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Pernille Harder
Danish footballer (born 1992) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Pernille Mosegaard Harder (born 15 November 1992) is a Danish professional footballer who plays as an attacking midfielder or a forward for Frauen-Bundesliga club Bayern Munich and the Denmark national team. She has won the domestic league with her teams every year for a decade straight, from 2015 to 2025; the first with Linköping, then 4 with VfL Wolfsburg, 3 with Chelsea and 2 with Bayern Munich.[1][2] In September 2020, Harder became the world's most expensive female footballer following her transfer from VfL Wolfsburg to Chelsea, a record she held for two years.[3][4] She is considered one of the best footballers in the world.[5][6][7]
Harder has been nominated thrice for the Ballon d'Or in 2018, 2019, and 2021, placing second with only a 6-point margin at the first ever awarding in 2018 while playing for VfL Wolfsburg.[8][9][10][11][12] She was awarded the UEFA Women's Player of the Year Award in 2018 and 2020, the first player to win the award twice.[13][11] English newspaper The Guardian named Harder as the best footballer in the world in 2018 and 2020, with Harder also the first player to twice receive this honour.[11][14] In 2020 British football magazine Four Four Two[a] named Harder the best footballer in the world.[16][15][17]
Harder, like her fiancée Magdalena Eriksson, is also known for her LGBTQ+ advocacy in sport and beyond.[18][19][20]
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Club career
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Early career
Harder played for Team Viborg and IK Skovbakken in her native Denmark's Elitedivisionen.[21] Skovbakken had made Harder and her contemporary Sofie Junge Pedersen contracted players in April 2010, in recognition of their exceptional potential.[22]
Linköpings FC
Harder chose Swedish club Linköpings FC for her next destination because she wanted a new challenge, but also because she wanted to remain in Scandinavia. In September 2013 she scored all four goals in Linköping's 4–1 win at relegation-bound Sunnanå SK.[23]
In the 2015 Damallsvenskan season, Harder scored 17 goals in 22 appearances for Linköping, winning a series of national awards including Årets Anfallare (English: Forward of the Year) and Årets Allsvenska Spelare (English: League Player of the Year). At the annual awards gala, she shared the stage with male winner Zlatan Ibrahimović and was described as "hyper-talented" and "world-class" by Swedish national coach Pia Sundhage.[24][25] Harder was also voted Danish Football Player of the Year in 2015.[26] In June 2016, Harder was among 30 local worthies to be named in a Wall of Fame by Linköping Municipality.[27]
Harder enjoyed further success in the 2016 Damallsvenskan season, retaining the League Player of the Year award. Her 23 league goals secured the Top Goalscorer award and helped Linköping win the Damallsvenskan title.[28] By now a transfer target for the biggest clubs in women's football, Harder's agent announced in November 2016 that she would be leaving Linköping for a new challenge.[29]
VfL Wolfsburg
In December 2016, it was announced that Harder had signed a two-and-a-half-year contract with VfL Wolfsburg running from January 2017. In all four seasons with the team, Harder won the Bundesliga and German Cup double. She was top scorer in the league twice: in the 2017–18 season with 17 goals scored, and in the 2019–20 season with 27 goals. Thanks to these performances, she won the UEFA Women's Player of the Year Award twice for the 2017-18[30] and 2019-20[31] seasons. She also played in two Champions League finals (2018 and 2020), losing both to Lyon.[32] In 2020, she was elected best forward of the Champions League[33] and best player of the German Championship.[34]
Chelsea
On 1 September 2020, Harder signed for Chelsea on a three-year contract for a world-record fee for a female footballer, reportedly in excess of £250,000.[35] In the 2020–21 Champions League quarter-finals, she scored in both legs against her former club VfL Wolfsburg.[36] In the group stage of the 2022–23 Champions League she scored a hattrick against KF Vllaznia Shkodër. On 18 November 2022 she suffered a serious thigh injury on national team duty against Austria that required surgery and sidelining her for five months. She made her comeback against Barcelona in the Champions League semi-final on 22 April 2023. In the FA Cup final against Manchester United she gave the assist for the victory goal for Sam Kerr in front of a record crowd of 77,390 people.
Bayern Munich
On 1 June 2023, it was announced that Harder, along with partner and former Chelsea teammate Magdalena Eriksson, had signed for Bayern Munich on a three-year deal.[37] She made her debut for Bayern against SC Freiburg and scored her first goal against 1. FC Köln. In the next game against SGS Essen, she scored her second goal, but collided with the goalkeeper and was subbed out with a knee injury after 17 minutes. With a medial collateral ligament injury she was out for over two month and made her comeback in December 2023 against 1. FC Nürnberg.[38] After the winter break, she quickly returned to her old form. She provided assists against Freiburg and Frankfurt, and scored twice against Leipzig. In the top match against her former club, she scored to make it 1-0 and set up Lea Schüller for the 3-0 goal with a through ball. Harder scored a hat trick against Nuremberg, and on the final matchday, away against TSG Hoffenheim, she scored again. FC Bayern thus won its sixth German championship. She finished the season as the club's second-best goalscorer alongside Jovana Damnjanović, with nine goals. Harder's 2024/25 season with FC Bayern was very successful: the team won the double for the first time with the German championship and the DFB Pokal and also won the newly created World Sevens Football small-field tournament. She was Bayerns best goalscorer with 14 goals and was named as Bayerns player of the season.
