Tag: injury clouds

  • Back-to-back champs face brutal reality as dramatic play-in looms: NBL finals preview

    Back-to-back champs face brutal reality as dramatic play-in looms: NBL finals preview

    The battle lines have been drawn in the lead-up to a do-or-die NBL grand final rematch between the underachieving Sydney Kings and an injury-ravaged New Zealand Breakers in the post-season.

    Stars and coaches from all six NBL finals teams converged on Melbourne on Tuesday to begin the long build-up to Wednesday-week’s Play-in Tournament double header.

    Tasmania will host Illawarra following the Kings-Breakers clash.

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    Sydney’s season sat on a knife’s edge before the record-breaking 55-point win over South East Melbourne on Saturday night but under-pressure coach Mahmoud Abdelfattah said his squad was entering the playoffs with momentum.

    “We’ve struggled with (consistency) the whole season but guys are getting back healthy, (they’re) aware of the situation,” Abdelfattah said.

    “We finished the season off on the right foot and hopefully that can carry some momentum into the playoffs.”

    The Kiwis fought through a rotating cast to finish sixth but will go into the game without All-NBL First Teamer Anthony Lamb (Achilles) and with stars William McDowell-White (shoulder) and Finn Delaney (back) under injury clouds.

    Mody Maor, Coach of the New Zealand Breakers, Tom Abercrombie of the New Zealand Breakers, Jaylen Adams of the Sydney Kings and Mahmoud Abdelfattah, Coach of the Sydney Kings pose for a photo during the 2024 NBL Finals Launch at John Cain Arena on February 20, 2024 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Kelly Defina/Getty Images for NBL)Source: Getty Images

    Coach Mody Maor took umbrage at suggestions his team had “snuck” into the Play-in — the Breakers finished 3.73 per cent ahead of seventh-placed Brisbane.

    “I don’t feel like we snuck in to the play-in, I feel we earned our spot there through a lot of hard work and consistent effort in a lot of different areas,” said Maor, who hopes scans for both his injured guns give each a chance to suit up.

    “There’s one game with everything on the line. Nothing but excitement.”

    Illawarra’s back-from-the-dead top-four finish after interim Justin Tatum took over has been rewarded with a date against the NBL’s toughest team.

    “When we were 2-7, I talked to the guys, I said everybody starts with a clean sheet,” Tatum said.

    “Everything we’ve done over the prior seven weeks, we just throw it out the window and let’s just rewrite our own stories.”

    For JackJumpers coach Scott Roth, it’s a third finals appearance in as many seasons and comes after his team never once lost a game by double digits in NBL24.

    “The build-up of the season, for us, had been quite choppy and we started relatively hot with expectations, and then we were very average during the middle of the season,” Roth said.

    “By the end of the season, we found our way again by winning five of our last six, which is a good sign.

    “We’re just starting to create our history.”

    Cotton joins Gaze with 4th NBL MVP | 00:56

    Awaiting the survivors of the Play-in Tournament are the league’s two best teams, Melbourne United and Perth Wildcats.

    The reward for finishing top two is figuring out how best to stay fresh and ready for the intensity of playoff basketball after a minimum 18-day break – the earliest date for the first semi-final is not until March 7.

    “We did a great job in the middle (of the season) to give ourselves a chance of finishing in the top two,” Perth coach John Rillie said of a squad that reeled off 13 wins in 15 games.

    “(But we understand) that we’re going to have virtually a three-week break.

    “I don’t think anyone really understands how to handle that or deal with it, so just trying to figure out how to best use it (the time) so when we do play, we’re ready to go again.”

    Top-of-the-table United’s Chris Goulding expected his team to dial up its focus in its pursuit of the Dr John Raschke Trophy.

    “A whole new season starts now,” Goulding said.

    “When we’re playing our best basketball, we’re going to be really tough to beat.

    “It’s just a matter of how consistently and how often we can bring that out.

    “I think we’re really going to see a mindset shift in the group

    “There’s no ‘all right, we’ll back up two days later if we lose this game’.

