The post Maika Hamano Is Voted Asia’s International Women’s Player Of The Year appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. LONDON, ENGLAND – OCTOBER 15: Maika Hamano of Chelsea interacts with the fans as she arrives at the stadium prior to the UEFA Women’s Champions League 2025/26 league phase match between Chelsea FC Women and Paris FCat Stamford Bridge on October 15, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images) Getty Images Chelsea’s Maika Hamano has been elected as the women’s International Player of the Year for 2025 by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) today. Shortlisted alongside two other players from the Women’s Super League – Steph Catley of Arsenal and Yui Hasegawa of Manchester City – Hamano was named today as the second recipient of the award by the AFC during a glittering award ceremony in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Hasegawa was also nominated last year but lost out on the prize to Australia’s Ellie Carpenter, then of Olympique Lyonnais, now at Chelsea. A year on, the Manchester City midfielder lost out again, this time to her international team-mate. Tonight’s ceremonies were the 29th edition of the AFC awards. A prize for the Asian Women’s Player of the Year was first awarded in 1999 but not in every year since. There have been five previous winners from Japan – Homare Sawa, Natsuko Hara, Aya Miyama, Saki Kumagai and Kiko Seike. Last year, the award was limited to women playing for Asian clubs with Seike winning for her performances with Urawa Red Diamonds which earned her a move to Brighton & Hove Albion in England. Tonight, the main award went to another Urawa Red Diamonds player, Hana Takahashi of Japan. Speaking via a video link, Takahashi said “I am deeply honoured to have been awarded the AFC Women’s Player of the Year, and it is tremendously encouraging to have my efforts from last season recognised.” A separate prize was inaugurated… The post Maika Hamano Is Voted Asia’s International Women’s Player Of The Year appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. LONDON, ENGLAND – OCTOBER 15: Maika Hamano of Chelsea interacts with the fans as she arrives at the stadium prior to the UEFA Women’s Champions League 2025/26 league phase match between Chelsea FC Women and Paris FCat Stamford Bridge on October 15, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images) Getty Images Chelsea’s Maika Hamano has been elected as the women’s International Player of the Year for 2025 by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) today. Shortlisted alongside two other players from the Women’s Super League – Steph Catley of Arsenal and Yui Hasegawa of Manchester City – Hamano was named today as the second recipient of the award by the AFC during a glittering award ceremony in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Hasegawa was also nominated last year but lost out on the prize to Australia’s Ellie Carpenter, then of Olympique Lyonnais, now at Chelsea. A year on, the Manchester City midfielder lost out again, this time to her international team-mate. Tonight’s ceremonies were the 29th edition of the AFC awards. A prize for the Asian Women’s Player of the Year was first awarded in 1999 but not in every year since. There have been five previous winners from Japan – Homare Sawa, Natsuko Hara, Aya Miyama, Saki Kumagai and Kiko Seike. Last year, the award was limited to women playing for Asian clubs with Seike winning for her performances with Urawa Red Diamonds which earned her a move to Brighton & Hove Albion in England. Tonight, the main award went to another Urawa Red Diamonds player, Hana Takahashi of Japan. Speaking via a video link, Takahashi said “I am deeply honoured to have been awarded the AFC Women’s Player of the Year, and it is tremendously encouraging to have my efforts from last season recognised.” A separate prize was inaugurated…

Maika Hamano Is Voted Asia’s International Women’s Player Of The Year

2025/10/17 07:04

LONDON, ENGLAND – OCTOBER 15: Maika Hamano of Chelsea interacts with the fans as she arrives at the stadium prior to the UEFA Women’s Champions League 2025/26 league phase match between Chelsea FC Women and Paris FCat Stamford Bridge on October 15, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)

Getty Images

Chelsea’s Maika Hamano has been elected as the women’s International Player of the Year for 2025 by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) today.

Shortlisted alongside two other players from the Women’s Super League – Steph Catley of Arsenal and Yui Hasegawa of Manchester City – Hamano was named today as the second recipient of the award by the AFC during a glittering award ceremony in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Hasegawa was also nominated last year but lost out on the prize to Australia’s Ellie Carpenter, then of Olympique Lyonnais, now at Chelsea. A year on, the Manchester City midfielder lost out again, this time to her international team-mate.

Tonight’s ceremonies were the 29th edition of the AFC awards. A prize for the Asian Women’s Player of the Year was first awarded in 1999 but not in every year since. There have been five previous winners from Japan – Homare Sawa, Natsuko Hara, Aya Miyama, Saki Kumagai and Kiko Seike.

Last year, the award was limited to women playing for Asian clubs with Seike winning for her performances with Urawa Red Diamonds which earned her a move to Brighton & Hove Albion in England. Tonight, the main award went to another Urawa Red Diamonds player, Hana Takahashi of Japan.

