By Vince Rugari
Tony Gustavsson ended one guessing game on Tuesday morning and then started another. Straight after unveiling the 18 players who will contend for Australia’s first Olympic medal in football, the Matildas coach refused to engage with the question left hanging in the air: will he still be in the job after Paris?
Gustavsson had admitted a few hours earlier, after the Matildas’ 2-0 victory over China on Monday night, that he was feeling “a bit emotional” and was trying to take everything in a little bit deeper. That was because, as things stand, there was every chance it was his final match as coach on Australian soil, since his contract runs out at the end of the Olympics and he is yet to sign an extension.
Asked if he had broached the topic of an extension with his employers, Football Australia, he gave nothing away.
“We said, let’s respect the current contract, work through this Olympics, and then we’ll pick up that conversation post the Olympics,” he said.
Not a bad forward defensive stroke for a Swede.
Rumours have been swirling since last year’s World Cup that Gustavsson was looking at his options. He was tossed up as a candidate to become the United States’ new head coach, having served as an assistant to Jill Ellis, but that job went to Emma Hayes. Then there were reports he had interviewed for the vacant men’s head coaching role with Sweden. He has dropped several hints that, if he was to stay on, it would be on the condition that there would be more “investment” in the Matildas from the federation, but never went into detail about what that might entail.
“I think right now what’s important for me and the team is that we’re focused on what we have in front of us,” he said when asked if he had any desire to stay on with the Matildas.
The best he could offer, as far as clarity over his future, was this: “What I can answer, though – I think all of you here know how much I love working with this team.”
It remains to be seen, then, if Gustavsson wants to guide them through another four-year cycle – which would take in the home Asian Cup in 2026, the next World Cup in Brazil in 2027, and the Los Angeles Olympics in 2028 – or if FA even wants him. An obvious successor is Joe Montemurro, the former Women’s Super League winner who recently left Juventus and came home to coach the A-League All Stars against Arsenal, another of his old teams.
It may depend on what happens in Paris. If the Matildas can finally break through and win their first medal at a global tournament, it could be the perfect moment to ride off into the sunset - as several of the older players in Gustavsson’s 18-player squad will probably do.
After losing the World Cup third-place play-off to Sweden and the bronze medal match to the United States at the Tokyo Olympics, there is clearly a sense of unfinished business among this cohort of players, eight of whom are going to their third Olympic Games.
“We’ve come fourth a couple of times now, and it’s getting on our nerves a little bit,” said winger Hayley Raso. “We’re all really wanting to achieve something and bring something back.”
Ellie Carpenter described the team’s ongoing lack of silverware - or goldware, or bronzeware - as the “only thing missing” from their legacy, and something they have been trying to address accordingly with their preparations for Paris.
“It’s that final product, the final details at the end of the tournament - we’re all tired, you’ve played six games, we know that’s the toughest game, you have to perform,” she said.
“Obviously, there’s going to be fatigue. That’s what we’re really focusing on. And we have been working on that, mentally and physically leading into this Olympics, because it’s going to be cut-throat. And we know what it needs to take to be there, so we really need to be prepared, and we’re really going to be pushing for that medal.”
There were no great shocks in the squad. Gustavsson has gambled on the fitness of Katrina Gorry (syndesmosis) and Caitlin Foord (hamstring) but, taking both players at their word, it is not much of a gamble. Gorry told this masthead last week she was certain she’ll be fully fit and recovered in time, while Foord’s hamstring twinge against China on Friday night in Adelaide was so minor she probably would have kept playing if they were in tournament mode.
The most high-profile exclusions were retiring goalkeeper Lydia Williams and defender Charlotte Grant, who deputised for Carpenter brilliantly when she was out of the team with an ACL injury but has struggled for a regular role since, and has been overtaken by the more versatile Kaitlyn Torpey.
“That’s the hard thing with the Olympic squads ... [they are] so small, and one of the things that’s most important is having flexibility,” said captain Steph Catley. “Sometimes that means that you’re not going to have double-ups in different positions, you’re going to have more players that can play different roles. I think that’s just where it’s maybe tipped Charli out of favour.”
Grant and Williams will still travel with the team, stay in the athletes’ village and train every day after being named as alternates, along with defender Courtney Nevin and forward Sharn Freier. Under rejigged IOC rules, they can be activated at any time until 24 hours before the medal matches, but only in the case of a legitimate injury deemed serious enough to end another player’s involvement in the tournament.
Cortnee Vine, meanwhile, was left feeling relieved. She became Australia’s overnight hero with her penalty shootout heroics against France but took a break from the national team earlier this year, sitting out of an international window to prioritise her own mental health as she struggled with the demands of her newfound fame.
It was a decision which she knew would put her childhood dream of competing at the Olympics at risk. “At the time, obviously, it was a massive call, and I knew what I was jeopardising when I took that time off,” she said.
“Sometimes you have to put yourself first - as a person, over the football. I do think that helps on-field stuff. That’s what I had to do. I think it has benefited [me], I feel like I’ve come back, and I know what I want, I know what I need to do, I want to be the best player I can be. That’s because of that time.”
The Matildas begin their Olympic campaign on July 25 against Germany in Marseille, then face Zambia (July 28) and the United States (July 31), the other teams in Group A.
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