logo
'Sometimes fairytales come true': Socceroos clinch World Cup berth against the odds

'Sometimes fairytales come true': Socceroos clinch World Cup berth against the odds

The Socceroos will head to a sixth consecutive World Cup after beating Saudi Arabia 2-1 to complete an incredible turnaround in qualifying.
After their upset 1-0 win over Japan, the Socceroos only needed to avoid defeat by less than five goals in their final game in Jeddah to seal automatic World Cup finals qualification for the first time in 12 years.
Saudi forward Abdulrahman Al-Aboud scored in the 19th minute at the King Abdullah Sports City Stadium to make things tense.
But striker Mitch Duke teed up Connor Metcalfe to equalise in the 42nd minute, before putting Australia in front in the 48th.
In his 100th appearance, goalkeeper and captain Mat Ryan denied Salem Al-Dawsari from the penalty spot in the 84th minute to seal victory.
Exactly a year before the start of next year's finals in the United States, Canada and Mexico, Australia (19 points, +9 goal difference) qualify in the second automatic spot behind Japan (23 points, +27) and ahead of Saudi Arabia (13 points, -1).
"It'd be nice if I could work out how to freeze time," Ryan said.
"You sit down together as a group and you work out how you can be successful. The final moment where it comes - that feeling - that's why we keep going and going for moments like this, the dedication, the sacrifice."
The result underlines the stellar job Tony Popovic, unbeaten as national team manager, has done since taking over in September, after Graham Arnold claimed just a point from Australia's first two games.
"Very satisfying, right now. I'm sure it'll sink in as the days go by," Popovic said of the "very special" accomplishment.
"It's been a very intense period since I've joined and I've loved it so far.
"We've done the first part, qualifying automatically, and now the next part is to be bigger and better for the World Cup."
Herve Renard's charges join fourth-placed Indonesia in the next round of qualifiers.
Martin Boyle dragged a shot wide in the 18th minute and Saudi Arabia immediately took the ball up the other end and scored.
Attacking maestro Al-Dawsari, so often a thorn in Australia's side, lifted the ball to Firas Al-Buraikan then burst forward to get it back.
Al-Dawsari then squared the ball for Al-Aboud to tap home on the goal line via a deflectio off Ryan's glove.
Australia responded when Duke took possession on the wing then threaded a neat square ball inside for FC St. Pauli midfielder Metcalfe, who nailed his first Socceroos goal with aplomb.
Three minutes into the second half, Boyle whipped in a free kick and Duke rose to glance home his first Socceroos goal since January 2024.
Ali Majrashi received a straight red card for denial of an obvious goal scoring opportunity on Boyle in the 52nd minute but it was overturned following a lengthy VAR review.
Saudi Arabia received a late penalty when Jason Geria was ruled to have brought down Al-Dawsari but Ryan palmed the spot-kick away.
"Sometimes fairytales come true," Ryan said.
The Socceroos will head to a sixth consecutive World Cup after beating Saudi Arabia 2-1 to complete an incredible turnaround in qualifying.
After their upset 1-0 win over Japan, the Socceroos only needed to avoid defeat by less than five goals in their final game in Jeddah to seal automatic World Cup finals qualification for the first time in 12 years.
Saudi forward Abdulrahman Al-Aboud scored in the 19th minute at the King Abdullah Sports City Stadium to make things tense.
But striker Mitch Duke teed up Connor Metcalfe to equalise in the 42nd minute, before putting Australia in front in the 48th.
In his 100th appearance, goalkeeper and captain Mat Ryan denied Salem Al-Dawsari from the penalty spot in the 84th minute to seal victory.
Exactly a year before the start of next year's finals in the United States, Canada and Mexico, Australia (19 points, +9 goal difference) qualify in the second automatic spot behind Japan (23 points, +27) and ahead of Saudi Arabia (13 points, -1).
"It'd be nice if I could work out how to freeze time," Ryan said.
"You sit down together as a group and you work out how you can be successful. The final moment where it comes - that feeling - that's why we keep going and going for moments like this, the dedication, the sacrifice."
The result underlines the stellar job Tony Popovic, unbeaten as national team manager, has done since taking over in September, after Graham Arnold claimed just a point from Australia's first two games.