Speaking via a video link, Takahashi said “I am deeply honoured to have been awarded the AFC Women’s Player of the Year, and it is tremendously encouraging to have my efforts from last season recognised.”

A separate prize was inaugurated by the AFC for the best player plying her trade outside of the continent. Hamano was recognised for her performances for club and country during the 2024/25 season.

Still only 21, Hamano was signed by current United States Women’s National Team coach Emma Hayes for Chelsea in January 2023 on a four and a half year contract. She had excelled for Japan at the FIFA U20 Women’s World Cup in Costa Rica. Hayes described her as “a fantastic talent, she is a Golden Ball and Silver Boot winner having shone at the Under-20 World Cup.”

SAN JOSE, COSTA RICA – AUGUST 28: Maika Hamano of Japan receives the golden ball after the FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup Costa Rica 2022 final match at Estadio Nacional de Costa Rica on August 28, 2022 in San Jose, Costa Rica. (Photo by Buda Mendes – FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)

FIFA via Getty Images

Then just 18, she was immediately sent on loan to Swedish team Hammarby where she scored seven goals in 17 appearances in the Damallsvenskan. Unfortunately, she sustained a shoulder injury which cut short her time in Sweden and she was recalled by Chelsea to undergo surgery and extensive rehabilitation.

Three months on, she made her Chelsea debut and later in the season scored a crucial winner away to Tottenham Hotspur as the west London side won the Women’s Super League title on goal difference. The following season, she established her place in the first team squad making a total of 30 appearances, scoring six goals and making three assists as Chelsea won the domestic treble. Last month she was rewarded with a contract extension until 2029.

LONDON, ENGLAND – MAY 15: Maika Hamano of Chelsea celebrates their first goal with her team mates during the Barclays Women’s Super League match between Tottenham Hotspur and Chelsea FC at Brisbane Road on May 15, 2024 in London, England.(Photo by Jacques Feeney/Offside/Offside via Getty Images)

Offside via Getty Images

Despite making her senior international debut for Japan a few months after the FIFA U20 Women’s World Cup in 2022, Hamano failed to score a goal for her country until the summer of 2024. Since then she has now found the net for Japan six times, including a goal at the Olympic Women’s Football Tournament and two at the She Believes Cup, which Japan won.

Elsewhere Korea DPR women’s team received the AFC President’s Recognition Award for Outstanding Achievement on account of its youth national teams winning the U20 and U17 World Cups in 2024.

AFC President Shaikh Salman said: “The exceptional successes of DPR Korea at both the FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup and FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup are a resounding testament to the capable long-term planning and youth development strategies of the DPR Korea Football Association.

“The AFC President’s Recognition Award for Outstanding Achievement is a fitting tribute to their unwavering commitment to excellence, and we must once again congratulate them on the historic feats, which will serve as inspiration to the rest of Asia and has also underlined Asia’s strength on the world stage.”

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/asifburhan/2025/10/16/maika-hamano-is-voted-asias-international-womens-player-of-the-year/

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.
Share Insights

You May Also Like

What the U.S. shutdown tells us about market resilience

What the U.S. shutdown tells us about market resilience

The post What the U.S. shutdown tells us about market resilience appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. During the U.S. federal government shutdown that began on October 1, 2025, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) went into contingency staffing mode. Almost a hundred crypto ETF decisions got stuck in approval limbo as a result, and key economic-data releases from agencies such as the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the U.S. Census Bureau were paused. For crypto, that blackout became an unscripted stress test, as the industry suddenly lost its usual regulatory support elements. And given that the crypto market often prides itself on being decentralized and self-sufficient, this is a moment of truth where it can prove that claim. How do crypto traders, exchanges, and issuers perform when oversight suddenly vanishes? Let’s take a look. What Actually Pauses in a U.S. Shutdown: ETF and token-filing reviews: Routine processing of ETF and token registration documents is largely suspended, as reflected by the SEC announcement. Issuer communications: Many correspondence channels between the SEC and registrants are inactive during the shutdown. Federal data releases: Reports such as jobs, inflation, and trade data are delayed, per Census Bureau and Bureau of Labor Statistics notices prior to the shutdown. A Pause in Oversight, Not in Action The shutdown didn’t just stop new rules; it halted everything that gives the market structure and visibility. And with enforcement activity slowing to a crawl, that leaves crypto issuers, exchanges, and traders navigating the silence on their own terms. For issuers, it’s an exercise in patience. There’s nothing to do but wait. Projects with pending ETF or token applications simply can’t move forward, no matter how ready they may be. Bureaucratic timeouts don’t discriminate — they hit all momentum equally. Exchanges, meanwhile, are keeping steady. The more experienced ones understand that running smoothly during a regulatory blackout is the best insurance policy. If anything goes wrong…
Share
2025/10/26 12:03