Katie Alison McCabe (born 21 September 1995) is an Irish footballer who plays for FA WSL club Arsenal[2] and serves as captain of the Republic of Ireland national team.
![]() McCabe in 2020 | |||
Personal information | |||
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Full name | Katie Alison McCabe[1] | ||
Date of birth | (1995-09-21) 21 September 1995 (age 27) | ||
Place of birth | Kilnamanagh, Dublin, Ireland | ||
Height | 1.64 m (5 ft 5 in) | ||
Position(s) | Winger, Forward, Full-back, Wing-back | ||
Club information | |||
Current team | Arsenal | ||
Number | 15 | ||
Youth career | |||
Templeogue United FC St Francis | |||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
2011–2015 | Raheny United | ||
2015 | Shelbourne | ||
2015– | Arsenal | 100 | (13) |
2017 | → Glasgow City (loan) | 0 | (0) |
National team‡ | |||
2010–2012 | Republic of Ireland U17 | 9 | (2) |
2012–2014 | Republic of Ireland U19 | 15 | (8) |
2015– | Republic of Ireland | 68 | (17) |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 19:26, 3 October 2021 (UTC) ‡ National team caps and goals, correct as of 6 September 2022 |
As a teenager, she won the Irish Women's National League title twice and the FAI Women's Cup three times with Raheny United before signing with Arsenal in 2015. With Arsenal, she has since won the Women's FA Cup in 2016, the 2018–19 FA WSL league title, and was named to the PFA Team of the Year for 2021. After earning her first Ireland cap in 2015, she was named the country's captain in 2017, the youngest captain in the history of the team.
Growing up, McCabe played on boys' youth teams for Kilnamanagh AFC and Crumlin United F.C. At the age of 10, she joined her first girls' team in Templeogue, playing for both the girls' team and the boys' team until she turned 13. Her favourite player as a kid was Damien Duff.[3] During secondary school, she also played Gaelic football and basketball.[4]
When the Women's National League (WNL) was formed in 2011, McCabe signed with Raheny United. She had previously trained with the club, but league regulations prevented her from signing a contract until she turned 16. She represented the club in the competition's first season. Over the next three seasons she won two league titles and three consecutive FAI Women's Cups with "The Pandas". She also represented the club in the UEFA Women's Champions League.[5]
She missed four months of the 2013–14 season with a broken leg.[6] That year, she had also been recruited by Florida State University to play for the Florida State Seminoles women's soccer team in the United States, but the move collapsed due to her injury.[7]
In 2014–15 McCabe scored 23 WNL goals for Raheny, two behind top scorer Áine O'Gorman of UCD Waves.[8] In November 2014, she scored the opening goal for Raheny in the FAI Women's Cup final, from a 35-yard free kick, winning her second FAI Cup with the club.[9]
For the 2015–16 season, McCabe remained with the club in their new guise as Shelbourne Ladies.
In December 2015 she signed for London club Arsenal Ladies,[10] rejecting competing offers from Glasgow City, Chelsea and Manchester City.[11]
After struggling with injuries and a lack of first-team playing time in her first year with Arsenal, she joined Glasgow City on loan in August 2017, for the second half of the Scottish Women's Premier League season.[12] She would help lead Glasgow to the Scottish title as well as making a handful of appearances in the UEFA Women's Champions League.[13]
Upon returning to Arsenal after the end of her loan, new Arsenal manager Joe Montemurro shifted her to the left-full back position.[14]
In the 2018–19 season, she helped lead Arsenal to the FA WSL title, playing the most minutes of any player on the squad.[15] Onn 26 March 2019, she signed an extension with Arsenal.[16] Five days later, in one of the last matches of the year, she scored a crucial game-winning goal against Birmingham, keeping Arsenal one point clear on top of the league table.[17]
She scored 5 goals and picked up 12 assists during the 2020–21 FA WSL season as Arsenal finished in third, tied for first in the league in assists and being named to the PFA Team of the Year.[18] In December 2020, she made her 100th appearance for Arsenal in a 4-0 victory over Everton, picking up an assist from the corner on a goal by Jen Beattie.[19][20] Later that month, she was involved in a COVID-19-related controversy after posting a picture of herself on a beach in Dubai despite a travel ban for Tier 4 residents in London. She stated that she had gone to Dubai for a business meeting with her agent.[21] She did not receive any disciplinary sanctions from the FA for the controversy.[22]
Ahead of the 2021–22 FA WSL season, she signed a new long-term contract with Arsenal.[23]
At the 2014 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship, McCabe featured as Ireland won their group,[24] before crashing 4–0 to a Vivianne Miedema-inspired Netherlands in the semi-final.
In March 2015 national coach Susan Ronan gave McCabe a senior debut against Hungary at the 2015 Istria Cup, a 1–1 draw. A quad injury kept McCabe out of Ireland's 3–0 UEFA Women's Euro 2017 qualifying defeat by Spain on 26 November 2015 at Tallaght Stadium, Dublin.[25] At the 2016 Cyprus Cup, McCabe scored her first international goal to secure a 1–1 draw with Italy.[26]
McCabe featured in Ronan's squad for the UEFA Women's Euro qualifying stage, making seven appearances in total.[27] In August 2017, new national team coach Colin Bell appointed 21-year-old McCabe as the Ireland captain, the youngest captain in the history of the team.[28]
In April 2021, she earned her 50th cap for Ireland against Belgium.[29][30] In September 2021, the FAI announced that it would implement equal pay for its men's and women's national teams, after negotiations led by McCabe and men's captain Séamus Coleman.[31][32]
No. | Date | Venue | Opponent | Score | Result | Competition |
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1. | 25 November 2021 | Tallaght Stadium, Dublin, Ireland | ![]() | 1–0 | 1–1 | 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification |
2. | 30 November 2021 | ![]() | 7–0 | 11–0 | ||
3. | 8–0 | |||||
4. | 12 April 2022 | Gamla Ullevi, Gothenburg, Sweden | ![]() | 1–0 | 1–1 | |
5. | 27 June 2022 | Tengiz Burjanadze Stadium, Gori, Georgia | ![]() | 1–0 | 9–0 | |
6. | 4–0 | |||||
7. | 7–0 | |||||
McCabe has 10 siblings, including Gary McCabe, who played in the League of Ireland Premier Division from 2007 to 2018.[33]
She is openly lesbian.[34][35] In June 2019, she revealed that she is in a relationship with fellow player Ruesha Littlejohn and that women's association football is very accepting of LGBT people.[36]
Raheny United
Arsenal
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Arsenal W.F.C. – current squad | |
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Awards | |||||
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