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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Sam_KerrSam Kerr - Wikipedia

    Samantha May Kerr OAM (born 10 September 1993) is an Australian professional soccer player who plays as a striker for FA Women's Super League club Chelsea, and the Australia women's national team, which she has captained since 2019.

  2. 2M Followers, 1,019 Following, 998 Posts - Sam Kerr (@samanthakerr20) on Instagram: "Footballer - @chelseafcw #20 @nike athlete @samkerrfootball ⚽️".

  3. Australian forward Sam Kerr joined the Blues on a two-and-a-half year deal ahead of the second half of the 2019/20 Barclays Women’s Super League season before signing an extension, keeping her at the club until 2024.

  4. Jul 30, 2023 · Kerr transformed Chelsea into the best womens team in the country, winning four straight Women’s Super League (WSL) titles, three FA Cups and two League Cups with the only thing missing a ...

  5. Sam Kerr is one of the most influential and in-demand footballers in the world. She plays for the Matildas – as captain since 2019 – and is an indomitable striker for Chelsea FC. Growing up in a sporting family, Kerr fell in love with football from a young age.

  6. May 8, 2022 · Sam Kerr steals the show as Chelsea wrap up a third successive WSL title and a promise to deliver silverware pays off.

  7. Jul 19, 2023 · Sam Kerr and the Dream of an Australian World Cup Title. The twenty-nine-year-old striker, one of the world’s great scorers, has raised hopes in a country where soccer was once an afterthought....

  8. Oct 15, 2022 · Over the past 13 years, Sam Kerr's trajectory has paralleled the rise of women's football. Now she's a finalist in the Ballon d'Or, world football's most prestigious individual award.

  9. Jul 19, 2023 · Kerr is the undisputed star, the main event, the central character of not only the biggest Women’s World Cup in history, but a World Cup that Australia desperately hopes to win on home soil....

  10. Jul 20, 2023 · In the darkness, the profile of an airborne Sam Kerr sails above the waters of Sydney Harbour, backlit by triangles of yellow and green to celebrate Australia’s successful World Cup 2023 bid.