Tag: Perth Glory

  • Socceroos vs Lebanon LIVE: ‘X-Factor’ benched on long-awaited return as 25yo beast gets big chance

    Socceroos vs Lebanon LIVE: ‘X-Factor’ benched on long-awaited return as 25yo beast gets big chance

    An illness to veteran forward Craig Goodwin and a host of injuries has forced a Socceroos shake-up as the Australians face Lebanon in World Cup qualifying (8.10pm AEDT).

    Australia are back in action for the first time since their disappointing quarter-final exit at the Asian Cup, with focus turning now to world No. 115 Cedars.

    The Socceroos are targeting a pair of victories when they face Lebanon tonight in Sydney and in Canberra on Tuesday – the latter officially a Lebanon home game that was moved down under due to instability in the Middle East.

    Two wins would guarantee the Socceroos a place in the third stage of Asian Football Confederation (AFC) qualifying for the 2026 World Cup with two games in hand.

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    The Socceroos beat Bangladesh 7-0 and Palestine 1-0 in their first two World Cup qualifiers – and still have to play those two teams again – while Lebanon drew 0-0 against both nations.

    Lebanon are expected to set up defensively and try to hit the Socceroos with rapid counter-attacks, with Socceroos coach Graham Arnold hoping his side can show their offensive weaponry in the final third.

    “What I want to see and expect to see is some positive things in the final third … and the boys going for it,” Arnold said yesterday.

    “That’s important for me. I feel in that middle third, we’re very good, then we get in the final third, and a lot of it’s down to the individual, and that’s what I expect.”

    The two teams have faced off twice in friendly matches, with Australia winning both 3-0.

    Craig Goodwin has been ruled out due to illness.Source: Getty Images

    But it’s not going to be an easy test.

    Jackson Irvine said: “These games just continually get harder as the competition in Asia gets more difficult. I think the standard is getting higher across the Confederation. All the way through, we’ve been tested more and more in these games as time has gone on.”

    Should the Socceroos win both matches and book their place in the next stage of qualifying, they will be one of 18 teams split into three groups of six. Each team plays the others in their group at home and away, with the top two teams from each group directly qualifying for the World Cup jointly held in the USA, Canada and Mexico.

    The third and fourth-placed teams continue to a fourth stage of AFC qualifying – but the Socceroos will hope to avoid the kind of last-ditch qualification journey that saw them book their place in Qatar 2022 only in an intercontinental playoff against Peru.

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    TEAM NEWS

    The Socceroos have been struck down by a wave of injuries, with three forced changes to the starting team followed by a fourth for form reasons.

    Winger Martin Boyle is absent after recently suffering a sickening head knock for his club Hibernian, while Marco Tilio, Aziz Behich, and Awer Mabil are all injured.

    Aiden O’Neill is suspended after being sent off in the Asian Cup quarter-final, a 2-1 extra time loss to South Korea – but an ankle injury would have ruled him out regardless.

    And right-back Lewis Miller was called up to the squad only to suffer a hamstring injury while playing in Scotland that has now ruled him out.

    Meanwhile, veteran winger Craig Goodwin (of English second-tier team Middlesbrough) came down sick while flying home and did not link up with the squad as he recovers. He will not play tonight but the Socceroos are hopeful their regular set-piece taker will return for Tuesday’s match.

    Fans will have to wait for the substitions to see a long-awaited return for ‘X-Factor’ playmaker Ajdin Hrustic, who was stuck in club limbo for nearly all of 2023 before securing a move to the Netherlands where much-needed match minutes earned him a recall to the national team.

    He played just one of the Socceroos’ 14 matches since the start of 2023.

    Arnold said: “I think it’s great to see [Hrustic] back playing. I have been watching him play in Holland, but yesterday was probably the first time I’ve seen him live since, doing the training session, to see the 11 v 11. But it’s great to have him back, he brings that X factor for us that can change games and that’s important.”

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    Ajdin Hrustic had a nightmare stint at Hellas Verona in Italy, but is back playing … and back in the Socceroos.Source: Getty Images

    Perth Glory striker Adam Taggart’s rich vein of scoring form earned him a first start since September 2022, alongside in-form Portsmouth forward Kusini Yengi.

    He replaces Duke in one of four changes from the Socceroos’ last match – with the ruled-out trio of Behich, Boyle, and Goodwin forcing Arnold’s hand.

