Steph Catley will lead Australia's women's soccer squad at the Paris Olympics in the injury-enforced absence of regular captain Sam Kerr.
The Australian Olympic Committee confirmed the 18-player
squad on Tuesday. Kerr was ruled out after she tore the anterior cruciate
ligament in her right knee while training with the Chelsea Women’s Super League
team in January.
Catley, vice-captains Emily Van Egmond and Ellie Carpenter,
Mackenzie Arnold, Caitlin Foord, Alanna Kennedy, Clare Polkinghorne and Tameka
Yallop will all become three-time Olympians in Paris.
Kyra Cooney-Cross, Mary Fowler, Katrina Gorry, Michelle
Heyman, Teagan Micah, Hayley Raso all return for their second Olympics, while
Clare Hunt, Kaitlyn Torpey, Cortnee Vine and Clare Wheeler have been selected
for their first Olympics.
“This has been an incredibly challenging squad to select
with so many quality players competing fiercely for limited spots,” Matildas
head coach Tony Gustavsson said. “It has been a methodical process over the
past couple of years to reach this point, and each of the players selected
brings unique and beneficial qualities to our team that will be vital for our
Paris 2024 campaign.”
Australia beat China 2-0 on Monday night in its final home
friendly before the Paris Games.
Australia goalkeeper Lydia Williams, who says she will
retire at the Olympics, was honored in the match played before 77,000 fans at
Sydney’s Olympic stadium.
Williams, Australian soccer’s longest-serving player, was
subbed off at halftime to a standing ovation. She is one of the four traveling
reserves going to Paris with the Matildas on standby in case of injuries.
A guard of honor assembled for the 36-year-old Williams
before the Sydney match as Australian tennis great Evonne Goolagong Cawley
presented Williams, a Noongar Indigenous woman, with a traditional animal skin
cloak.
Australia is playing in Group B against the United States,
Germany and Zambia. Australia has never won an Olympic medal, coming close at
the Tokyo Games in 2021 after losing 4-3 in the bronze medal match against the
United States, which was then ranked world No. 1.
The Australian” co-hosted the Women’s World Cup with New
Zealand last year and reached the semifinals.
Australia squad: Mackenzie Arnold, Ellie Carpenter, Steph
Catley (captain), Kyra Cooney-Cross, Caitlin Foord, Mary Fowler, Katrina Gorry,
Michelle Heyman, Clare Hunt, Alanna Kennedy, Teagan Micah, Clare Polkinghorne,
Hayley Raso, Kaitlyn Torpey, Emily van Egmond, Cortnee Vine, Clare Wheeler,
Tameka Yallop