Posted: 2024-05-05 03:08:23

Amidst all the flailing limbs and screaming faces, perhaps the player whose reaction captured the moment best was Princess Ibini.

The Sydney FC stand-in captain, wearing her bright yellow substitute's bib, tore out across the grass of Melbourne Rectangular Stadium as the full-time whistle still hung in the chill air.

Her arms were stretched as wide as her grin, as though she could wrap them around the whole world, and she ran with the kind of weightlessness of someone who has just had something impossibly heavy lifted from their shoulders.

The 2023-24 A-League Women season has not been a successful one by any traditional metric or measure for Ibini. She scored just one goal in the past 24 games, compared with eight in 21 the previous year, as well as four assists compared with five.

Not through lack of trying, mind you: of the many opportunities she tried to create — the ones that, in seasons past, would come to her as easily and naturally as breathing — the ball simply didn't want to go where she wanted it to.

Footballer Princess Ibini controls the ball at her feet with two defenders converging on her

Princess Ibini was hounded by Melbourne City defenders during the grand final.(Getty Images: Robert Cianflone)

It would spin off her foot the wrong way, clang into the shin of an opponent instead of skipping past them, roll just too far or too quickly away from her as she forlornly chased it down.

Nothing seemed to be going the way she wanted it to this season.

The captaincy was unexpectedly thrust upon her after Sydney's regular captain, Natalie Tobin, tore her ACL in the opening game. As the next most experienced player in the side, at just 23 years old, having been at this club for almost a decade, the task of leading them was suddenly, perhaps prematurely, hers.

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