Townsville Bulletin

Cahill fate down to rub of the cream

- DAVID DAVUTOVIC

TIM Cahill declared operation Honduras a tougher task than Uruguay in 2005, while refusing to make any Socceroos selection promises.

Cahill will be assessed by Socceroos physio Les Gelis when he arrives in San Pedro Sula this afternoon ( about 1pm AEDT), but appears to be in huge doubt for Saturday’s World Cup qualifier.

The Melbourne City attacker’s ankle was still swollen after he strained ligaments on Friday night, with Cahill spending the bulk of his 26- hour journey to Honduras getting treatment from Socceroos masseur Luke Attwell.

Before boarding, Cahill wouldn’t even confirm he would be ready for the second leg but vowed to contribute in a repeat of the Uruguay playoffs 12 years ago.

“Harder ( than Uruguay). Way harder. The travel, circumstan­ces, location and a different group of boys,’’ Cahill said.

“It’s the biggest two weeks of our lives. If we get to a World Cup, that’s all that matters.

“I can’t promise anything. I can’t even say that ( he will be ready for second leg on November 15). But I’m giving myself every chance.”

Ange Postecoglo­u and the medical team chose to delay Cahill’s flight by 24 hours, with the Socceroos’ record scorer revealing the lengths he has gone to in a bid to reduce swelling since limping off at AAMI Park.

“We’ve got a 15- hour flight, so I’ll get probably four treatments plus ice on it the whole way there,’’ he said.

“It was the most ( treatment) I’ve ever done in my life ( before going), but I made sure I got eight hours’ sleep. The moment I ( woke up) it was ( treated).”

 ?? DICEY CALL: Tim Cahill is racing to be fit for Australia's vital World Cup playoff against Honduras. ??
DICEY CALL: Tim Cahill is racing to be fit for Australia's vital World Cup playoff against Honduras.

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