    Kye Rowles will deputise at left-back for the injured Aziz Behich, with young gun Jordan Bos having mostly been used as a winger under Arnold instead of his natural left-back role. But Bos was left out of the starting line-up completely, with Riley McGree set to start at winger.

    Meanwhile 21-year-old midfielder Patrick Yazbek – a Lebanese-Australian – will be hoping to make an emotional debut, while fellow midfielder Josh Nisbet, striker John Iredale, and goalkeeper Thomas Glover are also potential debutants this series.

    CONFIRMED STARTING XI (Possible line-up 4-3-3, L-R)

    Mathew Ryan (GK, C)

    Kye Rowles, Harry Souttar, Cameron Burgess, Nathaniel Atkinson,

    Jackson Irvine, Keanu Baccus, Connor Metcalfe,

    Riley McGree, Adam Taggart, Kusini Yengi.

    FULL SOCCEROOS SQUAD

    Goalkeepers: Maty Ryan (captain), Thomas Glover, Joe Gauci

    Defenders: Harry Souttar, Kye Rowles, Cameron Burgess, Nathaniel Atkinson, Jordan Bos, Thomas Deng, Gethin Jones,

    Midfielders: Jackson Irvine, Keanu Baccus, Ajdin Hrustic, Craig Goodwin, Connor Metcalfe, Riley McGree, Patrick Yazbek, Josh Nisbet

    Forwards: Mitchell Duke, Adam Taggart, Kusini Yengi, John Iredale, Bruno Fornaroli, Brandon Borrello, Sam Silvera

    MATCH CENTRE: Live stats and more!

    LIVE BLOG

    Follow all the action in our live blog below. If you can’t see the blog, click here.

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  • Adam Taggart feels better placed than ever to push World Cup cause

    Adam Taggart feels better placed than ever to push World Cup cause

    It’s been two years since Adam Taggart last played for the Socceroos and it’s two years until the next World Cup, so the recalled striker has a narrow focus on simply performing against Lebanon in Sydney on Thursday, freed up by the comforts of home.

    Taggart earned a call-up from national coach Graham Arnold on the back of 15 goals in 19 appearances for Perth Glory in the A-League this season, including his team’s only two goals against Newcastle with the Socceroos’ boss watching that cemented his place.

    The 30-year-old again found the net in a 2-1 loss to the Wanderers last weekend, and having returned from four seasons playing in Korea and then Japan, Taggart felt like he was perfectly placed mentally to make the most of his opportunity.

    “It’s always been something at the back of my mind,” he said of a return to the international set-up, having last played for the Socceroos in September 2022.

    “Coming back to Australia was just one of those things to get back to enjoying football and scoring goals.

    “I knew that if I could get back into a rhythm, then the national team is always something that all of us want to be involved in.”

    Taggart said the glut of games he played in Asia took its toll and the load impeded his chances of being fit at the right times for Arnold to look his way.

    But a better balance at the Glory has resulted in his best form and at the right time, with Taggart and Bruno Fornaroli, who also has 15 goals in the A-League this season, set for the scoring duties in two clashes against Lebanon in Sydney and then Canberra.

    “I think playing in Asia in the four years leading up to coming back to Perth, your loads are always higher, it’s a lot harder to stay fit I found,” he said.

    “That was always the biggest challenge and you know when I was fit I seem to be doing all right, but that was always the biggest challenge and has been a big challenge for me my whole career.

    “So I think just going back to Perth getting into a good training schedule something that you know fits in with my family and the weekly routine that gets me ready for a game has probably worked really well for me and I think this season I’ve been able to play most games.

    Adam Taggart has been in hot goalscoring form for the Glory. Picture: James Worsfold/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

    “I‘ve always probably been a bit in and out of the this squad a lot, sometimes due to injuries, sometimes due to form and game time when I was younger, so it’s probably been a bit of a story of my international career, so it always means something to be back involved and I obviously cherish being in here and I’m looking forward to trying to contribute as much as I can and show what it means to me.”

    Taggart also knows injuries to others have opened the door for him and a lot can happen between now and the 2026 World Cup when it comes to selection.

    “I think there’s two years of a long time, still a lot can happen and it’s always going to be based on form and how you’re performing for the national team up until then,” he said.

    “So I’ll be trying to take this opportunity with both hands and I’ll just do the best that I can. As a striker it’s always about scoring goals, so I’ll be looking to do that.”

