Soccer-Australia's young gun Herrington hopes for Salah test at World Cup


Jun 25, 2026; Santa Clara, California, USA; Australia defender Lucas Herrington (25) passes against Paraguay during a Group D match of the 2026 FIFA World Cup at San Francisco Bay Area Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

SANTA CLARA, California, ⁠June 28 (Reuters) - After making a World Cup debut at18, defending Australia's goal ⁠from Mohamed Salah is the next box Lucas Herrington would like to ‌tick in a fast-moving career.

Egypt captain Salah is a doubt for the round of 32 clash against the Socceroos after suffering a hamstring strain during the 1-1 draw against Iran.

Centre back Herrington, however, hopes ​the former Liverpool stalwart will be fit to line ⁠up in Arlington, Texas on Friday.

"It's ⁠nice to verse (compete against) players like that. Really, that's where you want to be, ⁠that's ‌who you want to verse," Herrington told reporters at the Socceroos' training base in the San Francisco Bay Area.

"So to be given that opportunity, ⁠hopefully, it'll be special, and I can't wait."

Herrington became the ​youngest Soccerooto start a ‌match at the global tournament in a high-stakes group clash against Paraguay.

In ⁠only his fifth ​international, he barely put a foot wrong in the 0-0 draw against the South Americans, which ensured Australia would meet Egypt as the second-placed team in Group D rather than take ⁠on Germany as the third-ranked.

"That was the best ​moment of my life," said the Colorado Rapids player.

"I knew how important that game was, not just for us but for the whole country.

"So I was looking forward to ⁠it. Obviously I'd dreamed of that moment since I was a kid and I just really wanted to embrace it, enjoy it."

There may be more golden moments for Herrington in the near future.

Tony Popovic's side will bidto become the first Australia team to ​win a World Cup knockout match.

Herrington has also been ⁠linked with a move to Barcelona, a development that surprises none of his teammates.

Midfielder ​Connor Metcalfe said some players might be nervous about ‌a teenager's decision-making when under pressure in defence.

"Nothing ​really fazes him, he never looks nervous. I'm not nervous when he has the ball," said Metcalfe.

(Reporting by Ian Ransom; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

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