Coach Tony Gustavsson expects to have captain Steph Catley and a full-strength squad available when the Matildas face Germany in the opening match of their Olympic campaign on Thursday.
The Matildas have been beset by injury woes in the lead-up to the Paris Games, with Catley nursing a calf niggle, Katrina Gorry returning from an ankle injury, and other worries for attacking threat Caitlin Foord and defender Kaitlyn Torpey. But Gustavsson insisted his team was fit and ready to go following an extended pre-Olympics training camp, as all 22 players – 18 squad members and four reserves – trained on Wednesday in Marseille.
“Everyone trained today, which is good,” Gustavsson said. “It’s been a challenging preparation period, to be honest. If you look at the game minutes that these players have had over the last six months, with everything from stress fractures to foot surgeries to soft tissue injuries and all that. And then a break, and then coming in [to camp]. So we’ve had to do a lot of hard work and individual planning.
“It’s been a little bit of a challenge to get everyone up to speed, but to then see 100% of the players available for training today was amazing,” Gustavsson added.
While the coach said that final decisions on availability would be made following a last medical meeting, he indicated that Arsenal star Catley was expected to start against Germany. “If Steph is available, our captain, that’s a no-brainer,” he said.
“I’m fit,” added Catley, set to compete in her third Olympics. “I’m good to go.”
The Matildas enter the Games with high expectations after finishing fourth at both the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 and home World Cup in 2023. But on each occasion the Australians fell in the third-place encounter; the team has never won a medal at a major international tournament.
“It would be incredible,” Catley said about the prospect of finishing on the podium in Paris. “This team has gone through a lot, been together for many, many years, we’ve come close to having some pretty amazing results. It’s definitely something that we want to achieve.
“But so does every single team in this tournament,” continued the 30-year-old. “Every single team in this tournament is incredible – the Olympics is really, really tough. Not to be clichéd but it really is one game at a time for us. We dream big always – every tournament we go into, we go into to win, to achieve the absolute most we can. But it’s risky to start to think like that, we just need to focus on Germany and how we can beat them.”
After the encounter with Germany, the Matildas will face Zambia in Nice on Sunday, before concluding the group with a blockbuster clash against long-time rivals the United States in Marseille next week. The Australians need to finish in the top two of group B, or be among the best-ranked third placed teams, to qualify for the quarter-finals.
On the eve of their opening match, and with the Paris 2024 opening ceremony only 48 hours away, Catley spoke of her pride at wearing the green and gold on the Olympic stage.
“We know what the Olympics mean to everyone,” said the defender. “We take a lot of pride from the stories we share – meeting Cathy Freeman )ahead of the last World Cup], the connections we have with her, and how many of us grew up watching the Olympics and being so proud to be Australian in those massive moments.
“We want to recreate those kinds of moments for young girls watching the TV, up in the middle of the night watching us,” Catley added. “We want to make them proud – we want to give them that Olympic memory we had growing up.”
Goalkeeper Mackenzie Arnold, meanwhile, had a simple message for Australian fans ahead of the Germany clash: “Set your alarms.”
The Matildas’ Olympic opener will take place on Thursday evening local time (3am AEST). “It’s going to be an early one – set your alarms, get around it,” said Arnold. “It means a lot to us.”