Canada’s Christine Sinclair has announced plans to retire from professional soccer at the end of the National Women’s Soccer League season. The 41-year-old former Canada captain, who retired from international soccer last year, will play her final game with the Portland Thorns, her long-time club team, on Nov. 1.
A look at her glittering résumé:
– Sinclair is the world’s all-time leading goal-scorer with 190 in 327 international appearances. That earned her The Best FIFA Special Award in January of 2022.
– Sinclair has won Canada Soccer’s female player of the year 14 times – including a stretch of 11 straight years from 2004 to 2014 – and led the national team in scoring 16 years.
– She led Canada to bronze, bronze and gold medals at the 2012, 2016 and 2020 Olympic Games
– In December of 2019, she was named the Canada Soccer player of the decade. Steven Reed, Canada Soccer’s then-president, called Sinclair “a once-in-a-generation athlete that has been at the heart of Canadian sport for over 20 years.”
– In 2012, Sinclair won both the Lou Marsh Trophy (Canadian athlete of the year, now known as the Northern Star Award) and The Canadian Press Female Athlete of the Year Award.
– Canada’s flag-bearer at the London Olympics’ closing ceremony in 2012, the veteran forward is a four-time finalist for FIFA World Player of the Year.
– Sinclair is also the first soccer player appointed as an Officer of the Order of Canada, and the first to have her name engraved on Canada’s Walk of Fame.
– The Burnaby, B.C., product twice won the MAC Hermann Trophy as the top NCAA women’s soccer player while at the University of Portland.
– She won WPS club titles with FC Gold Pride and the Western New York Flash in 2010 and 2011, and the NWSL championship in 2013, 2017 and 2022 with the Portland Thorns.
– After announcing her retirement from international soccer, Sinclair played her final game with Canada, a 1-0 win over Australia in a friendly in front of 48,112 hometown fans at Vancouver’s BC Place Stadium on Dec. 5, 2023.
– Sinclair, one of the founding players for the Portland Thorns in the National Women’s Soccer League, announced on Sept. 27, 2024, that she is retiring from the game. Portland will honour her before the final regular-season home game on Nov. 1.