"Very satisfying, right now. I'm sure it'll sink in as the days go by," Popovic said of the "very special" accomplishment.
"It's been a very intense period since I've joined and I've loved it so far.
"We've done the first part, qualifying automatically, and now the next part is to be bigger and better for the World Cup."
Herve Renard's charges join fourth-placed Indonesia in the next round of qualifiers.
Martin Boyle dragged a shot wide in the 18th minute and Saudi Arabia immediately took the ball up the other end and scored.
Attacking maestro Al-Dawsari, so often a thorn in Australia's side, lifted the ball to Firas Al-Buraikan then burst forward to get it back.
Al-Dawsari then squared the ball for Al-Aboud to tap home on the goal line via a deflectio off Ryan's glove.
Australia responded when Duke took possession on the wing then threaded a neat square ball inside for FC St. Pauli midfielder Metcalfe, who nailed his first Socceroos goal with aplomb.
Three minutes into the second half, Boyle whipped in a free kick and Duke rose to glance home his first Socceroos goal since January 2024.
Ali Majrashi received a straight red card for denial of an obvious goal scoring opportunity on Boyle in the 52nd minute but it was overturned following a lengthy VAR review.
Saudi Arabia received a late penalty when Jason Geria was ruled to have brought down Al-Dawsari but Ryan palmed the spot-kick away.
"Sometimes fairytales come true," Ryan said.
The Socceroos will head to a sixth consecutive World Cup after beating Saudi Arabia 2-1 to complete an incredible turnaround in qualifying.
After their upset 1-0 win over Japan, the Socceroos only needed to avoid defeat by less than five goals in their final game in Jeddah to seal automatic World Cup finals qualification for the first time in 12 years.
Saudi forward Abdulrahman Al-Aboud scored in the 19th minute at the King Abdullah Sports City Stadium to make things tense.
But striker Mitch Duke teed up Connor Metcalfe to equalise in the 42nd minute, before putting Australia in front in the 48th.
In his 100th appearance, goalkeeper and captain Mat Ryan denied Salem Al-Dawsari from the penalty spot in the 84th minute to seal victory.
Exactly a year before the start of next year's finals in the United States, Canada and Mexico, Australia (19 points, +9 goal difference) qualify in the second automatic spot behind Japan (23 points, +27) and ahead of Saudi Arabia (13 points, -1).
"It'd be nice if I could work out how to freeze time," Ryan said.
"You sit down together as a group and you work out how you can be successful. The final moment where it comes - that feeling - that's why we keep going and going for moments like this, the dedication, the sacrifice."
The result underlines the stellar job Tony Popovic, unbeaten as national team manager, has done since taking over in September, after Graham Arnold claimed just a point from Australia's first two games.
"Very satisfying, right now. I'm sure it'll sink in as the days go by," Popovic said of the "very special" accomplishment.
"It's been a very intense period since I've joined and I've loved it so far.
"We've done the first part, qualifying automatically, and now the next part is to be bigger and better for the World Cup."
Herve Renard's charges join fourth-placed Indonesia in the next round of qualifiers.
Martin Boyle dragged a shot wide in the 18th minute and Saudi Arabia immediately took the ball up the other end and scored.
Attacking maestro Al-Dawsari, so often a thorn in Australia's side, lifted the ball to Firas Al-Buraikan then burst forward to get it back.
Al-Dawsari then squared the ball for Al-Aboud to tap home on the goal line via a deflectio off Ryan's glove.
Australia responded when Duke took possession on the wing then threaded a neat square ball inside for FC St. Pauli midfielder Metcalfe, who nailed his first Socceroos goal with aplomb.
Three minutes into the second half, Boyle whipped in a free kick and Duke rose to glance home his first Socceroos goal since January 2024.
Ali Majrashi received a straight red card for denial of an obvious goal scoring opportunity on Boyle in the 52nd minute but it was overturned following a lengthy VAR review.
Saudi Arabia received a late penalty when Jason Geria was ruled to have brought down Al-Dawsari but Ryan palmed the spot-kick away.
"Sometimes fairytales come true," Ryan said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lani Pallister breaks the 800m freestyle record and gets a hug from Dawn Fraser
Lani Pallister breaks the 800m freestyle record and gets a hug from Dawn Fraser

