England face the prospect of Australia’s star player Sam Kerr making her first start of the World Cup against them on Wednesday, with the player revealing the plan has always been to get her fit for the semi-final.
Kerr, who looked in no trouble after playing 55 minutes of football in the quarter final against France, said she felt ‘ready to go’, having shrugged off the calf injury she sustained in training before the tournament.
The Chelsea striker, 29, said after the team defeated France on penalties: ‘When I hurt my calf, the plan was to always to [try to] be ready for a semi-final, the final.
'So I could have [started against France], but who knows what could have happened? The girls have been smashing it and absolutely dominating.
‘I was ready to go, but we’ve had a plan this whole tournament and we just had to stick to it.
‘That was part of the plan, to get 20 minutes against Denmark to make me feel better for this game and now with another, what, 65 minutes, I feel better for it and I’ll have more training under my belt.
'So I feel ready to go. I think with everything that’s been going on, the best thing for [the France game] was the plan we did and the plan we followed.’
Australia is currently in a state of Matildas-mania, with the question of Kerr’s fitness being the nation’s most hotly debated topic since she pulled up with a pain in her calf at 9am on July 19, at the team’s Queensland Sports and Athletic Centre base in Brisbane.
Australian digital sports publisher Keepup revealed on Monday that the nation’s manager Tony Gustavsson was left with only 11 hours between her sustaining the injury and the deadline for the submission of his World Cup squad to decide if Kerr should be on his squad list.
He had already taken
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