    FULL SOCCEROOS SQUAD TO FACE LEBANON

    Goalkeepers: Mathew Ryan, Joe Gauci, Thomas Glover

    Defenders: Nathaniel Atkinson, Jordan Bos, Cameron Burgess, Thomas Deng, Gethin Jones, Lewis Miller, Kye Rowles, Harry Souttar

    Midfielders: Keanu Baccus, Ajdin Hrustic, Jackson Irvine, Riley McGree, Connor Metcalfe, Patrick Yazbek

    Forwards: Brandon Borrello, Mitchell Duke, Bruno Fornaroli, Craig Goodwin, John Iredale, Sam Silvera, Adam Taggart, Kusini Yengi

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  • Breaking: Exiled star earns Socceroos recall after nightmare 18 months as injury crisis strikes

    Breaking: Exiled star earns Socceroos recall after nightmare 18 months as injury crisis strikes

    Graham Arnold has named an extended 25-man Socceroos squad to face Lebanon in World Cup qualification, with a number of stunning recalls amid an injury and suspension crisis.

    Australia face Lebanon in Sydney (March 21) and Canberra (26th), where a pair of wins would book the Socceroos’ place in the next stage of Asian qualification for the 2026 World Cup.

    24-cap playmaker Ajdin Hrustic is undoubtedly the biggest inclusion in the squad for Australia’s first matches since a disappointing quarter-final exit at the Asian Cup.

    The creative midfielder was a standout in Australia’s qualification journey to the 2022 World Cup, only to be restricted to just a handful of minutes during the tournament proper due to an ankle injury.

    He underwent surgery after the tournament before being sent into virtual exile at Serie A club Hellas Verona. His lack of game time meant he played just once for the Socceroos in 2023 – a 45-minute appearance last May.

    But in February, the 27-year-old finally sealed an exit from Verona, joining Eredivisie relegation battlers Heracles Almelo. He has subsequently played five straight games, picking up a goal.

    His return to form is a huge boost for a Socceroos team that has often struggled to break down organised, packed defences – while his set-piece ability provides another valuable weapon to the Socceroos’ offensive arsenal.

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    Ajdin Hrustic endured a nightmare run at Serie A side Hellas Verona.Source: Getty Images

    Perth Glory striker Adam Taggart also earns a recall as Arnold searches for depth up front – what has become something of a problem position for the green and gold.

    Taggart has 14 goals in 18 appearances in the A-League Men’s this season, and scored twice for Glory in a 2-2 draw with Newcastle on the weekend in front of a watching Arnold.

    The 30-year-old has not appeared for the Socceroos since September 2022.

    Western Sydney Wanderers striker Brandon Borrello has also been recalled after recovering from an ankle injury that saw him miss the Asian Cup.

    Martin Boyle will be absent after suffering a sickening head knock for his club Hibernian, while Marco Tilio, Aziz Behich, and Awer Mabil are all injured.

    Aiden O’Neill is suspended after being sent off in the Asian Cup quarter-final, a 2-1 extra time loss to South Korea – but an ankle injury would have ruled him out regardless.

    Right-back Lewis Miller was named in the squad, just hours after suffering an injury while playing for Scottish club side Hibernian. Miller was forced from the field in the first half of Hibs’ 2-2 draw at Ross County and is now in doubt.

    The raft of injuries and unavailability has seen 21-year-old Patrick Yazbek promoted from the under-23s Olyroos team, after being initially named to play for that side in a tournament in Saudi Arabia this window.

    The Viking FK defensive midfielder is one of three potential debutants, alongside striker John Iredale (SV Wehen Wiesbaden in Germany) and gloveman Thomas Glover.

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    “As a group we took a lot away from our time in Qatar and I’ve got no doubt that we’ll be better for the experience as we work towards World Cup qualification,” Arnold said in a statement.

    “We selected a number of younger, inexperienced players for the Asian Cup with the view of giving them more opportunities at international level as well as exposing them to tournament conditions.

    “It’s part of our continued regeneration of the senior national team squad, ensuring that in two years’ time we have the depth and experience required to succeed on international football’s biggest stage.”

    “We’ve gone with a similar squad to the one we took to the Asian Cup, and they’ll be prepared to face a side in Lebanon that have a lot to play for,” added Arnold.

    “It’ll be a great test for the group and one I know they’re very much looking forward to,” Arnold concluded.

    There is no room for 33-year-old Mathew Leckie, whose international future appears set to be over with Arnold turning to the future. His Melbourne City teammate Jamie Maclaren is also absent.

    The Socceroos currently sit top of Group I in the AFC’s second round of World Cup qualifiers with two wins (six points) from two matches.