    “Backs are against the wall now, whether we like it or not, and that’s an environment we’re going to flourish in.”

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  • World Cup uncertainty with seven players under injury clouds

    World Cup uncertainty with seven players under injury clouds

    Australia heads to the sub-continent in a state of uncertainty with injury dramas and sudden form woes putting mounting pressure on its looming World Cup campaign.

    Just a week ago, when Australia was up 2-0 in its five-match ODI series against South Africa, it felt as though everything was under control and the pot was coming to the boil nicely.

    But after being thrashed three times in a row to capitulate to a 3-2 loss to a Proteas team not expected to be a major World Cup threat, Australia has to be very careful the wheels don’t come off.

    At least seven members of the 15-man World Cup squad have question marks over their fitness, while others including key all-rounders Cameron Green and Marcus Stoinis haven’t exactly been setting the world on fire in the lead-up matches.

    Selectors now face a massive decision over whether to gamble on carrying Travis Head (who doesn’t require surgery on a fractured hand) in the hope he will recover for the back half of the tournament starting in India in just under three weeks’ time.

    But waiting for Head to come back for the big games is almost certainly a luxury Australia cannot afford, because how can the in-form Marnus Labuschagne be kept out of a squad where there are already so many other concerns?

    Australia has until September 28 to make changes to the 15 man party already named, and selectors are going to need every day of that allowance to lock a final team away with so many balls up in the air.

    Superstars Steve Smith, Glenn Maxwell, Mitchell Starc and captain Pat Cummins are yet to play a match due to injury and, at least in Maxwell’s case, may barely get a run in before the World Cup starts against India on October 8.

    Sean Abbott (split webbing) and standby bowler Nathan Ellis (adductor) have also pulled up sore in South Africa, as did World Cup squad member Ashton Agar (calf), who only played a solitary match before returning to Australia for the birth of his child.

    It’s far from panic stations because the 50-over World Cup is a marathon not a sprint and you don’t want to be peaking now, a full two months before the trophy is going on the line.

    But Australia’s preparation is far from ideal and a lot is relying on the big guns Smith, Maxwell, Starc and Cummins returning fully fit and without rust.

    One thing that has worked in Australia’s favour is Labuschagne has responded to his initial World Cup snubbing as a man on a mission and he simply demands being slotted into the squad after topping the run-scoring and executing two match-winning knocks against South Africa.

    Labuschagne for Head is the most likely and logical change, unless selectors decided that second wicketkeeper Josh Inglis was surplus to requirements, and holding out for Head to return when the whips are cracking is the better bigger picture call.

    With Labuschagne added to the same line-up as Smith, Australia loses some of the explosiveness it had been planning to unleash at the top of the order, but that might not be such a bad thing after some alarming batting collapses in South Africa.

    Australia desperately needs Smith to come back and fire at his favourite position No.3 and Starc to dominate World Cups as he has done his entire 50-over career, but arguably the man they need most is Maxwell.

    Recovering from the freak broken leg he suffered last year has not been easy and will be difficult to manage through an arduous World Cup campaign with nine group matches.

    But Maxwell is the player who, particularly in Indian conditions, gives Australia its balance, with his almost unrivalled batting experience in the IPL and ability to contribute valuable spin overs.

    On a positive note for Australia, stand-in captain Mitchell Marsh and veteran David Warner have been two of the side’s best in South Africa and even with the blow of losing Head, the Aussies can still put out a potent opening pair.

    Before the World Cup starts, Australia has three ODI matches against India and then warm-ups against the Netherlands and Pakistan. Results don’t matter so much, but Australia must quickly get its best team on the park.

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  • Analysis: Marnus magic creates World Cup dilemma

    Analysis: Marnus magic creates World Cup dilemma

    Two games down and two man of the match performances for Marnus Labuschagne have created one fascinating dilemma for Australia’s selectors.

    Subbed into the one-day series against South Africa after Cameron Green was struck on the helmet by Kagiso Rabada, Labuschagne has made 204 runs at a strike rate over 100 and been out just once.

