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Randee Joanne Hermus... speaks English... she was four years old when she started playing soccer at Langley United SC; she was 12 years old when she started playing soccer at Surrey United SC... earned Bachelor of Arts, Kinesiology and Exercise Science; Geography from Simon Fraser University in 2002... studied Sales and Marketing degree from British Columbia Institute of Technology in 2013...
honoured by the Canada Soccer Hall of Fame as part of the Class of 2019, with her official celebration ahead of the Canada international home match on 8 April 2022 at BC Place in Vancouver (five teammates Randee Hermus, Karina LeBlanc, Brittany Timko Baxter, Martina Franko and Rhian Wilkison were honoured)... honoured by the Soccer Hall of Fame of British Columbia and the Simon Fraser University Athletics Hall of Fame...
represented Canada at two FIFA Women’s World Cups (USA 2003 and China 2007), including a fourth-place finish at USA 2003... represented Canada at one Olympic Games (Beijing 2008)... won four Concacaf medals with Canada (2002 silver, 2004 bronze, 2006 silver, 2008 silver)... won a bronze medal with Canada at the Pan American Games Rio 2007... career 113 international “A” appearances across 11 years from 1998 to 2008 with Canada Soccer's Women's National Team… when she left international football, she ranked fourth in international “A” appearances (113) with Canada Soccer’s Women’s National Team...
club career in Canada and Norway... with Vancouver Whitecaps FC, a two-time USL W-League Championship winner (2004 and 2006)... with Surrey United SC, a two-time Canada Soccer National Championships winner (Jubilee Trophy in 2006 and 2011), in fact winning national medals at eight consecutive editions from 2004 to 2011... with Simon Fraser University, a NAIA Women’s Soccer Championship....
served as a draw assistant at the Official Draw for the 2012 CONCACAF Women’s Olympic Qualifiers on 24 October 2011... attended the FIFA Women’s World Cup Canada 2015 in Vancouver...
said coach Even Pellerud in 2000, “a ballwinner with attitude and determination“... said coach Shelley Howieson in 2012, “Randee was a dominant force on the field; tactically she was one step ahead of most people”...
finished fourth with Canada at the XIII Pan American Games Winnipeg 1999... she was 20 years old when she made her debut for Canada (12 March 2000)... represented Canada at the 2000 Algarve Women's Cup... finished fourth with Canada at the 2000 CONCACAF Women's Gold Cup... represented Canada at the 2001 Algarve Women's Cup...
represented Canada at the 2002 Algarve Women's Cup... she scored her first international “A” goal for Canada on 5 March 2002 in Silves, POR (Algarve Cup)… won a silver medal with Canada at the 2002 CONCACAF Women's Gold Cup / FIFA World Cup Qualifiers for USA 2003... represented Canada at the 2003 Algarve Women's Cup... finished fourth with Canada at the FIFA Women's World Cup USA 2003 (she did not feature because of an injury)... she was the 10th women's footballer to make her 50th appearance for Canada (01 March 2004)... finished third with Canada at the 2004 CONCACAF Women's Olympic Qualifying tournament in Costa Rica...
she was the seventh women's footballer to make her 75th appearance for Canada (28 October 2006)... won a silver medal with Canada at the 2006 CONCACAF Women's Gold Cup / FIFA World Cup Qualifiers for China 2007... won a bronze medal with Canada at the XV Pan American Games Rio 2007... represented Canada at the FIFA Women's World Cup China 2007... because of her injury in 2003, she incidentally holds the Canadian record for most matches played before making her FIFA Women’s World Cup debut (90 appearances from 2000 to 2007)... finished first with Canada at the 2008 Cyprus Women's Cup... she was the fourth women's footballer to make her 100th appearance for Canada (14 March 2008)... finished second with Canada at the 2008 CONCACAF Women's Olympic Qualifying tournament (Canada qualified for the Beijing 2008 Olympics)... reached the quarter-final phase with Canada at the Beijing 2008 Women's Olympic Football Tournament... played in a career-high 46 consecutive Canada matches from 2005 to 2008, at the time a national record (surpassed by Sophie Schmidt in 2012)...