    Lebanon is in second with two points, while Palestine and Bangladesh each have one point.

    The top two nations progress to the third round, where 18 teams are split into three groups of six.

    FULL SQUAD

    Nathaniel Atkinson, Keanu Baccus, Brandon Borrello, Jordy Bos, Cameron Burgess, Thomas Deng, Mitchell Duke, Bruno Fornaroli, Joe Gauci (Gk), Thomas Glover (Gk), Craig Goodwin, Ajdin Hrustic, John Iredale, Jackson Irvine, Gethin Jones, Riley Mcgree, Connor Metcalfe, Lewis Miller, Kye Rowles, Mathew Ryan (Gk) (C), Sam Silvera, Harry Souttar, Adam Taggart, Patrick Yazbek, Kusini Yengi

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  • Property tycoon Ross Pelligra has become the new owner of Perth Glory

    Property tycoon Ross Pelligra has become the new owner of Perth Glory

    Property mogul Ross Pelligra has been confirmed as Perth Glory’s new owner.

    The Melbourne multi-millionaire – who also owns Italian third division club Catania as well as baseball, basketball and ice hockey teams in Adelaide and Canberra – intends to re-establish the Glory as “a benchmark club of Australian football”.

    The Pelligra Group will reportedly pledge $4 million per year to the Glory, who have been funded by the financially embattled Australian Professional Leagues since former owner and chairman Tony Sage was stripped of the club’s licence in July last year.

    “Sport is a great passion of mine and over the years I have invested in other sporting clubs in Australia and in Italy,” Pelligra said.

    “I have seen how integral a sporting club can be to a community. It can have a powerful, unifying impact and that is what we are here to achieve in Perth.

    “There are three key pillars we need to focus on in the first phase of our tenure – reconnect, drive success and create long term sustainability.

    “We have learned from our previous experiences with other sporting franchises, but every team is different, every city is different and it is important we listen and learn.

    “We want (the Glory) to be the envy of every other A-League club, just like it was when it was first founded.”

    Ross Pelligra is Perth Glory’s new owner. Picture Matt Turner.Source: News Corp Australia

    Pelligra had previously tried to take charge of the Glory, but Melbourne property developer Robert Brij was the preferred option until APL-appointed receivers KordaMentha pulled the plug on the deal in November due to “preconditions” not being met.

    A-League commissioner Nick Garcia said an “incredible opportunity” existed for football in Western Australia with Pelligra’s purchase of the Glory.

    “Ross is a successful business and football person, both locally and abroad and this experience and his passion for the world game is a great asset for Perth Glory and the A-League,” Garcia said.

    “We believe that with this new ownership, the future of Perth Glory is in extremely safe hands and we look forward to seeing them deliver success both on and off the pitch.”

    Pelligra has promised to meet with state and local governments, club members and fan groups to “further inform the strategy and future direction of the club”.

    “One of our key priorities will be to establish a future permanent home for Perth Glory with state-of-the-art training and administration facilities,” he said.

    Pelligra will be at HBF Park on Saturday night for the Glory’s match with Brisbane Roar.

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  • ‘Don’t see enough happiness’: Adelaide boss’ sad reveal amid Bayern-bound teen’s struggles

    ‘Don’t see enough happiness’: Adelaide boss’ sad reveal amid Bayern-bound teen’s struggles

    Happiness has deserted Nestory Irankunda’s game since his transfer to football giant Bayern Munich was officially announced in November says Adelaide United coach Carl Veart.

    Irankunda, who turned 18 on Friday, was unleashed off the bench on the hour in Adelaide’s 3-3 draw with Perth Glory at Coopers Stadium.

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    “Nestor (Irankunda) hasn’t been anywhere his level this year (season) that we expected from him,’’ Veart said.

    “Whether the pressure is taking its toll on him, he must start and go back to enjoying his football.

    “I just don’t see enough happiness from him at the moment.

    “It’s a difficult position that he is in because everyone expects things from him and it’s important, we’re very careful of how much we expect from him.”

    Veart wasn’t sure if delaying Irankunda’s announcement to Bayern Munich could have eased the pressure on the rising star.

    Irankunda is expected to join Bayern Munich in June.

    “I suppose no one’s going to really know that was the best way for it to go,’’ Veart said.

    Adelaide boss Carl Veart believes Irankunda isn’t playing with any happiness. (Photo by Jonathan DiMaggio/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

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    “It (speculation) did go on for a long time and then we hoped that once it got announced he could go back to focusing on playing football.

