Antonia Göransson
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File:Antonia Goransson.jpg | |||
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Antonia Pia Anna Göransson[1] | ||
Date of birth | 16 September 1990 | ||
Place of birth | Stockholm, Sweden | ||
Height | Script error: No such module "person height". | ||
Position(s) | Winger | ||
Youth career | |||
1995–1996 | Sjöbo IF | ||
1997–2002 | Hornskrokens IF | ||
2003–2004 | Trångfors IF | ||
2005–2006 | Alviks IK | ||
2006–2008 | Malmö FF | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
2007–2008 | → Husie IF (loan) | ||
2007 | → BK Skjold (loan) | ||
2008–2010 | Kristianstads DFF | 38 | (8) |
2010–2011 | Hamburger SV | 17 | (6) |
2011–2014 | 1. FFC Turbine Potsdam | 54 | (13) |
2014–2015 | Vittsjö GIK | 15 | (3) |
International career‡ | |||
2010– | Sweden | 40 | (7) |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 25 May 2015 ‡ National team caps and goals, correct as of 24 July 2013 |
Antonia Pia Anna Göransson (born 16 September 1990) is a Swedish footballer who plays as a winger for Vittsjö GIK of the Damallsvenskan. A product of Malmö FF's youth system, Göransson began her Damallsvenskan career with Kristianstads DFF in 2008. She moved to Germany in 2010, with SV Hamburg, before joining Turbine Potsdam a year later.
After making her debut for the senior Sweden women's national football team in October 2010, Göransson represented her country at the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup, the 2012 London Olympics and the 2013 UEFA Women's Championship. A fast and skilful winger, Göransson can strike the ball equally well with either foot. She has an outspoken character and has sometimes clashed with her coaches over their selection choices.
Contents
Club career
Early career
Born in Stockholm, Göransson moved to Sjöbo aged three, then Boden aged seven. She played for various clubs in this period before signing for Malmö FF at youth level when the family returned to Skåne County in 2006.[2] At Malmö Göransson came under the influence of youth coach Lena Videkull, whom she credited for a rapid improvement in all aspects of her game.[3]
Göransson was sent on loan to Malmö's lower division nursery club Husie IF. She also spent part of the 2007–2008 season on loan to BK Skjold in Copenhagen, scoring three goals in the Danish Elitedivisionen.[4] Göransson's working relationship with Malmö coach Jörgen Pettersson became strained because she was impatient for a chance in the first team.[5]
Kristianstads DFF
In summer 2008, Göransson quit Malmö for a low-key transfer to their Damallsvenskan rivals Kristianstads DFF.[2] After adjusting to first team football in the remainder of the 2008 season, Göransson flourished under the leadership of KDFF's Icelandic coach Elísabet Gunnarsdóttir in 2009. She became an important part of the team, scoring five goals in 19 league matches and winning the Swedish Football Association's Rookie of the Year award.[6]
Ambitious 18-year-old Göransson informed Kristianstads that the chances of her remaining at the club for another season were 50:50.[5] In 2010 she played 16 matches and scored three league goals for Kristianstads, before accepting a professional contract offer from SV Hamburg in August 2010.[7]
Germany
Göransson performed well in 2010–11, her first season in the Frauen-Bundesliga, scoring six goals in her 17 appearances. Hamburg were keen to extend the initial one-year contract she had signed.[8] Instead Göransson accepted a competing offer from Frauen-Bundesliga champions Turbine Potsdam, signing a two-year contract.[9]
Back to Sweden
In June 2014 Göransson left Turbine Potsdam and returned to Sweden to join Vittsjö GIK. She signed a contract until the end of the 2015 season.[10]
International career
As a Swedish under-19 international, Göransson played in the 2009 U-19 European Championship in Belarus, where Sweden lost 2–0 in the final to England.[11] At the 2010 U-20 World Cup in Germany, Göransson was surprised to be utilised as a makeshift striker. She scored four goals in four games as Sweden were beaten 2–0 by Colombia in the quarter-final.[12]
In February 2010, Göransson and Emilia Appelqvist were called up to train with the senior national team for the Algarve Cup.[13] Göransson was named in the senior national team squad for the first time in March 2010, replacing the injured Kosovare Asllani for a 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup qualifier in Wales.[14] She made her first senior appearance in October 2010; a 3–1 friendly win over longstanding rivals Norway in Falkenberg.[15]
Quotes attributed to Göransson in local newspapers strongly criticised national team coach Thomas Dennerby for leaving her out of the national team. But she later distanced herself from the remarks, stressing that her relationship with Dennerby was good.[3] Angry Dennerby wrote an open letter, criticising state broadcaster Sveriges Television for unethically taking Göransson's quotes out of context.[16] When she was named in Dennerby's squad for the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup in Germany, delighted Göransson said she had dreamed of the opportunity since she was 12 years old.[17] She featured as a substitute in Sweden's 3–1 semi-final defeat to eventual winners Japan in Frankfurt. Sweden secured third place by beating France 2–1 in Sinsheim, although Göransson did not play.
Third place in the World Cup secured Sweden's qualification for the 2012 Olympic football tournament in London. Dennerby kept Göransson in Sweden's Olympic squad for London,[18] and she made a substitute appearance in Sweden's 2–1 defeat by France in the quarter-final at Hampden Park. In June 2013, incoming coach Pia Sundhage named Göransson in the squad for UEFA Women's Euro 2013, which Sweden hosted.[19] When the Swedes lost 1–0 to Germany in the semi-final, disappointed Göransson was glad that the team had managed to raise the profile of women's football in Sweden.[20]
In September 2013 Sundhage tried Göransson in the left back position during Sweden's 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification matches. Göransson responded positively to the experiment.[21] Sundhage dropped Göransson from the national squad for an important qualifier against Scotland because she was not playing often enough at club level for Turbine Potsdam. Although Göransson found regular first-team football with Vittsjö and returned to the national squad for the 2015 Algarve Cup, she was left out of Sweden's 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup squad.[22]
Playing style
Göransson can play equally well with either foot. She describes her left foot as more powerful and her right foot as more accurate.[2] An editorial in the Dagens Nyheter newspaper published during the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup called for Göransson to be included in the national team's starting line-up, praising her pace, power and technique.[23]
Honours
Club
Turbine Potsdam
- Frauen-Bundesliga (1): 2011–12
International
- FIFA Women's World Cup Third place: 2011
Individual
- Best Swedish New Talent (1): 2010
References
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Antonia Göransson. |
- Antonia Göransson – FIFA competition record
- Antonia Göransson on TwitterLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
- Swedish National Team profile (Swedish)
- Damallsvenskan profile (Swedish)
- Framba.de profile (German)
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- Articles with Swedish-language external links
- Articles with German-language external links
- Swedish women's footballers
- 1990 births
- Living people
- Sweden women's international footballers
- Hamburger SV (women) players
- 1. FFC Turbine Potsdam players
- 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup players
- Footballers at the 2012 Summer Olympics
- Olympic footballers of Sweden
- Kristianstads DFF players
- Damallsvenskan players
- Swedish expatriate footballers
- Expatriate women's footballers in Germany
- Vittsjö GIK players
- Seattle Reign FC players
- National Women's Soccer League players