ABC News

time28 minutes ago

  • ABC News

Lani Pallister breaks the 800m freestyle record and gets a hug from Dawn Fraser

Lani Pallister has smashed Ariarne Titmus's Australian women's 800m freestyle record set at last year's Olympic Games. Pallister's time of 8:10.84 was more than a second faster than the old mark and five seconds under her previous personal best. It also ranks as the third-fastest swim of the year. "I'm pretty happy with that time," Pallister said, after sharing an emotional hug with godmother and Australian swimming champ Dawn Fraser poolside. "I would have liked just under eight-ten, but I think it's a big three years coming up, so to do that on eight weeks, 10 weeks of work with everyone at St Peters is huge." This year Pallister, who was previously coached by her mother Janelle Elford, moved to the St Peters squad in Queensland under Titmus's coach, Dean Boxall. "I didn't know what time I was going [during the race]," she said. "Usually, I have a little look to see if I could see the scoreboard or not, but all I could see was Dean doing these ones [mimicking fast kicking], kicking his legs on the last 50 and I was like OK 'it's either going to be real close to my best time or close to the time we spoke about'. So yeah, I'm really happy." Pallister said she was keen to get back to work to prepare for the World Championships in Singapore next month, but said the result doesn't change her goals. "It doesn't really change much, I think I'm using this year just to race, have fun," Pallister said. Multiple Olympic gold medallist Kaylee McKeown won her third title at the national swimming trials in Adelaide, taking out the 200m backstroke. "I'm not going to be harsh on myself, I am happy with that," McKeown said. "If I look back on my preparation for this year, I had four months, spent four months in a group where I wasn't finding myself really happy and made the decision a week before the national to move to Sunny [Sunshine] Coast. "I still haven't got a house to live in, I'm in Airbnb's and it has been really a hard transition. "It's just the things that people don't really see when you come in and race." Despite winning three out of three races at the nationals, McKeown has been either critical of her times, or lukewarm at best as she was on Thursday. Her time in the 200m was the fastest in the world this year, but she said it would count for nothing once the World Championships begin in Singapore next month. "No, it doesn't matter what you do here, it depends what you do on the day in an international meet," she said. "I could be doing world records here, get to an international meet and come last. "So, it really doesn't matter what I do here, what form I'm in, I've just got to get my mind right and see what I can do in a few weeks' time. Asked what was motivating her to go on, she said: "I want to go to a third Olympics." "I want to be on American soil and show them what the Aussies have," she said. Second place-getter Hannah Fredericks, who has made her first Australian team, said it was difficult to see the likes of McKeown and Mollie O'Callaghan criticise their own times. "I idolised Kaylee for example, and Mol and it's always hard to see them be so hard on themselves," she said. She said McKeown congratulated her after the swim. "She just said like, 'I'm so, so happy for you'," Fredericks said. Rio gold medallist Kyle Chalmers won the men's 100m freestyle in a time that was faster than he swam to win the silver medal at the Paris Olympics. He said his state of mind outside the pool was translating to fast times in it. "Now, I'm really happy and content," he said. "Like I've got a fantastic new coach, physiologists who are working with me every single day who believe in me 100 per cent, a fiancée who's incredible and I'm preparing to be a dad, living on a farm. "Like there's so many amazing things going on outside of the pool that I think it allows me to come here and have fun. "I'm not here with pressure and expectation, like anything I kind of achieve from this point on is just the icing on the cake in my career. "I'm physically, mentally, and emotionally in a great place and I think when all of those buckets are topped up, I can swim well in the pool." Reflecting on McKeown and O'Callaghan, who have both said during the meet that they're struggling to enjoy swimming, Chalmers said athletes had to find the right attitude to get the most out of their sport. "I mean, everyone's probably very different, like you've got to enjoy what you're doing," Chalmers said. "This is my 10th year on the Australian swimming team now and my 14th trials, like it goes so quickly. "It doesn't feel like it was that long ago when I was arriving here for, you know, London 2012 trials. "It goes so quickly, and I think it's just you've got to slow down and enjoy it." In other results, Brittany Castelluzzo made her first Australian team by winning the women's 200m butterfly final. Paralympic stars, Alexa Leary and Rohan Crothers both won their 100m freestyle events.