    “He needs to just keep working and it’s important that when he does eventually go there, he keeps his head down and works hard.”

    Veart said Irankunda has also had to deal with criticism surrounding the move to the Bundesliga, claiming the club is keeping an eye on his wellbeing via medical professionals.

    “Unfortunately, in this country, we make it very difficult for people that we see that are going to have success instead of getting behind them and trying to help them,’’ Veart said.

    “We want to knock them down and Nestor takes a lot of this in, and he knows what people are saying and it’s been very difficult for him.

    “Hopefully we can keep pushing him to give him a good grounding for what he wants to do.”

    Irankunda is off to Bayern Munich at the end of the season. (Photo by Mark Brake/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    However, Veart was content with Adelaide’s ability to bounce back from the brink of another home-ground disaster in Friday’s draw after the Reds had squandered a two-goal lead.

    Glory led 3-2 from the 82nd minute until the eighth minute of stoppage time before Panagiotis Kikianis equalised after Veart had made four changes to the starting 11 that were belted 4-0 by Central Coast at Hindmarsh eight days ago.

    “I think the first half was what we were looking for and the second half we got a little bit lost,’’ Veart said.

    “(We) allowed Perth to dictate a little bit more, sometimes when you’re struggling that confidence is easily knocked out of you, but I was a lot happier with the intent and desire to play.”

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  • Benched star sends message to Roos coach with dazzling cameo: Player Ratings

    Benched star sends message to Roos coach with dazzling cameo: Player Ratings

    The Socceroos are through to the Asian Cup quarterfinals after a 4-0 win over Indonesia on Sunday night. The scoreline may have flattered the Australians who struggled at times, but there’s no doubting the excellent performances of some players.

    Here’s how every Aussie performed in our Player Ratings!

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    DEFENCE

    Mat Ryan: 6

    Faced just one shot on target in the match (and that was a simple catch), but nevertheless had a busy afternoon. Ryan was often called into action to rush out and stifle long balls, while he was often passed back the ball under pressure. But he never panicked and distributed the ball well.

    Gethin Jones: 4.5

    Produced an inch-perfect cross for Martin Boyle’s headed goal to double the advantage on the stroke of halftime. It was just reward for Jones’s tireless attacking runs up the line … except he gave away the ball too often by running straight into packs of defenders. Made a few dubious decisions in defence, especially in the first half. And Jones almost lost his head when he lashed out at an opponent after being fouled. If the incident had been any worse, he would have seen a red card instead of yellow – but he lasted just three more minutes anyway before being taken off with an apparent groin injury.

    Harry Souttar: 7

    It was a sloppy start, and he was guilty of misreading a long ball into the box in the 16th minute that could have proved costly if not for some smart work from Ryan. But Souttar calmed those early nerves and was reliable from there out, before capping off the win in the 91st minute with a trademark header. He won all of his aerial duels in another commanding performance.

    Kye Rowles: 5.5

    He’s often overshadowed by his centre-back partner in the green and gold (literally as well as figuratively). But he made a number of crucial interventions to stifle the Indonesian forays into the area including a team-high four clearances and was an assured presence at the back.

    Aziz Behich: 5

    Had a nervy start but settled into the game. The Socceroos needed calm heads in the second half and he contributed to a more stable, disciplined defensive unit after the break. No Aussie touched the ball more, and he passed well, but couldn’t find a target on any of his crosses.

    MIDFIELD

    Jackson Irvine: 7

    Irvine has been excellent so far this tournament, and he continued his strong run of form with another influential performance. No Socceroo was up for the fight in the early minutes as much as Irvine, who set up the opening goal with a barnstorming run past a pair of defenders. He wasn’t at his best in terms of passing – completing a lowly 63% of his passes – but Indonesia’s hard-pressing defence deserves credit for breaking up so many attacks. He won’t get that opening goal credited to his name, since it was a cross deflected into the net, and he was also extremely unlucky not to score the third Socceroos goal – which was well saved but fell straight to Craig Goodwin to finish off.

    Keanu Baccus: 5

    Baccus was overrun in the midfield in the first half as Indonesia dominated that area, but he worked as hard as ever and made a number of tackles and interceptions. Improved markedly after the break and became more influential with his passing. Taken off in the 86th minute.