    His two innings at Bloemfontein were in vastly different match situations. The first came needing to bat time and with the lower order to guide Australia through a difficult chase. The second was with Travis Head and David Warner having already barged through the Protea attack in the early stages batting first, Labuschagne maintaining the rage en route to his second ODI ton in tandem with Warner, who posted his 20th and in doing so surpassed Sachin Tendulkar for the most centuries as an opener in cross-format international cricket (46).

    In any case Labuschagne has starred on both instances, two days apart, and it is increasingly hard to justify him not being part of Australia’s squad for next month’s World Cup.

    That is not to say the selection panel erred originally in bypassing Labuschagne, because his form in ODIs had been middling and the role he plays as top order stabiliser was being done better by Steve Smith.

    But the fact Australia named its provisional 15-man squad with eight ODIs and a couple of official warm-ups to come before the World Cup begins in India, combined with the fact that five members of that squad are recovering from injury, meant there was always the risk of someone doing what Labuschagne has done by running hot from outside.

    If not for Smith’s niggling wrist injury picked up during the second Ashes Test, Labuschagne would not have even been in the country of his birth for this series and would instead be in Queensland with Australia A for its one-day matches against New Zealand A.

    However Australia’s depth in one-day cricket is such that Saturday’s 123-run win at Mangaung Oval was achieved with four players in the XI (Labuschagne, Tim David, Aaron Hardie and Nathan Ellis) that aren’t in the World Cup squad, and in Labuschagne and David’s case weren’t even in the preliminary 18-man squad announced last month.

    It has been a mark of the Andrew McDonald/George Bailey era to ensure players know where they sit in the pecking order, and that is perhaps why Australia jumped well ahead of the September 28 deadline in announcing its squad. It is not unusual either, England, India and the Proteas have done so too.

    Still, in releasing the squad during the week, Cricket Australia noted that the group remained subject to change until that date late in month.

    It is a nice bit of wiggle room coach McDonald, Bailey and fellow selector Tony Dodemaide. It is easy enough to suggest that Labuschagne could come into the 15, much harder to pinpoint an obvious candidate to come out.

    CA has stressed that Pat Cummins (wrist), Mitchell Starc (groin), Glenn Maxwell (ankle) and Smith should all be back for the World Cup and could feature in the next lot of preparation matches against the hosts later in September. Yet, when combined with Green’s blow, it is an unnervingly large and important group of players to be heading into the biggest white-ball event on the calendar under injury clouds.

    The players in the 15 most likely to spend the bulk of time on the bench come the tournament proper are Josh Inglis, Sean Abbott and Ashton Agar, but all three have made useful contributions too already on this tour and it would be risky to head to a World Cup without a spare wicketkeeper, paceman or spinner.

    Warner, notably posting his first ton in South Africa since the ball tampering scandal, has surely also cast aside any queries about his place. As McDonald kept saying in England, a big score was just around the corner.

    Perhaps attrition will do its thing. While none of the sidelined quintet shape as particularly long odds to make the World Cup, someone tends to fall over at some stage. Four years ago Australia had to call in Peter Handscomb and Matthew Wade late in the tournament after injuries to Shaun Marsh and Usman Khawaja respectively.

    All Labuschagne can do is continue to nag away with runs, something he was born to do.

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  • Tillies stalwart gets lucky break amid midfielder’s brutal WC reality: Winners and Losers

    Tillies stalwart gets lucky break amid midfielder’s brutal WC reality: Winners and Losers

    Matildas coach Tony Gustavsson has rolled the dice on multiple stars under injury clouds as he named his 23-player squad for the Women’s World Cup on home soil.

    Headlined by Sam Kerr with the skipper’s armband, Gustavsson’s troops will now prepare for a final friendly against France on July 14 before departing for camp in Brisbane the following day.

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    Unlike the Socceroos squad for the Men’s World Cup, Gustavsson named a 29-player provisional squad so Aussie football fans already had a solid idea of who was going to make the final cut.

    However, that didn’t spot the Swede from springing a number of surprise inclusions into his final team as they gear up for what will be a memorable World Cup campaign.

    Foxsports.com.au breaks down the squad in Matildas Winners and Losers!

