and The Netherlands.[10] These would be the first matches played by the Matildas since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, giving greater significance to the matches. In the match against Germany on 10 April 2021, Sayer would be substituted on in the 57th minute, marking her fourth ever appearance for the squad. She would play 33 minutes at the attacking midfield position as the match would play out to a 5–2 score line in favor of Germany.[11]
An attacking midfielder and playmaker, Sayer is adept at finding quality forward passes and likes to combine with others for quick passing moves rather than carrying the ball too often.[citation needed] While Sayer is an excellent athlete, her style draws more on her technical range, vision and creativity and she would prefer to play an incisive pass or use one touch passing combinations to beat a player – rather than looking to rely on speed in a footrace.[citation needed] In the front third she is an increasingly unpredictable and dangerous attacker as she adds more variety to her attacking style – while she is naturally inclined to look for a clever through pass or combination play to attack the opponent's penalty box, she is equally capable of scoring from range on either foot and is demonstrating this more and more with some eye-catching long-distance goals at club and international level.[citation needed]