    Riley McGree: 3.5

    McGree and Bruno Fornaroli were meant to provide the creativity and attacking impetus that the Socceroos have lacked so far this tournament, but it was another very quiet performance. He couldn’t build the kind of connected, smooth-flowing passing moves that he often orchestrates at his best, gave the ball away frequently, and was subbed off after 61 minutes.

    ATTACK

    Martin Boyle: 7

    Boyle was switched on from the opening kick-off, and was willing to take on defenders from the first minute until the last. Boyle’s dangerous dribbling was on full display, completing six of seven dribbles (a game-high). He also won a remarkable 10 of his 11 ground duels, which are battles for the ball with a defender. His goal sums up everything we love about Boyle – a well-timed run that caught out a defender, followed by a desperate body-on-the-line dive for the ball. It was his second goal in as many games.

    Jordan Bos: 5

    Graham Arnold sees Bos as a winger rather than a left-back, but this was not the young gun’s best attacking performance by some distance. He played just one ball into the final third, despite getting into some excellent positions and showing off great technical ability. The potential is clearly there for him to be a dangerous attacking threat, and Arnold praised him after the game, but he lost possession in good positions when he could have done more to create effective chances. Defensively, however, he tackled well and made five recoveries.

    Bruno Fornaroli: 5

    The 36-year-old was brought in for his ability to control the ball in tight areas and create chances – an especially valuable skill against packed defences.

    And he started well, fighting hard for the ball and even attempting an acrobatic bicycle kick that instead earned him a yellow card.

    He didn’t have the kind of creative input Arnold would have hoped for, made some poor tackles and lost the ball a bit too frequently, but there were promising signs.

    He faces a tough battle on his hands to retain the position for the tough quarter-final ahead, with Arnold often preferring Mitch Duke in big games. Fornaroli was replaced after 61 minutes.

    SUBSTITUTES

    Mitch Duke: 4

    Like Fornaroli, he struggled to get on the ball, but made a number of good runs off the ball to create space. He made a horrible mess of a great opportunity to chip the keeper and seal the game when it was 2-0 soon after coming onto the park. It was a quiet day for the dependable veteran, but he’ll be buoyed after getting through half an hour on his return from a minor hamstring niggle.

    Connor Metcalfe: 4

    He hardly saw the ball in his half an hour on the pitch, and started slowly before settling into the rhythm of the contest. There were no major mistakes, so it perhaps seems harsh to give him just a four – but there was also little of note from the talented midfielder, besides a couple of nice driving runs into space.

    Nathaniel Atkinson: 6

    Having lost his spot to Gethin Jones after replacing him for the Uzbekistan game, Atkinson was forced into action when Jones went down with injury in the 69th minute. Atkinson showed good intent with a couple of nice dribbles and a long-range shot that drifted wide. He also delivered an excellent cross into the box to set up the third goal. Didn’t need to do much defensively, but Arnold will trust he can replace Jones for the next match if the new recruit can’t overcome what looked like a groin injury.

    Craig Goodwin: 9

    Goodwin delivered one of the all-time cameos off the bench, scoring then assisting in the space of just over two minutes. His volley was clinical and coolly-taken, before he delivered a perfect set piece ball for Souttar to head home in the 91st minute. His set pieces were very poor in the opening game of the tournament – and he hadn’t played since then – so it was the perfect reminder to Graham Arnold of what he can do.

    Aiden O’Neill: N/A

    Only had a handful of minutes and didn’t have much of an impact.

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  • ‘Very difficult to accept on many levels’: Perth Glory left disappointed after being forced to loan winger to rival

    ‘Very difficult to accept on many levels’: Perth Glory left disappointed after being forced to loan winger to rival

    A frustrated Perth Glory has sensationally lost contracted Tunisian midfielder Salim Khelifi to a rival A-League team for the rest of the season – a move, the club claims, driven by Australian Professional Leagues (APL).

    The 11th-placed Glory, who have been without a private owner for six months, on Friday night confirmed Khelifi’s departure – subject to medical and international clearance – for the remainder of the A-League campaign, but claimed it’d been instructed by the APL to accept the rival club’s loan offer.

    The West Australian reported Khelifi is poised to join the undefeated Melbourne Victory, who sit second on the ladder with six wins and seven draws.

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    Khelifi, who arrived at the Glory in 2022 then signed a contract extension until the end of 2025, has played 10 games so far this season.

    Glory chief executive Anthony Radich said his club was disappointed, but added there was little the Glory could do.

    “I want to make it very clear to all our members, club partners and fans that this decision is neither the will, nor the want of the club,” Radich said.