    LOCKED IN! 111-cap veteran a shock inclusion as Kerr headlines historic Matildas World Cup squad

    ‘PUTTING EVERYTHING AT RISK’: Kerr makes strong call on World Cup rainbow armbands

    Kerr reveals the ‘key’ for WC success | 01:10

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    WINNERS

    Kyah Simon

    Kyah Simon missed out on the 2019 Women’s World Cup in France after being unable to prove her fitness to then-coach Ante Milicic in brutal circumstances.

    However, the 111-cap veteran ensured there would be no such repeat despite rupturing her ACL last October for club side Tottenham Hotspur.

    Simon’s inclusion is a major gamble from Gustavsson considering she has not played a competitive match since the injury, but her reputation precedes itself.

    If the 32-year-old partakes in the Matildas’ World Cup opener against Ireland on July 20, it will have been a staggering 291 days since her ACL injury.

    Of course, Gustavsson made a point during the official squad announcement press conference that he can make changes to his squad up to 24 hours before the Ireland game.

    So, if Simon is unable to be fully match fit, the Swede can dip into his reserves for a replacement.

    But he has rolled the dice on the veteran forward who scored the goal that sealed Australia’s first and only knockout win at a World Cup in 2015.

    Kyah Simon is a surprise inclusion in the Matildas World Cup squad. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Lydia Williams and Clare Polkinghorne

    Granted, Lydia Williams was basically a guaranteed inclusion within the goalkeeping department.

    As for Clare Polkinghorne, she wasn’t a certainty having missed action for Swedish side Vittsjo GIK since April due to a lower-leg injury.

    But Polkinghorne’s veteran presence both on and off the park — Sam Kerr essentially described her as the team’s mum — will be pivotal in a tournament that will draw plenty of eyeballs.

    The duo’s selections are not necessarily what makes them winners in this analysis.

    Rather, it is the fact it will be both Williams and Polkinghorne’s fifth appearance at a World Cup, the most of any male or female Australian in history.

    That is no feat to be sniffed at.

    Williams and Polkinghorne, who have 102 and 156 caps for the Matildas respectively, began their World Cup journeys in 2007 and have never looked back.

    The former is likely to struggle for game time with West Ham goalkeeper Mackenzie Arnold likely to be the preferred option between the sticks.

    Yet Polkinghorne could have a big role to play in the heart of the backline with her calming presence provided she is fully recovered from the leg injury.

    Polkinghorne’s veteran presence will be vital throughout the Matildas’ World Cup campaign. (Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Australia

    If it hasn’t sunk in yet, then the announcement of the Matildas’ World Cup squad should surely do the job.

    Yes, Australia has had World Cups of several sporting disciplines over the years.

    The Rugby World Cup in 2003. The men’s Cricket World Cup in 2015. The men’s T20 World Cup in 2022. The women’s T20 World Cup in 2020. The men’s Rugby League World Cup on several occasions.

    But none of those will have the global pull quite like the Women’s World Cup.

    And it’s all happening on our very shores.

    Hayfever is officially out, and World Cup fever is in.

    Australia, get keen.

    ‘Pressure is a privilege’: Sam Kerr | 02:11

    LOSERS

    Chloe Logarzo

    It was only going to be bad news for a group of six Matildas and unfortunately for Chloe Logarzo, she was one of them.

    The midfielder made the 29-player cut despite a foot injury which restricted her to only a handful of appearances for A-League Women’s side Western United throughout the season.

    Logarzo’s omission was made all the more brutal by the fact she had recovered from an ACL tear which had threatened to derail her World Cup plans in the first place.

    The 28-year-old has plenty of energy between boxes and given the inclusion of other players who remain under injury clouds, Logarzo can certainly feel hard done by.

    Logarzo would no doubt have been told by Gustavsson to keep fit in case one of the current crop of midfielders goes down with injury prior to the tournament.

    But for now, she must stomach the brutal news.

