Matildas could have both captain Sam Kerr and Mary Fowler for Asian Cup
Australian has drawn an opening-round clash with Philippines for the home tournament next March, and with Fowler starting to run during some training in Sydney this week under a program being run by her club, Manchester City, Montemurro is excited that she could be ready in time.
Fowler ruptured her ACL in April, an injury that can take up to 12 months to recover from.
'I spoke to her the other day and she's on track,' Montemurro said at the Asian Cup draw in Sydney.
'She's in Sydney at the moment doing some running.
'She's looking good, and she should be hopefully back playing before November.'
Kerr has also moved in to full training with Chelsea more than 18 months after suffering her own ACL injury and looms as a key inclusion, with the tournament opener being played in her home town of Perth.
'All the signs are really, really positive. She's joined in pre-season training with Chelsea,' Montemurro said.
'She's probably into a pretty normal routine now, back to club training, and we hope that all goes well going forward and getting some game time at Chelsea.'
Back on the grass! � pic.twitter.com/jdWZpB7fH6
— (C)helsea FC Women ðŸ�†ðŸ�†ðŸ�† (@ChelseaFCW) July 28, 2025
Montemurro knows the pressure will be on to replicate the stunning run of the Matildas to the semi-finals of the home World Cup in 2023 when the tournament kicks off.
'In any tournament, the expectations were what they were,' Montemurro said.
'I couldn't predict that I wanted this team or that team. Now it's a little bit clearer, the style of teams we're playing, and it's a little bit clearer on how we approach the build-up into it.'
Matildas' Asian Cup matches::
Matildas v Philippines
Date: Sunday, March 1, 2026
Venue: Perth Stadium, Perth
Time: 5pm AWST/8pm AEDT
Matildas v Iran
Date: Thursday, March 5, 2026
Venue: Gold Coast Stadium, Gold Coast
Time: 7pm AEST/8pm AEDT
Matildas v Korea Republic
Date: Sunday, March 8, 2026
Venue: Stadium Australia, Sydney

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


7NEWS
an hour ago
- 7NEWS
McLaren boss Zak Brown addresses ‘sensitive' Oscar Piastri situation with Lando Norris
McLaren chief Zak Brown is preparing to deal with disappointment at the end of the Formula One season, even as the team enjoy one of their most dominant years and a 200th grand prix win at the weekend. As the title battle between Australia's Oscar Piastri and teammate Lando Norris heats up — the McLaren pair are separated by just nine points after Sunday's Hungarian Grand Prix — the boss conceded he was thinking also about how to handle the aftermath. Red Bull's reigning champion Max Verstappen, the McLaren drivers' closest rival, is now 97 points off the pace and told reporters at the weekend that he may not win again this year given problems with his car. Even before the weekend, both Piastri and Norris cast caution aside and called it a two-horse race. One of them will surely end the year celebrating a dream come true. But the other will rue what might have been, with a new engine era next season shaking everything up again and chances potentially disappearing. Losing always hurts, doubly so when it is to a teammate with the same car, and Brown said McLaren would have to deal with the situation sensitively when — although he still insisted on saying if — the time came. 'Eventually... we'll just sit down and actually have a conversation and go, 'right, one of you is going to win and it's going to be the best day of your life. One of you is going to lose. How do you want us to handle that?',' he told reporters. 'We'll actually sit down and go, 'Right, you want us to jump up and down and celebrate? This guy won'. So we're fully aware and sensitive to how do you celebrate that situation?' Piastri has won six races to Norris's five but the Briton has momentum going into the August break, with three wins from his last four starts. The pair have had seven one-two finishes from 14 races, including the last four, and have left rivals trailing. McLaren are so far ahead in the constructors' standings — 299 points over Ferrari — that the crown is a given. Much has been made of the potential for a falling out between friends, but Brown was sanguine and said the relationship was only growing stronger. When Norris ran into the back of Piastri as he challenged for the lead in Canada in June, the Briton defused the situation by immediately taking responsibility. Piastri locked up behind Norris in Hungary on Sunday, and though no contact was made, race engineer Tom Stallard warned the Australian on the team radio: 'Remember how we go racing, Oscar.' Brown said the drivers have complete transparency on strategy and how the team go about racing, and he expected more close calls. 'There's competitiveness brewing... as the championship builds, I'm sure that tension will grow,' he said. 'We're fully anticipating them 'swapping paint' again at some point. I'm very confident it won't be deliberate, which is where you then get into the problems. 'They will have racing incidents in their further time here at McLaren, we know that and they know that, so we're not afraid of that. 'I'm positive they're never going to run each other off the track, and that's where you get into bad blood. So they're free to race... there are rules around our racing, which is respect your teammate, they know that.'