    Salim Khelifi of the Glory celebrates a goal. Picture: Paul Kane/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

    “It is a direct consequence of our inherited financial legacy, but that said, the outcome is still a very difficult one to accept on many levels.

    “We understand the disappointment that this will bring to all our key stakeholders and furthermore, the significant impact it will have upon Alen Stajcic and his team (who have been incredibly stoic and resilient) as they look to drive forward into the second half of the season.”

    The Glory have been under the leadership of the APL since July after they were forced into receivership. In November, they were on the verge of a highly-touted sale to a consortium led by Melbourne-based property group Primeland, only for it to spectacularly collapse as the group had failed to satisfy key elements of the deal.

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    Perth has been barred from signing any new players until it finds a new owner, meaning it’ll be unable to replace star winger Khelifi.

    “This is a challenging time for the club, but we remain hopeful of a resolution to our ownership situation in the very near future and are deeply appreciative of our loyal and passionate Glory family for their ongoing support,” Radich said.

    It comes days after the APL announced an “organisational restructure” that led to mass redundancies.

    The APL earlier this week said it needed to “create efficiencies through consolidation” as poor crowds continue to be a problem for the men’s and women’s competitions.

    Salim Khelifi of the Glory. Picture: Will Russell/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

    “In the three years since unbundling (with Football Australia), APL has implemented a strategy that has seen a period of rapid growth across our business,” an APL statement said.

    “With the original three-year strategy coming to an end, a planned full strategic and commercial review has taken place over the last several months.

    “The review has identified significant opportunities to create efficiencies through consolidation and this necessitates an organisational restructure that is now underway.

    “APL’s priorities remain the same – to deliver commercial growth and sustainability by creating the most exciting competitions possible for our fans – with strong teams producing great young players across Australia and New Zealand.”

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  • A-League’s $40m disaster sparks mass job cuts as grim reality laid bare

    A-League’s $40m disaster sparks mass job cuts as grim reality laid bare

    The A-League is in financial turmoil, with the Australian Professional Leagues undergoing an “organisational restructure” that has led to mass redundancies on the back of horror crowds at last weekend’s Unite Round in Sydney.

    The APL, which has run the A-League men’s and women’s competitions for the past three years, has confirmed staff cuts in an attempt to “consolidate” the business, with up to 50 per cent of the staff having been made redundant.

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    As part of the cost-cutting measures, KeepUp, the APL’s digital and content arm which is understood to have cost the organisation $40 million, will cease to exist.

    However, the A-League’s separate competition website, which started this season as under the broader KeepUp banner, will continue in some form.

    In a statement without attribution to A-League commissioner Nick Garcia, the APL stated a need to “create efficiencies through consolidation” as poor crowds continue to be a problem for the men’s and women’s competitions.

    “In the three years since unbundling (with Football Australia), APL has implemented a strategy that has seen a period of rapid growth across our business,” an APL statement said.

    “With the original three-year strategy coming to an end, a planned full strategic and commercial review has taken place over the last several months.

    “The review has identified significant opportunities to create efficiencies through consolidation and this necessitates an organisational restructure that is now underway.

    “APL’s priorities remain the same – to deliver commercial growth and sustainability by creating the most exciting competitions possible for our fans – with strong teams producing great young players across Australia and New Zealand.”

    A-League Commissioner Nick Garcia . (Photo by Matt King/Getty Images for APL)Source: Getty Images

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    Last weekend’s “Unite Round” – in which all 12 A-League men’s and women’s matches were played in Sydney – attracting a cumulative attendance of less than 48,000 people.

    Despite the popularity of the Matildas after their stunning run to the World Cup semi-finals, only one of six A-League women’s matches last weekend attracted more than 2000 people. The total attendance for those games was just over 11,000.

    However, Garcia was confident of a stronger “Unite Round” next year.

    “This is just the start of a unique tradition in our game,” Garcia said.

    “We’ve already begun planning for Unite Round next season, and will take on feedback from fans, clubs, players and partners, as we look to build on this success in years to come.”

    There have serious been questions raised about its broadcast deal with Network 10/Paramount +, with sagging ratings have failed to meet required targets needed for the total sum of broadcast deal to be paid to the APL.

    There was also significant fan backlash over the decision to sell the grand final to the New South Wales government (taking hosting rights away from the top-placed team), a decision which was reversed after just one year and replaced by “Unite Round”.

    The APL has also been forced to fund the struggling Perth Glory, with the Newcastle Jets have required the financial assistance of other club owners to remain afloat.

