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Calm, composed Socceroos primed to take down Japan

Calm, composed Socceroos primed to take down Japan

The Advertiser2 days ago

Socceroos coach Tony Popovic is brimming with confidence Australia can beat Japan for the first time since 2009 and earn automatic qualification for the 2026 World Cup.
The arch rivals will lock horns in front of more than 50,000 fans at Perth's Optus Stadium on Thursday night, and there's plenty on the line for the Socceroos.
While Japan (20 points) have already qualified for the World Cup, Australia (13 points) and Saudi Arabia (10 points) are locked in a fight for the second automatic qualifying berth.
If Australia beat an understrength Japan, it will almost certainly be enough to snare a World Cup berth, barring a huge loss in the vicinity of five goals to Saudi Arabia in Jeddah next Tuesday.
The Socceroos' last win over Japan was a 2-1 victory in a World Cup qualifier at the MCG in 2009.
Since then, Japan have won six and drawn four of their 10 matches against Australia.
Australia are desperate to turn the tables.
The Socceroos came close in October, when they snatched a shock lead on enemy territory, only for Japan to fight back for a 1-1 draw.
Popovic feels his side is now ready to snare all three points.
"When that whistle blows, I'm very confident the players will go out there and execute in a very calm, composed manner, with confidence of winning the game," Popovic said.
"I think the growth in development and the way the team has evolved is clear.
"We all see that, we understand there is a lot more growth in us, but we are a much better team than we were in October.
"We set that as a target to be in this position, that we can qualify automatically.
"We just need to finish the job off and we know that we can take a major step by winning.
"It's been a long time since Australia has beaten Japan, but I have a lot of confidence that this group can do that."
Japan have brought across a youth-laden squad missing the likes of regular stars such as Kaoru Mitoma (Brighton & Hove Albion), Daizen Maida (Celtic), Reo Hatate (Celtic), Takumi Minamino (Monaco), Ritsu Doan (Freiburg), Junya Ito (Reims) and Hidemasa Morita (Sporting Lisbon).
Despite that, Popovic is wary of the threat they pose, and is taking nothing for granted.
Australia are also missing a host of players, with Jackson Irvine (foot), Craig Goodwin (foot), Mathew Leckie (hamstring), Nishan Velupillay (ankle) and Nestory Irankunda (hamstring) among a lengthy unavailable list.
Socceroos coach Tony Popovic is brimming with confidence Australia can beat Japan for the first time since 2009 and earn automatic qualification for the 2026 World Cup.
The arch rivals will lock horns in front of more than 50,000 fans at Perth's Optus Stadium on Thursday night, and there's plenty on the line for the Socceroos.
While Japan (20 points) have already qualified for the World Cup, Australia (13 points) and Saudi Arabia (10 points) are locked in a fight for the second automatic qualifying berth.
If Australia beat an understrength Japan, it will almost certainly be enough to snare a World Cup berth, barring a huge loss in the vicinity of five goals to Saudi Arabia in Jeddah next Tuesday.
The Socceroos' last win over Japan was a 2-1 victory in a World Cup qualifier at the MCG in 2009.
Since then, Japan have won six and drawn four of their 10 matches against Australia.
Australia are desperate to turn the tables.
The Socceroos came close in October, when they snatched a shock lead on enemy territory, only for Japan to fight back for a 1-1 draw.
Popovic feels his side is now ready to snare all three points.
"When that whistle blows, I'm very confident the players will go out there and execute in a very calm, composed manner, with confidence of winning the game," Popovic said.
"I think the growth in development and the way the team has evolved is clear.
"We all see that, we understand there is a lot more growth in us, but we are a much better team than we were in October.
"We set that as a target to be in this position, that we can qualify automatically.
"We just need to finish the job off and we know that we can take a major step by winning.
"It's been a long time since Australia has beaten Japan, but I have a lot of confidence that this group can do that."
Japan have brought across a youth-laden squad missing the likes of regular stars such as Kaoru Mitoma (Brighton & Hove Albion), Daizen Maida (Celtic), Reo Hatate (Celtic), Takumi Minamino (Monaco), Ritsu Doan (Freiburg), Junya Ito (Reims) and Hidemasa Morita (Sporting Lisbon).
Despite that, Popovic is wary of the threat they pose, and is taking nothing for granted.
Australia are also missing a host of players, with Jackson Irvine (foot), Craig Goodwin (foot), Mathew Leckie (hamstring), Nishan Velupillay (ankle) and Nestory Irankunda (hamstring) among a lengthy unavailable list.
Socceroos coach Tony Popovic is brimming with confidence Australia can beat Japan for the first time since 2009 and earn automatic qualification for the 2026 World Cup.
The arch rivals will lock horns in front of more than 50,000 fans at Perth's Optus Stadium on Thursday night, and there's plenty on the line for the Socceroos.
While Japan (20 points) have already qualified for the World Cup, Australia (13 points) and Saudi Arabia (10 points) are locked in a fight for the second automatic qualifying berth.
If Australia beat an understrength Japan, it will almost certainly be enough to snare a World Cup berth, barring a huge loss in the vicinity of five goals to Saudi Arabia in Jeddah next Tuesday.
The Socceroos' last win over Japan was a 2-1 victory in a World Cup qualifier at the MCG in 2009.
Since then, Japan have won six and drawn four of their 10 matches against Australia.
Australia are desperate to turn the tables.
The Socceroos came close in October, when they snatched a shock lead on enemy territory, only for Japan to fight back for a 1-1 draw.
Popovic feels his side is now ready to snare all three points.
"When that whistle blows, I'm very confident the players will go out there and execute in a very calm, composed manner, with confidence of winning the game," Popovic said.
"I think the growth in development and the way the team has evolved is clear.
"We all see that, we understand there is a lot more growth in us, but we are a much better team than we were in October.
"We set that as a target to be in this position, that we can qualify automatically.
"We just need to finish the job off and we know that we can take a major step by winning.
"It's been a long time since Australia has beaten Japan, but I have a lot of confidence that this group can do that."
Japan have brought across a youth-laden squad missing the likes of regular stars such as Kaoru Mitoma (Brighton & Hove Albion), Daizen Maida (Celtic), Reo Hatate (Celtic), Takumi Minamino (Monaco), Ritsu Doan (Freiburg), Junya Ito (Reims) and Hidemasa Morita (Sporting Lisbon).
Despite that, Popovic is wary of the threat they pose, and is taking nothing for granted.
Australia are also missing a host of players, with Jackson Irvine (foot), Craig Goodwin (foot), Mathew Leckie (hamstring), Nishan Velupillay (ankle) and Nestory Irankunda (hamstring) among a lengthy unavailable list.

