Football Fern Betsy Hassett makes international return a family affair
[wh] Football Fern Hassett makes international return a family affair
Betsy Hassett wasn't expecting a national team call-up so soon after the birth of son Nói,
Photo:
Colombia Football Federatiion
Nine months after the birth of her first child, midfielder Betsy Hassett is surprised to be back in the Football Ferns with the potential to add to her 157 caps for New Zealand.
Hassett is one of five changes new head coach
Michael Mayne
has made for two games against
world No. 51 Venezuela
in Spain. The first game is at 4am Sunday (NZT).
Playing semi-professional club football for Icelandic Premier Division club Stjarnan, a club she has been with since 2020, Hassett said, despite being in contact with Mayne since late last year, she was not expecting a call-up for this tour.
All her club games were filmed, so Mayne knew what kind of form she was in, before he brought her into the squad.
"I'm physically and mentally back, and I'm ready to go," Hassett, 34, said.
Her return means she is joined by son Nói and partner Gummi on this tour. They are staying in an apartment in Spain, around the corner from the team hotel.
When Hassett first played for the Football Ferns as a teenager, goalkeeper Jenny Bindon was the only mum in the team.
Bindon is now a Football Ferns
assistant coach
and son
Tyler is an All White
.
"That was a big inspiration for me back then, but I was not even thinking about [motherhood], I was so young back then," Hassett said.
Former Ferns goalkeeper Jenny Bindon now has a son in the All Whites.
Photo:
Photosport
Not every Football Ferns mum has found the balance possible.
"There's been Hayley Bowden and she came back for maybe one tour, but it was a bit difficult," Hassett said of the midfielder who retired in 2015. "There was not really set-up for babies and family, so she had to give it up,"
"That's why I'm going to give it a go. Times are changing now, so it's really cool that this is actually a possible thing to do now."
Re-joining the Football Ferns has meant getting introduced to the newbies and reacquainted with those players whom Hassett has played many games with.
"There's definitely some new faces in the team, now I've been out for just over a year, so really enjoying getting to know a couple of girls I've never even met before," she said.
"Then, of course, coming back in and meeting up with the likes of Stotty [Rebekah Stott] and Flea [Annalie Longo] and Ally Green and the older ones that I'm used to playing with has been amazing, and especially for them to just get to meet my little new son."
Football Ferns line up to face Colombia.
Photo:
photosport
After playing college football in California, Hassett has played club football around the world in Germany, England, Norway, Netherlands, Iceland and Wellington.
The long Icelandic winters take some getting used to as a footballer, when training conditions can be "tough".
"It's coming into summer, so it's getting brighter there very quickly. The days are really long and I'm looking forward to the summer, because it can be really long winters there.
"It's nice to go away for a little break in the middle of the winter sometimes, just to get away and see some sun. It's actually really nice to have training in the winter, because it's something that makes you feel better.
"Get out and run around and see your mates, instead of just being inside and in the dark all day."
The Football Ferns' games against Venezuela will be the first time the two sides have faced each other at senior international level.
"It's going to be a good challenge," Hassett said. "I think they'll be a really good team, strong team, so we're doing everything we can, and we're looking good and heading into the game so far.
"Really excited to see what we can do."
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
4 minutes ago
- RNZ News
Marlborough stadium under pressure as senior classes boom
By Kira Carrington, Local Democracy Reporting Aquacise instructor Alison 'Janey' Phipps always has at least 50 people in her 9am class at the Marlborough Lines Stadium 2000 in Blenheim. Photo: LDR / Supplied Blenheim seniors are flocking to Marlborough Lines Stadium 2000 and staff are starting to worry there may not be room for them all. Even first thing on a Monday, the changingrooms are packed before the Aquacise class, a hot favourite among the older demographic. "Don't suggest that people join our class, because there's no room," one participant said, only partly joking. Senior use of the aquatic, fitness and sport centre was expected to keep growing until 2038, while other demographics were expected to plateau, a report from the Marlborough Stadium Trust said. Seniors went to the stadium 25,555 times in the 2023/24 year, up 249 percent from 7333 visits in 2013/14. Aquacise instructor Alison 'Janey' Phipps said at least 50 people or even up to 90 people attended her class, which started at 9am, three times a week. An Aqua-gentle class ran twice a week. "I just love this demographic of people," Phipps said. "They just get on with it, they're just in there and I really like that." Aquacise was really good for seniors, as it helped with mobility, injury recovery and fall prevention, as well as just being fun, she said. "I really like to focus on balance and hip mobility. Working into the hip joint, just for trips and falls, getting that strength in the legs, so that they can correct quickly." As classic tunes from the 80s boomed through the aquatic area, Phipps had the group doing leg, arm and core exercises in a 45-minute workout that was not for the faint of heart, using pool noodles and foam dumb bells. An 80-year-old participant, having her ritual coffee after the class at the stadium cafe with the other participants, said she was dragged along by a friend, while she was recovering from an injury. "I was still on crutches and I was at the back of the pool, and I've gradually got myself fit enough and now I'm there doing it all." Aquacise class help seniors with mobility and fall prevention. Photo: LDR / Supplied Classes offered more than simply exercise, she said. "Don't discount all the social stuff. A lot of the people who come, it's the only people they see all day. "They come and they swim, and they talk to the people and they live alone. That one bit of socialisation they can get is fantastic." Her friend had joined after moving to Blenheim from Wellington. The stadium's pool facilities was one of the reasons she chose the town, she said. "It's a great facility. A lot of councils don't have the same facility to provide these services." All the demand had put the facilities under considerable strain, stadium trustee Anna Houkamau told the Marlborough District Council's assets and services committee on 15 July. "We have up to 90 seniors in some of the exercise classes in the mornings and associated capacity issues with things like changing," Houkamau said. The basketball and netball courts were also at capacity, particularly due to their use by groups, with not enough space to hold tournaments. The trust's new '10 + 10 committee' was working on a plan to future-proof the stadium and part one involved assessing the community's needs, likely working with the council to do that, she said. "[It's about] ensuring that our existing asset is in good form for the next 10 years and 10 beyond that," Houkamau said. "Step one is to be able to understand what we could afford to maintain in the future." In 2013, the council bought the neighbouring buildings at the corner of Redwood and Kinross streets, and leased them to Smith's City and the Marlborough Youth Trust's MySpace centre. The aim of the purchase was to ensure the stadium could expand in the future, if demand warranted it. Council's group manager for property and community facilities Jamie Lyall said it was now proposed for those buildings to be integrated into the stadium complex, but any decision to transfer the buildings to the trust would be done in collaboration with the Marlborough Youth Trust. - LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
NPC Rugby live upates: Wellington v Canterbury
Jamie Hannah in action for Canterbury against Wellington. Photo: Martin Hunter/ Perennial heavyweights Wellington and Canterbury kick off their NPC campaigns, with Wellington looking to defend their title they won last season. Kickoff is at 2.05pm.

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
NPC Rugby live updates: Wellington v Canterbury
Jamie Hannah in action for Canterbury against Wellington. Photo: Martin Hunter/ Perennial heavyweights Wellington and Canterbury kick off their NPC campaigns, with Wellington looking to defend their title they won last season. Kickoff is at 2.05pm.