Germany v Australia: women’s international football friendly – live! | Football





17:29




17:22




17:09

Full-time! Germany 5-2 Australia




17:07

Goal! Germany 5-2 Australia




17:06

Goal! Germany 5-1 Australia




17:03




17:01




16:57

Goal! Germany 4-1 Australia




16:52




16:49




16:46




16:44




16:42

Updated




16:40




16:35

Goal! Germany 3-0 Australia

Updated




16:28

Updated




16:25




16:20




16:17




16:15

Goal! Germany 2-0 Australia

Updated




16:06




15:57

Half-time! Germany 1-0 Australia

Updated




15:54




15:50




15:45




15:41




15:38




15:36




15:33




15:31




15:30




15:27

Updated




15:25

Goal! Germany are ahead!




15:18




15:16




15:14




15:12

And we’re under way!




15:04




14:55

Preamble

There has been much talk about the fact we are little more than 100 days out from the Olympics, that time is of the essence and camps and friendlies a precious commodity. For many national teams, though, this relative resumption is also about time passed, about how long it has been since their last match.

For Australia’s women’s team, it has been a long time between drinks – 395 days at my count, since the Matildas played their last match at the Olympic qualifiers in March of last year. They were, incidentally, the same qualifiers which were hastily relocated to Australia from Wuhan – ground zero of Covid-19 – before the WHO had even named the 2019 novel coronavirus Covid-19. Point being, this group have not shared the same side of a field in yonks. Expect some rustiness, some blowing away of the proverbial cobwebs.

Said cobwebs will be blown away in Wiesbaden, the location of the Matildas’ first outing under new coach Tony Gustavsson. And against world No 2 Germany, no less. Martina Voss-Tecklenburg’s Germany have had the benefit of two friendlies this year, beating Belgium 2-0 in February before losing 2-1 to 2019 World Cup finalists the Netherlands – who Australia play on Wednesday. This is possibly the Matildas’ toughest match in some time.

That is not to say Australia’s personnel are not in good individual form. “Good” is something of an understatement for the recent output of Sam Kerr, who has 17 goals from 19 WSL games for leaders Chelsea, including a hat-trick against Birmingham City five days ago (there was another last month in the League Cup final win over Bristol City).

Many of the usual suspects are in Gustavsson’s squad but he has two sizeable defensive holes to fill. First-choice left-back Catley was already ruled out after her problematic hamstring compounded a torrid time with injury since joining Arsenal. And this week right-back Ellie Carpenter withdrew after a Covid outbreak at Lyon. They are two positions out and out run by these two and with not all that much depth.

Also absent is Amy Harrison (Covid-19 protocols), Katrina Gorry (pregnancy), Elise Kellond-Knight (injury) and Kyah Simon (injury).



Laisser un commentaire