West Australian
an hour ago
- West Australian
Day leads Aussie FedEx tilt as great Scott misses out
A resurgent Jason Day will lead a three-pronged Australian assault on golf's FedEx Cup playoffs, but veteran Adam Scott has missed out. The US PGA Tour solidified its field of 70 golfers for the post-season event after the final round of the Wyndham Championship in North Carolina on Sunday (local time). Day, showing glimpses of his absolute best in 2025 after years of battling injuries, finished the season in 37th place. The other Aussies who qualified were Min Woo Lee in 50th spot and Cam Davis (69th). Australian rookie Karl Vilips, who claimed his first US PGA Tour event this year at the Puerto Rico Open, ended the season in 83rd spot. Vilips finished the regular season in dazzling style, scoring his first hole-in-one in the final round of the Wyndham, where he was the leading Aussie, tied for 19th place at 10 under. New Zealander Ryan Fox, a two-time winner on the US PGA Tour this season, qualified in 32nd place. Scott fired a 65 on the first day of the Wyndham but was pedestrian from there. He needed a victory to catapult from 85th into the top 70, but instead dropped back to 90th in points at season's end. American Gary Woodland, the 2019 US Open winner, was among a host of notable names who failed to qualify at the Wyndham. He had an outside shot of entering the top 70 after beginning the tournament in 75th place. Woodland opened with rounds of 67 and 64 to be near the top of the leaderboard, but back-to-back 70s on the weekend weren't enough. He tied for 23rd at the Wyndham and finished the season 72nd in points. The American was attempting to make the playoffs for the first time since he underwent surgery for a brain lesion in 2023. Germany's Matti Schmid began the regular-season finale sitting 70th in the points standings, and finished exactly where he started after tying for 31st in the tournament. Chris Kirk was the only player to climb in from outside the top 70. He tied for fifth at 14 under with four rounds in the 60s, which was enough to boost him from 73rd entering the week to 61st. The one player who lost his spot was South Korea's Byeong Hun An, who missed the cut at the Wyndham and dropped from 69th to 74th in points. Defending FedEx Cup champion Scottie Scheffler holds a large lead over Northern Ireland's Rory McIlroy as the top 70 players head to the FedEx St Jude Championship this week in Memphis, Tennessee. The next number to watch is No.50, because only the top 50 after Memphis will advance to the second leg of the playoffs. Australia's Lee holds 50th spot, with notable players currently on the outside including Venezuela's Jhonattan Vegas (No.56) and Americans Tony Finau (No.60) and Rickie Fowler (No.64).


Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
Day leads Aussie FedEx tilt as great Scott misses out
A resurgent Jason Day will lead a three-pronged Australian assault on golf's FedEx Cup playoffs, but veteran Adam Scott has missed out. The US PGA Tour solidified its field of 70 golfers for the post-season event after the final round of the Wyndham Championship in North Carolina on Sunday (local time). Day, showing glimpses of his absolute best in 2025 after years of battling injuries, finished the season in 37th place. The other Aussies who qualified were Min Woo Lee in 50th spot and Cam Davis (69th). Australian rookie Karl Vilips, who claimed his first US PGA Tour event this year at the Puerto Rico Open, ended the season in 83rd spot. Vilips finished the regular season in dazzling style, scoring his first hole-in-one in the final round of the Wyndham, where he was the leading Aussie, tied for 19th place at 10 under. New Zealander Ryan Fox, a two-time winner on the US PGA Tour this season, qualified in 32nd place. Scott fired a 65 on the first day of the Wyndham but was pedestrian from there. He needed a victory to catapult from 85th into the top 70, but instead dropped back to 90th in points at season's end. American Gary Woodland, the 2019 US Open winner, was among a host of notable names who failed to qualify at the Wyndham. He had an outside shot of entering the top 70 after beginning the tournament in 75th place. Woodland opened with rounds of 67 and 64 to be near the top of the leaderboard, but back-to-back 70s on the weekend weren't enough. He tied for 23rd at the Wyndham and finished the season 72nd in points. The American was attempting to make the playoffs for the first time since he underwent surgery for a brain lesion in 2023. Germany's Matti Schmid began the regular-season finale sitting 70th in the points standings, and finished exactly where he started after tying for 31st in the tournament. Chris Kirk was the only player to climb in from outside the top 70. He tied for fifth at 14 under with four rounds in the 60s, which was enough to boost him from 73rd entering the week to 61st. The one player who lost his spot was South Korea's Byeong Hun An, who missed the cut at the Wyndham and dropped from 69th to 74th in points. Defending FedEx Cup champion Scottie Scheffler holds a large lead over Northern Ireland's Rory McIlroy as the top 70 players head to the FedEx St Jude Championship this week in Memphis, Tennessee. The next number to watch is No.50, because only the top 50 after Memphis will advance to the second leg of the playoffs. Australia's Lee holds 50th spot, with notable players currently on the outside including Venezuela's Jhonattan Vegas (No.56) and Americans Tony Finau (No.60) and Rickie Fowler (No.64).