    Unfortunately for Logarzo, she missed out on World Cup selection. Pics Adam HeadSource: News Corp Australia

    Larissa Crummer

    Despite featuring in every one of Gustavsson’s squads for the past 12 months, Brisbane Roar forward Larissa Crummer was another omission from the final 23-player squad.

    Gustavsson has previously stated his admiration for Crummer’s remarkably pressing ability but based on his other selections, speed is the quality the Swede has valued most within his forwards.

    To even get to this point for Crummer is remarkable considering she seriously feared for her playing future after a sickening injury in 2019 in which she broke her leg in two places.

    But sadly it was not to be for the 27-year-old who recently secured a move to Norwegian side Brann.

    Crummer was a constant presence in Matildas squads over the past 12 months. (Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Canada, Ireland and Nigeria

    You bet the Matildas’ Group B rivals are losers in this piece.

    Why?

    Well, they’re the ones who will have to play out of their skins to stop the host nation from overcoming the first major hurdle.

    And, with a squad brimming with fresh talent in terms of World Cup debutants and several veterans of multiple iterations of the tournament, this is a Matildas squad that has plenty of stars at the peak of their careers.

    Ireland has the tall task of taking on the Matildas in their World Cup opener in front of a sellout crowd at Accor Stadium on July 20.

    Then it’s down to Melbourne on July 27 where a clash against Nigeria awaits.

    The Matildas then round out their Group B experience against Canada in Brisbane on July 31.

    With Gustavsson’s squad now locked in, the three rival nations know exactly what lays ahead.

    It’s not a test many would be willing to face.

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  • 111-cap veteran a shock inclusion as Kerr headlines historic Matildas World Cup squad

    111-cap veteran a shock inclusion as Kerr headlines historic Matildas World Cup squad

    Matildas coach Tony Gustavsson has unveiled his 23-player squad for the Women’s World Cup and has rolled the dice on a number of stars under injury clouds.

    Sam Kerr will headline the historic squad as skipper and Steph Catley to be the vice-captain, with the Matildas set to begin their World Cup journey against Ireland on July 20.

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    Emily Gielnik, Larissa Crummer, Remy Siemsen, Chloe Logarzo, Amy Sayer and Jada Whyman were the unfortunate group of six to miss out.

    Kyah Simon is one major inclusion given she had barely played any football since injuring her ACL last October.

    However, the 111-cap Matildas veteran’s injury issues would not force her to miss out on a second consecutive Women’s World Cup having been absent from the 2019 iteration of the tournament due to injury.

    15 players from the Matildas’ 2019 World Cup squad will reprise their roles, with seven set to make their World Cup debuts.

    The 2023 tournament will have great importance for Lydia Williams and Clare Polkinghorne, with the duo to have the tremendous distinction of being the only male or female Australian players to compete at five World Cups.

    Matildas coach Tony Gustavsson is set to unveil his 23-player squad for the Women’s World Cup. (Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    MORE COVERAGE

    Ange sends social media wild after cheering on Aussies at Lord’s

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    With the squad now settled after multiple international windows and several players used, Gustavsson is excited to have locked in the 23 players who will look to make history.

    “I am delighted to see the progression of the team as it is a result of their dedication to be prepared for this moment,” Gustavsson said.

    “To see so many debutants for the tournament speaks to the hard work of the players themselves, but also the coaching staff and support staff as we looked to build depth in the squad.

    “This is a special group of players who, when you see the anticipation around the tournament and level of interest for women’s football, have already sparked a transformation.

    “We can’t wait to get the tournament underway in front of a record crowd of support.”

    MATILDAS WORLD CUP SQUAD

    Goalkeepers: Mackenzie Arnold, Teagan Micah, Lydia Williams

    Defenders: Ellie Carpenter, Steph Catley, Charlotte Grant, Clare Hunt, Alanna Kennedy, Aivi Luik, Courtney Nevin, Clare Polkinghorne

    Midfielders: Alex Chidiac, Kyra Cooney-Cross, Katrina Gorry, Emily van Egmond, Clare Wheeler, Tameka Yallop

    Forwards: Caitlin Foord, Mary Fowler, Sam Kerr, Haley Raso, Kyah Simon, Cortnee Vine

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