Trainer Gerald Ryan will unleash runners at Rosehill Gardens and Eagle Farm this Saturday
Trainer Gerald Ryan will unleash runners at Rosehill Gardens and Eagle Farm this Saturday

News.com.au

time35 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Trainer Gerald Ryan will unleash runners at Rosehill Gardens and Eagle Farm this Saturday

Master trainer Gerald Ryan was discussing his Saturday starters when inevitably the subject turned to his former brilliant sprinter and super sire Snitzel which died earlier this week. 'Snitzel was a terrific horse to a lot of people,'' Ryan said. 'His statistics as a stallion and all his stakes winners are just unbelievable.'' Ryan has trained more than 2000 winners including 25 at Group 1 level during his career and prepared some outstanding horses like Trapeze Artist, Clangalang, Snitzerland, Hurricane Sky and Paint but arguably Snitzel's win in the 2006 Oakleigh Plate was the most significant. It was an overdue Group 1 win for Snitzel that set him up for what was to be a hugely successful stallion career at Arrowfield Stud where he was four-time Australian Champion Sire. 'Snitzel deserved that Oakleigh Plate then next start he was unlucky not to beat Takeover Target in the Newmarket Handicap,'' Ryan recalled. 'We brought him back to Sydney and at his next start he won the Challenge Stakes in record time. He was an outstanding winner.'' Ryan, who trains in partnership with Sterling Alexiou these days, may not have a horse of Snitzel's ability running this weekend but his stable can still make a statement with Silentsar, Khumbila, High Blue Sea and Pajanti at their home track of Rosehill Gardens on Saturday. Silentsar ($9) and dual entry Khumbila ($26) are likely to clash in the Midway Handicap (1200m). 'We have Khumbila for the 1300m race as well but if he runs it will be in the Midway,'' Ryan said. 'But Silentsar would be the pick of our two because of his racing pattern which is suited around Rosehill. He will be up in the first three or four, he's fit and he goes well fresh.'' High Blue Sea is resuming in the Captivant At Kia Ora Handicap (1300m) but seems at generous odds of $17 given he usually sprints well fresh. Ryan said High Blue Sea is set-up to run well provided the Rosehill track rating stays a soft 6 or even improves for raceday. 'High Blue Sea has returned really well, we've been very happy with his trials and his work,'' he said. Pajanti ($16) disappointed last start but Ryan felt the mare had genuine excuses when unplaced behind Liberty State last start and can run an improved race in the Toyota Forklifts Handicap (1300m). 'She got further back than I thought she would last start then didn't have a lot of galloping room in the straight,'' Ryan said. 'She doesn't like being hemmed in too tight, either. 'We gave her a month between runs going into that race and she seems to have bounced back well. Her previous run at Randwick first-up was terrific.'' The Ryan and Alexiou stable also has big-race chances at Eagle Farm with Just Party in the Group 3 $200,000 Gunsynd Classic (1600m) and Arctic Glamour first-up in the Group 2 $300,000 Dane Ripper Stakes (1300m). Just Party resumed with a fast-finishing second to Media World in the Hawkesbury Guineas but then ran below his best when down the track behind Spicy Martini in the Fred Best Classic. 'When the Eagle Farm meeting was called off that day and the race (Fred Best) was switched to Doomben over 1350m that was the last place I would run that horse but he had to have the run,'' Ryan said. 'He has done everything right since and worked nicely Tuesday. With the 1600m at Eagle Farm and a firmer track, he will run well. 'Arctic Glamour is going really good but she never draws a barrier. She has missed a beat since she got to Brisbane earlier in the week and she just needs a bit of luck in the run.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store