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International career
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At the inaugural 2008 U-17 World Cup in New Zealand, Harder was part of the Denmark team who won their group before losing 4–0 to eventual champions North Korea in the quarter-final.[39] Still 16 years old, she contributed a hat-trick to a crushing 15–0 win over Georgia in her senior international debut in October 2009, and she has continued to score regularly for the Danish team ever since.[40]
Harder scored further hat-tricks against Austria and Armenia in 2011 and Russia in 2013.[41] She was named in national coach Kenneth Heiner-Møller's Denmark squad for Euro 2013.[42] With nine goals she had been the team's top goalscorer in qualifying.[43]
She played in the Algarve Cup in 2011, 2012, 2013, and 2015, but had an injury in 2014. In October 2013, Harder won her 50th cap for Denmark in a 1–1 draw with Serbia. She scored Denmark's goal in the match.[44] In March 2016, Harder was appointed captain of the national team.[45]
In 2017, she was named in national coach Nils Nielsen's Denmark squad for the Euro 2017. She captained the team to the final and scored a goal in Denmark's 4–2 defeat by hosts the Netherlands. She was voted runner-up to Lieke Martens in the UEFA Women's Player of the Year Award for 2016–17.[46] On 16 September 2021, she broke Merete Pedersen's 12.5-year-long national record, becoming the record goalscorer of the Denmark national team, with 66 goals in her 129 games.[47] In the successful campaign to qualify for the Euro 2022, she played in all ten games and scored eight goals. She was called up for the Euro 2022 and scored the only goal for Denmark, but the team was eliminated in the group stage.
In qualifying for the 2023 World Cup, she played four times and scored two goals.
In July 2023, she was named to the final roster for the 2023 FIFA World Cup.[48] She scored one goal and provided one assist, but Denmark was knocked out in the round of 16 by Australia. It was the first time since 1995 that Denmark reached the knockout stage at a World Cup.
On June 20, 2025, she was nominated for the European Championship, but Denmark was already eliminated in the group stage. In the last game against Poland, she had to be substituted after just 25 minutes due to an injury, when the score was 0-2.
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Personal life
Since May 2014, Harder has been in a relationship with current Bayern Munich teammate and Swedish international, Magdalena Eriksson.[46][49][50] On 21 July 2024 they announced their engagement after over a decade together.[51]
She and Eriksson work with the charity Common Goal and pledged 1% of their salaries to help tackle social issues throughout football. The couple also advocates for equality and LGBTQ+ rights in sport.[20]
She has a Master's degree in Business administration.[52]
She grew up as an avid Manchester United fan.[53]
Career statistics
Club
- The Ballon d'Or was not awarded in 2020 due to Covid-19, but many of the France Football voters awarded Harder this honour[15]
- Includes Svenska Cupen, DFB-Pokal and FA Cup
- Includes FA Women's League Cup
- Includes UEFA Champions League
- Includes Svenska Supercupen and DFB-Supercup
International
- Scores and results list Denmark's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Harder goal.
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Honours
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Linköping
- Damallsvenskan: 2016
- Svenska Cupen: 2014, 2015; runner-up: 2016
- Svenska Supercupen runner up: 2015, 2016
VfL Wolfsburg
- Bundesliga: 2016–17, 2017–18, 2018–19, 2019–20
- DFB-Pokal: 2016–17, 2017–18, 2018–19, 2019–20
- UEFA Women's Champions League runner-up: 2017–18, 2019–20
Chelsea
- FA Women's Super League: 2020–21, 2021–22, 2022–23
- Women's FA Cup: 2020–21, 2021–22, 2022–23
- FA Women's League Cup: 2020–21
- UEFA Women's Champions League runner-up: 2020–21
Bayern Munich
- Bundesliga: 2023–24, 2024–25
- DFB-Supercup Frauen: 2024, 2025
- DFB-Pokal: 2024–25
- World Sevens Football Tournament: 2025
Denmark
- UEFA Women's Euro runner-up: 2017
Individual
- Danish Breakthrough Player of the Year: 2010
- Danish Football Player of the Year: 2012,[56] 2015,[57] 2016, 2017, 2018,[57] 2019, 2020,[57] 2024[58]
- Damallsvenskan's Most Valuable Player: 2015, 2016
- Damallsvenskan Forward of the Year: 2015, 2016
- Damallsvenskan Top scorer: 2016
- FIFPro: FIFA FIFPro World XI: 2017,[59] 2020[60]
- UEFA Women's European Championship All Star Team: 2017
- Goal 50: 2017[61]
- UEFA Women's Champions League Squad of the Season: 2016–17, 2017–18, 2018–19, 2019–20, 2020–21
- IFFHS Women's World Team: 2017,[62] 2018,[63] 2020[64]
- Frauen-Bundesliga Top scorer: 2017–18,[65] 2019–20[66]
- UEFA Women's Player of the Year Award: 2017–18,[13] 2019–20[67]
- UEFA Women's Champions League Top scorer: 2018–19
- UEFA Champions League Forward of the Season: 2019–20[68]
- The 100 Best Female Footballers In The World Winner: 2018,[69] 2020 [70]
- Niedersachsens Fußballer des Jahres: 2020[71]
- Women's Footballer of the Year (Germany): 2020[72]
- World Soccer's Women's World Player of the Year: 2020[73]
- IFFHS World's Best Woman Player: 2020[74]
- IFFHS UEFA Woman Team of the Decade 2011–2020[75]
- FA Women's Super League Goal of the Month: September 2021[76]
- Nominated for the Ballon d'Or Féminin: (2018 2.place), (2019 14.place), (2021 7.place)
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Notes
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
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