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Australia’s generation next step up to play starring Matildas role on World Cup stage | Jo Khan

With history to be made a group of young players showed nerves of steel in the shootout to clinch a spot in the semi-finalPenalty shootouts are fastidiously prepared long before they arrive. Every player picks their target, hammering in practice shots again and again until the precise movement is etched into their muscle fibres. But with her name 10th on the list of 11 Matildas penalty-takers, Cortnee Vine did not really think she would have to step up.Yet after 19 penalty kicks and the shootout score at 6-6, Australia’s eyes turned to the 25-year-old as she dutifully made her way to the spot. Brow furrowed in focus, Vine’s calm belied the fact this was her first World Cup and first...

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History-making Matildas stand up on near-perfect evening of high drama | Jack Snape

Quarter-final win over France was an occasion of soaring spectacle for Australia, and the stakes could not have been higher Australia 0-0 France (7-6 on pens) | Player ratings | Reaction “We’ve made history.” These are big words. But Matildas winger Hayley Raso is entitled to make them. She played 104 minutes in a titanic World Cup quarter-final struggle against a mighty French side. Then, after being substituted, had the best seat in the house for what those in Brisbane will surely describe as the greatest penalty shootout ever.“You saw the emotion and the scenes afterwards,” she said. “The feelings all around are just so high.” Continue reading...

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Matildas face Sam Kerr-nundrum before Women’s World Cup quarter-final | Kieran Pender

There is no easy answer to the question of how to return one of the world’s best strikers to a cohesive team against France“I’m going to be honest,” offered coach Tony Gustavsson on Monday night, after the Matildas’ last-16 victory over Denmark was capped off with the return of captain Sam Kerr. “I could sit here and say it was easy, but it wasn’t. Those decisions are big.”The return of Kerr in the final stages of the second half in Sydney was a symbolic moment – the return of their “spiritual leader”following her calf injury on the eve of the tournament. Kerr began to warm up with her team holding a slender one-goal advantage; she was brought on after Hayley...

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Speed, skill and scoring: Caitlin Foord rises to Women’s World Cup challenge | Kieran Pender

For all the talk in recent weeks of the Matildas missing Sam Kerr, another of the world’s best attackers has been playing all alongIt was a perfect case study in the brilliance of Caitlin Foord. When the Matildas forward gained possession midway through the first half against Denmark night, she was deep in her own team’s half. This would have come as no surprise to her colleagues, who regularly hail Foord’s defensive work ethic.The forward quickly dispatched a crisp pass to Mary Fowler. And then she took off. Foord has variety in her attacking arsenal. She can outwit defenders as she runs at them with the ball; she can pass her way through most midfields. But Foord is at her...

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Australia banish World Cup demons and become the team to beat | Kieran Pender

By using an injury timeout to regroup, the Matildas show their increasing maturity and composure in win against Denmark Golden boot tracker Your bumper guide to all 736 players Four years ago, it was the nightmare in Nice. This time it was the celebration in Sydney. Where lapses of mental fortitude against Norway at the 2019 World Cup led to the Matildas exiting the tournament in the last 16, maturity and toughness saw them through against Denmark on Monday.Without one, the Matildas may not have managed the other. This was a journey that began in the bowels of the Stade de Nice on a French summer’s night with the captain, Sam Kerr, in tears having missed their opening penalty of...

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