Soccer-Australia coach hopes Trump attends World Cup match against US


Soccer Football - World Cup - AFC Qualifiers - Group C - Saudi Arabia v Australia - King Abdullah Sports City Stadium, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia - June 10, 2025 Australia coach Tony Popovic reacts REUTERS/Stringer

MELBOURNE, May 4 (Reuters) - Australia coach Tony Popovic ⁠said it would be "wonderful" if Donald Trump were to watch their World Cup match against ⁠the United States in Seattle, saying the U.S. President's presence would motivate his team.

Trump is expected ‌to attend the co-hosts' matches, which include a group stage game against Popovic's Socceroos at the 72,000-seat Seattle Stadium on June 19.

"I don't know if he wants to come and watch the U.S. play, I'm sure I'd expect him to come and watch them at ​the World Cup," Popovic told reporters in Sydney on Monday.

"If he ⁠chooses to watch Australia, that's wonderful for ⁠us. It would make it even more special in trying to win that game."

Australia midfielder and occasional captain ⁠Jackson ‌Irvine said last week that FIFA awarding Trump its inaugural Peace Prize made a "mockery" of the governing body's Human Rights Policy, and voiced concern for LGBT rights in the U.S.

Popovic, however, said he was ⁠not bothered by the political climate in the U.S. as he ​prepares to head to Sarasota, Florida, ‌for a pre-World Cup camp.

The World Cup, also co-hosted by Canada and Mexico, starts on June ⁠11.

"We've already been ​in the U.S. (in) October and November. We've had no issues there," Popovic said of Australia's tour of the nation for friendly matches.

"We've enjoyed both experiences - on and off the park. We were well looked after. We had a great time, whether ⁠that was casually or obviously professionally with training and playing.

"Jackson's ​a big boy. He has his opinions. My focus is on the team and that's not really something that I've wasted any energy on."

A contingent of eight players will arrive at Australia's Florida camp this week, including 2022 World ⁠Cup heroes Harry Souttar and Mathew Leckie.

More will follow as club seasons wind down.

Britain-based centre-back Souttar has barely played in a year and a half since an Achilles injury in late-2024, while 35-year-old Melbourne City winger Leckie has been on the comeback trail after a long recovery from hip surgery.

Popovic suggested both would be included ​in his final World Cup squad if they could prove their fitness in ⁠Florida, while raving about Leckie's performance over the weekend in City's shootout defeat by Auckland FC in the A-League ​playoffs.

"Mathew Leckie was the best player on the park at 35, ‌with no football under his belt," he said.

"That’s the difference, ​and that’s what you need at a World Cup. Now will he make the World Cup? That will come down to his body."

(Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

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