She has not played a second in the Women's World Cup. In fact, she is not a player at all. But Nualphan Lamsam of Thailand has provided one of the tournament's most viral, celebrative and heart-warming moments, representing a team that has been widely applauded for responding to overwhelming defeat with dignity and persistence.
Many on social media were struck by the joyfully tearful response of Nualphan on the Thai sideline, when the team finally scored a goal of its own Sunday after surrendering 13 to the United States and four in an ongoing match to Sweden.
Nualphan Lamsam, general manager of the Thai women's soccer team.Credit:Alamy
Nualphan, 53, is the general manager of the Thai national team, known for her vital financial aid, positive attitude and expressions of emotion during important soccer moments. In her day job, she is the chief executive of one of Thailand's largest insurance companies, an heiress to a banking fortune and a jet-setter widely referred to by her nickname, Madam Pang.
She is also president of a men's team in the Thai Premier League. After Sunday's World Cup match against Sweden, she flew home to Bangkok on business but also found time to watch her club win a domestic cup match. Thailand lost their match against Chile on Thursday night 2-0, and won't advance to the next round.
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Nualphan is already a familiar face to many. After Thailand's captain Kanjana Sung-Ngoen scored in the waning minutes against Sweden, Nualphan began crying and hugged her team's coach. Later, she smiled broadly in a team photo, holding her right hand aloft as many players gave a thumbs up. It was impossible to tell from the jubilant photo that Sweden, not Thailand, had prevailed by 5-1.
"Winning or losing is not as important as having the heart and spirit back from a feisty performance," Nualphan wrote on her Instagram account.
Thirteen years ago, after working with disabled athletes, she became the team's general manager at the request of a former president of the Thai soccer federation. Nualphan had never played soccer and had no experience in the sport. But she agreed to take on the role after meeting the players, and has since become one of a very small but powerful group of benefactors of women's soccer in countries where players have been largely ignored, dismissed and severely underfunded.
"She's not just a manager to us; she's like a mother," Ainon Phancha, a Thai defender, said. "She's the head of the family."
Julie Foudy, a former captain of the US national team and a longtime activist for equitable treatment of female players, refers to Nualphan and Cedella Marley of Jamaica, the eldest daughter of reggae legend Bob Marley, as "angels" for helping to fund their country's women's national teams when their own soccer federations have been indifferent.
But, Foudy added, in reference to FIFA, soccer's world governing body, which has historically lagged in its support of women: "When do we get to a place where we don't need someone to come in and save these players? This is FIFA's job."
Cedella Marley's support for Jamaica, which lost all funding from its national soccer federation several years ago, resulted in the team's arriving in France as the first from the Caribbean to qualify for a Women's World Cup.
In Thailand, the men's national team has never qualified for the World Cup, and the country's professional league has been hindered by corruption and match-fixing. Women's soccer has been more successful internationally, but at home it receives scant attention, respect and financial support.
The United States' Alex Morgan comforts Thailand's Miranda Nild after the match.Credit:AP
So Nualphan has helped fund the national team's salaries by hiring them into her insurance company, and she handed out bonuses during World Cup qualifying so that the players could focus on soccer without having to go job hunting. Thailand is nowRead More – Source
She has not played a second in the Women's World Cup. In fact, she is not a player at all. But Nualphan Lamsam of Thailand has provided one of the tournament's most viral, celebrative and heart-warming moments, representing a team that has been widely applauded for responding to overwhelming defeat with dignity and persistence.
Many on social media were struck by the joyfully tearful response of Nualphan on the Thai sideline, when the team finally scored a goal of its own Sunday after surrendering 13 to the United States and four in an ongoing match to Sweden.
Nualphan Lamsam, general manager of the Thai women's soccer team.Credit:Alamy
Nualphan, 53, is the general manager of the Thai national team, known for her vital financial aid, positive attitude and expressions of emotion during important soccer moments. In her day job, she is the chief executive of one of Thailand's largest insurance companies, an heiress to a banking fortune and a jet-setter widely referred to by her nickname, Madam Pang.
She is also president of a men's team in the Thai Premier League. After Sunday's World Cup match against Sweden, she flew home to Bangkok on business but also found time to watch her club win a domestic cup match. Thailand lost their match against Chile on Thursday night 2-0, and won't advance to the next round.
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Nualphan is already a familiar face to many. After Thailand's captain Kanjana Sung-Ngoen scored in the waning minutes against Sweden, Nualphan began crying and hugged her team's coach. Later, she smiled broadly in a team photo, holding her right hand aloft as many players gave a thumbs up. It was impossible to tell from the jubilant photo that Sweden, not Thailand, had prevailed by 5-1.
"Winning or losing is not as important as having the heart and spirit back from a feisty performance," Nualphan wrote on her Instagram account.
Thirteen years ago, after working with disabled athletes, she became the team's general manager at the request of a former president of the Thai soccer federation. Nualphan had never played soccer and had no experience in the sport. But she agreed to take on the role after meeting the players, and has since become one of a very small but powerful group of benefactors of women's soccer in countries where players have been largely ignored, dismissed and severely underfunded.
"She's not just a manager to us; she's like a mother," Ainon Phancha, a Thai defender, said. "She's the head of the family."
Julie Foudy, a former captain of the US national team and a longtime activist for equitable treatment of female players, refers to Nualphan and Cedella Marley of Jamaica, the eldest daughter of reggae legend Bob Marley, as "angels" for helping to fund their country's women's national teams when their own soccer federations have been indifferent.
But, Foudy added, in reference to FIFA, soccer's world governing body, which has historically lagged in its support of women: "When do we get to a place where we don't need someone to come in and save these players? This is FIFA's job."
Cedella Marley's support for Jamaica, which lost all funding from its national soccer federation several years ago, resulted in the team's arriving in France as the first from the Caribbean to qualify for a Women's World Cup.
In Thailand, the men's national team has never qualified for the World Cup, and the country's professional league has been hindered by corruption and match-fixing. Women's soccer has been more successful internationally, but at home it receives scant attention, respect and financial support.
The United States' Alex Morgan comforts Thailand's Miranda Nild after the match.Credit:AP
So Nualphan has helped fund the national team's salaries by hiring them into her insurance company, and she handed out bonuses during World Cup qualifying so that the players could focus on soccer without having to go job hunting. Thailand is nowRead More – Source