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Socceroos forward Brandon Borrello says they want to beat Saudi Arabia, not just qualify for World Cup
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Socceroos forward Brandon Borrello says they want to beat Saudi Arabia, not just qualify for World Cup

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Socceroos itching to confirm World Cup fate
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Socceroos itching to confirm World Cup fate
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The Socceroos will move on from the "frustrating" wait to have their tickets to the World Cup finals officially stamped and set their sights on sealing the deal in Saudi Arabia. Aziz Behich's wonderful 90th-minute goal against Japan delivered a 1-0 victory in Perth and almost certainly confirmed direct qualification for next year's tournament in North America. Socceroos players watched together from their hotel as the Saudis beat Bahrain 2-0 overnight, when a draw or loss would have sealed Australia's berth. Tony Popovic's Australia (16 points, plus eight goal difference) are still well and truly in the box seat to finish second behind Japan ahead of Saudi Arabia (13 points, zero goal difference). A win, draw or defeat by less than five goals in Jeddah on Wednesday morning (AEST) will confirm Australia's sixth consecutive World Cup finals appearance. Striker Brandon Borrello said of the Bahrain-Saudi result: "Frustrating. I'll leave it at that. It was probably just frustrating. "We have to approach the game regardless of Bahrain winning or losing. "The boss speaks to his elite standards that we have. It's just got to be the same ... so no-one drops the standards. "Obviously it's frustrating in that sense, but today's a new day, and we've just got to approach it the way we would (normally)." The Socceroos and Saudi Arabia, led by Herve Renard, drew 0-0 last time out in Melbourne. "We have to go to Saudi and get a result. They have to win by five ... we're going there to win regardless," Borrello said. "It's obviously going to be a very heated game but we're up for the challenge." Popovic's charges are now focused on recovery. When asked if sealing qualification in Saudi would be more satisfying than having it confirmed at 3am in their hotel rooms, Borrello said: "I don't think it matters how you qualify, as long as you do qualify." While there were scenes of elation and tears of happiness for the Socceroos on Thursday night, Borrello, who described the win as a reflection of "true-blue Australian grit", was measured on Friday. "I'm being honest - without sounding arrogant, our intention was to go and beat Japan regardless. And that was the way we spoke," Borrello said. "That was the language we used around it: we're going to win. "Obviously, last night, we created a bit of history. It's been a while since we beat Japan, and we knew it was going to happen. "And the boss said pretty much, if we believe in ourselves half as much as what he believes in us, that we're going to win. So that's what we did."

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