How are the Matildas shaping up just 100 days out from the World Cup?

By Christian Montegan / Roar Pro

Approaching almost three years since Australia and New Zealand found out they won the rights to host the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup, time has scarily flown by.

The excitement and nerves are slowly starting to assemble around the country in anticipation of the biggest sporting event to hit our shores since the 2000 Olympics. 



Over the past decade, the Matildas have inspired a new generation of young aspiring footballers and have been adored by the Australian public. 



Alen Stajcic was the man responsible for taking the Aussie girls to the next level by becoming the first senior Australian football team to win a knockout stage match at a World Cup by winning silver at the Asian Championships.

Under Stajcic, the Aussies qualified for the Olympics for the first time in 12 years, and attaining the Matildas’ highest ever ranking of number five in the world, all while developing the next generation and playing some incredibly entertaining and attractive football in the process.

Unfortunately, his shock sacking led to a couple of management changes which in truth rattled the cohesion and consistency of the playing group as they were forced to adjust accordingly. 



Now, Sweden-born Tony Gustavsson is tasked with the challenge of guiding the Matildas to a deep run in the World Cup, where all eyes will be on them to perform down under.

(Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)

So, how is the squad adapting to life under Gustavsson and are there any lingering issues to fix just 100 days out from the tournament?



At the beginning of the 49-year-old’s tenure, it felt as though he struggled to get a real grip on the identity of how he wanted the team to play, tinkering with a lot of options but not producing the results. 


On Friday, the Matildas lost their first game since September at a neutral ground in Wimbledon, going down 1-0 to 23rd-ranked Scotland in a friendly. 



An alarming statistic proves that Gustavsson’s girls still need to prove their worth against the very best, as they’ve only won four of the last 22 games against top-25-ranked opposition.

To be fair, three of those past four victories have come most recently against Denmark, Sweden, and Spain (albeit the Spanish facing a crisis under their new manager.)

There was a period during Stajcic’s reign when the Matildas looked virtually unstoppable and combined incredibly well all over the park to create scoring opportunities. Glimpses of those same patterns have been evident under Gustavsson, most notably in the 3-2 victory over Spain in the Nations Cup. 


In saying that, what’s most concerning just over three months out from the showpiece event is how heavily reliant and dependent the squad seems to be on certain players. 



Australia’s group opponents for the World Cup contain Canada, Nigeria and the Republic of Ireland. Back in September 2021, Australia suffered a 3-2 loss to the Irish without key pieces such as Caitlin Foord, Ellie Carpenter, and Kyah Simon.

Foord was also unavailable against Scotland along with superstar Sam Kerr, casting some doubt over whether this team contains the depth and personnel to carry the weight of responsibility from these important names.

(Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)

Promising 20-year-old forward Mary Fowler has been dubbed the next best thing for Australia since she made her debut in 2018 and already has 34 caps to her name.

However, her past few games have been underwhelming and that’s to be expected for a player so young, but she’s proven that she can’t be relied upon when the pressure heats up in July.

In that same match against Ireland, all three goals conceded were a result of set pieces, highlighting the biggest weakness that needs to be urgently dealt with. 


After the defeat, Gustavsson admitted that this was an area that needed to be deeply analysed and rectified. 



“The one thing we didn’t train on the field before the game was defending set plays, we only covered it in a video session,” he said. 



Since then, they have only conceded three goals from set plays, but it’s nations such as Ireland that Gustavsson needs to be wary about as opposed to teams like Spain and the USA who carry so many other weapons.

The balance within the squad is there for all to see, but Gustavsson needs to utilise his training sessions effectively with the little time he will be given before the event kicks off on July 20. 



Mackenzie Arnold has come into her own between the sticks. Clare Polkinghorne and Alanna Kennedy offer the experience at the back. Versatility and depth cover the midfield with the likes of Elise Kellond-Knight, Emily Van Egmond, and Katrina Gorry guiding 21-year-old Kyra Cooney-Cross.

Up front, we’re all aware of the exciting talent and ability.

No doubt there are a lot of positive signs, but can Gustavsson prepare his squad well enough to take down the world’s best?

The Crowd Says:

2023-04-12T09:24:04+00:00

Simoc

Roar Rookie


This was probably written a day to soon. They played really well this morning and the defence was the best I've seen from them. England dominated possession but Australia created the best goal scoring opportunities. Both teams missing a few stars but I think England expected to win and it just wasn't happening. They would be pretty disappointed about not being up to the challenge presented. Probably the first goal was offside but Australia were creating the best scoring chances. That is the key to winning when you can convert of course. Hopefully the injury toll isn't to bad.

2023-04-11T21:10:32+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


That was a great win against the world’s best team. I’m glad you noticed the lack of coverage, which also includes the coverage before the game and we’ll see what talk happens after this great win. I thought there would still be a few tickets left in Sydney, but they must have sold out Accor.

2023-04-11T20:54:43+00:00

Bloke7

Roar Rookie


How are the girls shaping up? How about the poor media coverage? Where was the live feed on the Roar this morning? Phenomenal result and performance against an England team unbeaten in 30 games. Sadly I missed out on tickets to the Mathildas games but got some to see England.

AUTHOR

2023-04-11T12:19:27+00:00

Christian Montegan

Roar Pro


Well if the depth isn’t there then there’s going to be some fringe players like that in the squad. I think for a 23 -player squad we have the right amount of depth required. Just lacking in a couple of key areas such as a creative player, but TG has the pieces available to work with

2023-04-11T12:07:55+00:00

chris1

Roar Rookie


It's not TG's fault that we lack depth. As Brains points out we have 11 decent players and the rest are extremely ordinary. If we stay injury and fatigue free we can top the group and get to quarters at least. TG has given some players way too many chances (Crummer, Siemsen, Ibini) to name a few. These players are not at international level.

AUTHOR

2023-04-11T03:52:01+00:00

Christian Montegan

Roar Pro


The 7-0 loss to Spain highlighted that Gustavsson experiments too much in my opinion. He fielded a team full of youngsters and inexperience, but that was the perfect opportunity for the regular starters to test themselves against one of the top nations

2023-04-11T03:26:40+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


At times it has seemed as though Gustavson’s plan is really coming together. There seems to be method in his madness and then they have a game where their defence again looks leaky and their passes go astray. They looked really good against Ireland, in patches and with a weakened team so I still have a lot of hope for them. The fact is, as we all know, women’s football has improved greatly and there are many top rate teams. To win a World Cup in women’s football will require a lot of skill, good tactics and plenty of good fortune. I live in hope because it would be an amazing result for women’s sport in our country and also for football in our country. Just imagine another half a million people wanting to play football in Australia off the back of a successful World Cup.

2023-04-10T23:38:52+00:00

Brainstrust

Roar Rookie


The Matildas lost most of those game against top opposition because they held onto over the hill players and in the case of Luik introduced them into the team again. Even some of the newbies like Nevin are failures at W-league level and mysteries why they are picked. That they played so many matches with a bad selection of players its not suprising they lost. Recentlty they settled on their first decent team with Gorry instead of Van Egmond and the front four of Kerr, Ford ,Raso , Vine being good then Hunter at the back. Two are out and then in comes Crummer who is not even a D squad by merit and Fowler who shows talent but is lazy and going backwards. Ultimately its about that decent first eleven being available and avoiding the terrible players. The better solution would be to fill the squad with the best Australian players avoid the bad ones.

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