World Cup

Salah Fitness Fear Puts Egypt On Edge Before Australia Knockout Test

The Egypt captain has suffered a hamstring strain, according to reports citing the Egyptian federation, leaving the Pharaohs waiting on their biggest player before a historic Round of 32 clash.

Mohamed Salah has become Egypt’s biggest worry before their World Cup knockout clash with Australia.

The Egypt captain has suffered a hamstring strain, according to reports citing the Egyptian federation, placing his availability under doubt before the Pharaohs’ first World Cup knockout game. The federation said tests confirmed the injury, but did not state whether Salah would miss the Round of 32 tie.

It also said he had already started a recovery programme.

That uncertainty now shapes Egypt’s build-up.

Salah has been one of Egypt’s key attacking figures in the campaign. He started all three group matches, scored against New Zealand and provided assists against New Zealand and Belgium.

Now Egypt must wait.

The Liverpool forward felt pain during the match against Iran and was forced off. The injury has since been identified as a hamstring strain, but Egypt have not announced a final decision on his availability for Australia.

That distinction matters.

Salah is injured. But he has not been ruled out.

For Egypt, the difference is huge. With Salah, the Pharaohs carry sharper movement, a stronger transition outlet and a player Australia must constantly account for.

Without him, the pressure shifts.

Egypt would need more from the supporting cast that has made them more dangerous than expected in this tournament. They would also need greater control in midfield and cleaner decisions in the final third.

Australia will not make that easy.

The Socceroos are physical, direct and difficult to break down. They will test Egypt’s rhythm, concentration and ability to handle pressure in a knockout game.

That makes Salah’s fitness the central story.

Egypt have already made history by reaching this stage. Now they have a chance to push further, but their biggest player is racing against time.

The Pharaohs still have technical quality. They still have belief. They still have a route into the match.

But ahead of Australia, one question now sits above everything else.

Can Salah recover in time to lead Egypt into their biggest World Cup night?

Independent Digital News Network

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