03/06/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 03/05/2026 23:54
Winning against the odds
What made it even more remarkable was the context. The Matildas were still operating in a semi-professional environment.
"Somehow we've been able to get the results as a semi-professional team," Walsh said.
And when they returned home as continental champions, the reception was sobering.
"I was expecting mass media when we got home… but if our families weren't there it pretty much would've been no one."
On the field, the road to the title required belief under pressure. In the final, three first-choice forwards were unavailable, one of them being Walsh, forcing the team to look elsewhere for solutions.
The responsibility shifted to youth, in what was already a very young team, the average age being just 22.
Among them was a 16-year-old Sam Kerr, already showing signs of the career that would follow.
"Sammy always had this X-Factor about her," Garriock said.
But talent alone did not carry that team. It was a culture built on collective sacrifice, a willingness to put ego aside.
"It didn't matter what position he [former Matildas coach Tom Sermanni] asked you to play, it didn't matter what role you had to play within the team. You want to do it because you wanted to do it for each other."
When the title was secured, the emotion reflected more than just a single match.
"We didn't win much in the Matildas. But that moment really goes down in history."
Garriock didn't realise it at the time, but reflecting on her role in the beginning of something special still brings her to tears.
"I get emotional… more emotional that I know what I've known now, the journey that the players have built and the path that the older girls have paved," Garriock said.
"It's just incredible to see where the Matildas are at today. And we all had a part to play."
From limited recognition to national spotlight
For Walsh, being part of that 23-player squad created a lifelong connection, one forged in circumstances far removed from today's spotlight.
"To be one of the 23 women that won it, we will always have that bond."
Yet she is candid about the contrast between achievement and recognition at the time.
"When you get success without the investment, without the eyeballs that are around you, it's not that satisfying."
It wasn't until the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup, amid record crowds and global attention, that she felt the broader shift in perception.
"I was more satisfied in 2023 when I didn't have to explain to people that women's football was commercial."