Sam Kerr should stay as Matildas captain after UK court case, says vice-captain Emily van Egmond

Joanna Guelas
AAP
Emily van Egmond has endorsed the call for fellow Matildas veteran Sam Kerr to stay on as skipper.
Emily van Egmond has endorsed the call for fellow Matildas veteran Sam Kerr to stay on as skipper. Credit: James Worsfold/Getty Images

Veteran Matildas midfielder Emily van Egmond has rubbished calls for Sam Kerr to step down as captain ahead of the star striker’s return to the national team.

Kerr will attend Australia’s training camp in a non-playing capacity for their two-match friendly series against South Korea on home soil after addressing her recent UK court case with the Football Australia board.

The 31-year-old was not disciplined by FA, with the governing body finding the matter warranted no further action following her acquittal of causing racially aggravated harassment of a police officer in February.

Sign up to The Nightly's newsletters.

Get the first look at the digital newspaper, curated daily stories and breaking headlines delivered to your inbox.

Email Us
By continuing you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.

Her English club, Chelsea, also concluded Kerr’s subsequent apologies warranted no further action.

Kerr had been charged after calling a police officer “f***ing stupid and white” late in an hour-long, drunken altercation at a Twickenham police station in the early hours of January 30, 2023.

She apologised after the court hearing “for expressing myself poorly on what was a traumatic evening”.

Matildas vice-captain van Egmond said Kerr had the support of teammates and did not expect her to hand over the armband to stand-in captain Steph Catley.

“No, she definitely should not be stepping down,” van Egmond said on Tuesday.

“The federation (FA) has come out and said what they need to say, and obviously Sammy had her side to say as well.

“As teammates and a team, we’re in full support for her.”

Kerr’s return to the Matildas is part of her rehabilitation from an anterior cruciate ligament injury suffered during a Chelsea training camp in January last year.

Van Egmond, a long-time international teammate of Kerr, said her inclusion has only energised the squad ahead of Friday’s match at Allianz Stadium in Sydney.

The pair have been playing alongside each other since 2008 in the Australian U17 squad.

Kerr’s first camp since the February court case will be under interim coach Tom Sermanni, who debuted Kerr as a 15-year-old in 2009.

“We obviously found out last minute (that Kerr would be joining camp), but it was a really nice surprise,” van Egmond said.

“Sammy has been such an important figure for this team for X amount of years now.

“The first thing is removing Sam Kerr the footballer from Sam Kerr the human being, and just making sure that she was OK.

“She’s just really happy to be here. It’s been so long.

“She only helps the team in positive ways so for us, it’s really, really nice just to see her here again and be a part of the group.”

It’s hoped Kerr, not yet cleared to play for club or country, will return to face Argentina in Melbourne on May 30 and Canberra on June 2.

Comments

Latest Edition

The Nightly cover for 02-04-2025

Latest Edition

Edition Edition 2 April 20252 April 2025

Trade wars, secret ships and election meddling: Our perilous place in the new world order.