Australia Sam Kerr GFXGetty/GOAL

How Australia survived Sam Kerr injury absence to reach an historic Women's World Cup semi-final

When Australia stars Tameka Yallop and Lydia Williams sat down to talk to the media before the Matildas’ Women’s World Cup semi-final against England, the words ‘Til it’s done’ were boldly emblazoned on the front of the table at which they sat. It’s been the team’s motto throughout the entirety of their home tournament, one that has seen them go beyond what any Australia team has done before by reaching the last four. While these adopted mantras can sometimes become a punchline if a team underwhelms or falls at an unexpectedly early hurdle, this one has only grown in its relevance and significance with each match.

On so many occasions this past month, Australia have faced huge challenges. When Sam Kerr suffered an injury on the eve of the opening game, one that kept her on the sidelines for the entire group stage, many on the outside counted them out. But when staring failure in the face, knowing defeat to Olympic champions Canada would bring their tournament to an end before the knockout rounds, they stood up tall and pulled out a remarkable 4-0 win.

In the quarter-finals, after seeing chance after chance go begging during the game, Australia went to a penalty shootout against France - one which would become the longest in Women’s World cup history. On three occasions, they had to score to stay in the tournament. Katrina Gorry, Yallop and Ellie Carpenter all held their nerve. And when Cortnee Vine stepped up as the 10th penalty taker, knowing that her kick could secure passage to the semi-finals, she did, too.

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The biggest moment yet will come on Wednesday, though. At a packed Stadium Australia, where almost everyone in attendance will be rooting for them, the Matildas will take on the European champions, England, for a place in the 2023 Women’s World Cup final. They’ll need every ounce of that never-say-die attitude as they try to ensure it is indeed not done.

But the way they’ve come through tough moments so far, all while Kerr – their talismanic captain, their star player and one of the best footballers on the planet – has been restricted to just two substitute appearances has been incredibly impressive. Just how have they done it?