Matildas, Tony Gustavsson part ways after Games flop – MASHAHER

ISLAM GAMAL1 August 2024Last Update :
Matildas, Tony Gustavsson part ways after Games flop – MASHAHER


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He guided them to their best Olympic finish, in Tokyo, where they narrowly missed out on a medal against the US in the third-placed play-off, while they also broke through to the semi-finals of a World Cup for the first time last year, the latter achieved without the injured Sam Kerr during a fraught group stage.

But the Matildas also crashed out of the 2022 Asian Cup in the quarter-finals against South Korea, meekly surrendering their best chance of winning a trophy during Gustavsson’s reign, while their failure to get out of their group in Paris represents the team’s worst run at the Olympics since their debut at Sydney 2000.

Kerr’s absence up front was sorely felt as Australia’s attack failed to fire. Now it will be up to someone else to reintegrate the injured skipper back into the national team when she is due to return from her ACL injury at the start of next year, as well as figure out how to get the best out of Mary Fowler and Caitlin Foord, who were far below their usual standards at the Games.

Questions in the aftermath have centred around the nature of the pre-Olympics camp in Spain, a taxing few weeks that followed a rare two-week break after an intense calendar.

“At the end of every major tournament, regardless of the results, we always have a very comprehensive review, and that will be part of it,” assistant coach Mel Andreatta told media on Thursday in Paris, as the squad went their separate ways. “But we’ve done what we thought was best with information we had at the time.

“Everyone who pulls on this jersey, green and gold, gives their best. Tony gave his best, and that’s all we can ask for.”

FA said the search for the Matildas’ next coach – who will be in charge for the home Asian Cup, to be held in 2026 – would begin immediately, as would a thorough review into what had gone wrong at the Olympics. While this is a golden age for Australian coaches, there are no obvious slam-dunk options.

Joe Montemurro, long touted by fans as an ideal candidate, left Juventus earlier this year but has since found a high-profile job at Olympique Lyonnais. Andreatta, who worked under Gustavsson and his two predecessors, Ante Milicic and Alen Stajcic, would also come under consideration, but her lack of high-level experience as a head coach in her own right may count against her – particularly as the international game continues to rapidly evolve.

“Right now, I’m trying to make sense of all this and just decompress,” Andreatta said after being asked if she would be interested in the job. “I’m actually going home and expecting a first child, so I’ll welcome that baby in the coming weeks and then see how things play out.”

The Matildas console each other on the pitch after their 2-1 loss to the US.Credit: AP

From the A-League Women’s competition, the standout candidate is Ante Juric, the mastermind of Sydney FC’s reign of domestic dominance; they have not missed a grand final since he took on the job in 2017, but he has just signed a long-term contract extension with the club.

FA could seek another foreigner like Gustavsson, but that would come with the trade-off that as with all import coaches, it may take them some time to come to terms with the vagaries and intricacies of the way Australian soccer operates. Gustavsson is one of only three foreigners to take charge of the Matildas in the past 30 years, along with Tom Sermanni (Scotland) and Hesterine de Reus (Netherlands).

“He’s done a lot on and off the field, and we have a lot to thank him for,” Tameka Yallop said on Thursday.

“He really did bring a lot of passion with him from Sweden, and we definitely took advantage of that. We’ve had some amazing finishes at tournaments that we haven’t done before. We made history with him.”


Source Agencies

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