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Kerr will start v France if fit to play 90: Gustavsson

The Matildas go through their paces as they gear up for the World Cup quarter-final against France. (Darren England/AAP PHOTOS)

By Anna Harrington in Brisbane

IF Sam Kerr is fit to play 90 minutes, she will start against France.

Matildas coach Tony Gustavsson cut to the chase when asked about the role Australia’s superstar captain would play in Saturday’s Women’s World Cup quarter-final.

Kerr has played a tick over 10 minutes against Denmark to date, with a starting front four of Caitlin Foord, Mary Fowler, Emily van Egmond and Hayley Raso thriving in her absence.

But Gustavsson dismissed the suggestion dropping someone for Kerr, if she is fit to start after returning from her calf injury, could disrupt that dynamic.

“They’ve been amazing teammates supporting each other. There’s been no complaints whatsoever in terms of if you start or come off the bench – they know their role and they play their role,” Gustavsson said.

“And I definitely would never, ever see Sam as a disturbance to the team.

“I want to be very clear in here now to say if Sam is fit to play 90 minutes, she is starting. There is not even a question and the team knows it.

“We’re talking about Sam Kerr here.

“Whether she is ready to play 90 minutes plus extra time, that’s to be decided tonight. But there is no question whatsoever that if she is, she is starting.”

Whether Kerr has the minutes in her legs to start, after minimal involvement to date since her calf injury, is another thing – and will be decided at a medical team meeting on Friday night.

Australia have consistently played mind games over the striker’s minutes, and could well use Kerr from the bench again.

“Is she going to play tomorrow or not? That’s not what worries me,” France coach Herve Renard said via a translator.

Striker Eugenie Le Sommer added: “It’s true that she’s a very big player, very good.

“She can score lots of goals and she can make the difference but I never focus on one particular player.”

All 23 players, including Kerr, trained at Brisbane’s Perry Park on Friday, though Kyah Simon left the main group early.

France know what it feels like to wilt under the pressure of a home Women’s World Cup, losing in the quarter-finals in 2019, and have tried to project that onto the Matildas.

“We’re hoping to put Australia through exactly what France went through when they were the host country,” Renard said this week.

Defender Ellie Carpenter expects Australia to embrace the pressure and urged the Brisbane crowd to bring the noise.

“I love the pressure and I think we love the pressure. We turn that into ‘look around – all these people in this stadium are cheering for us,'” she told reporters.

“We don’t take it on as pressure. We take it as look at this, it’s such a privilege being able to play at home in front of 50,000, 70,000, 30,000-odd people watching us, cheering us on and that only helps us.

“That’s our 12th player on the field and I cannot stress enough honestly throughout the game when you’re going through a tough period and we don’t have the ball for a bit and the crowd gets in, it really, really helps us.

“It’s no pressure at all. It’s honestly a privilege and I wouldn’t want to be doing anything than playing that game tomorrow. This is why we play football. It’s for these games.”

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Australian Associated Press

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