    The men’s league is supposed to expand next season with the addition of a second New Zealand team and a new Canberra based club.

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  • Matildas’ silver lining in Kerr heartbreak as injury curse strikes again

    Matildas’ silver lining in Kerr heartbreak as injury curse strikes again

    Sam Kerr’s Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) injury, suffered in a mid-season Chelsea training camp, has rocked the Matildas’ preparations for the 2024 Paris Olympics.

    It’s the second time Kerr has injured her ACL, having first suffered the devastating injury in 2011 – and it ruled her out of the 2012 Olympics in London.

    She has not yet been ruled out of this year’s Games, which take place in late July-August, but the Matildas described it as a ‘ruptured’ ligament, which typically requires surgery and a minimum nine months of rehabilitation and recovery.

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    Chelsea say ‘no time frame’ has been placed on her return as yet, but have ruled her out of the remainder of the Women’s Super League season which ends in May. She will undergo further testing upon her return to London.

    It’s the latest in a sad recent run of injuries suffered by the Matildas captain and Australian all-time record scorer. She suffered a calf injury the day before Australia’s opening game of the 2023 Women’s World Cup, which kept her out of the group stage.

    She returned for the knockouts, initially off the bench, and scored one of the most memorable goals in Australian football history in the semi-final with a long-range screamer against England.

    But in the heartbreaking third-place playoff defeat to Sweden, she suffered a calf injury to her other leg, and has since battled a series of minor niggles at Chelsea, including a foot injury that ruled her out of December’s Matildas friendlies against Canada.

    Matildas’ Olympics hopes take major hit as Kerr suffers ‘devastating’ injury blow

    Coach Tony Gustavsson and Sam Kerr after the third-place playoff at the Women’s World Cup.Source: News Corp Australia

    “Considering how hard Sam has worked over the past six months to return to play, this news is a devastating blow for everyone,” Matildas coach Tony Gustavsson said.

    “With her ability to lead by example, Sam’s guidance and influence on the team is significant and, as a result, this will be an incredible loss for the national team.

    “Our focus now is on ensuring she has all the support she wants and needs to navigate recovery and rehab.”

    What is somewhat remarkable is that Kerr has escaped serious injury for so long – especially after it marred the start of her career. The first ACL injury, in 2011, required a knee reconstruction and cost her a place at the 2012 London Olympics. She suffered another knee injury in 2014 at Perth Glory, and watched on in crutches as her teammates lost the W-League grand final (now the A-League Women’s).

    At the time, the 21-year-old believed her football career could have been over.

    AIS strength and conditioning coach Aaron Holt spent six weeks working with her on a high-intensity rehabilitation program.

    He told KeepUp last year: “She came in, and she was probably at rock bottom. Genuinely going: ‘Am I ever going to play football again?’”

    That six-week period managed to get her fit for the 2015 World Cup. Four years later, ahead of the 2019 World Cup, she wrote a letter to Holt thanking him.

    “I never got the chance to tell you how grateful I am for the time you spent with me.

    “When I injured my knee in 2014 my life came crashing down, and I thought I would never make the 2015 World Cup.

    “The most important part about the time I spent with you is that you cared more about the person than the player.”

    In 2015, she ruptured her Lisfranc joint and required surgery and a plate to be inserted in her foot.

    Again, her career seemed on the ropes.

    “I knew straight away that it was a serious, serious injury. The hardest part about being injured is the mental side of things,” the Matildas skipper said in a Nike documentary, ‘Sam Kerr: Birthplace of Dreams’.

    “It’s probably the lowest point I’ve ever been in my life and career.”

    Again, she worked tirelessly to return, this time making it back in time for the 2016 Olympics in Rio.

    But after that trio of devastating injuries early in her 20s, Kerr enjoyed a clean run of years without major injury – and shot to superstardom as one of the world’s finest players.

    She has broken scoring records across multiple different leagues, including at Chelsea where she has won two golden boots in the WSL and has scored 99 goals in 128 games, winning four-straight WSL titles and three-straight FA Cups.

    But after four goals in eight league games this season, she has now played her last game for Chelsea this year – and her last under legendary coach Emma Hayes, who is leaving at season’s end to take over the US Women’s national team.

    Kerr is off-contract at the end of the season, and had been set to spark a bidding war that could see her become the first WSL player to earn more than $1m AUD in club wages per year (currently she reportedly earns just under $800,000 per year, the highest salary in women’s football).

    Now, clubs could think twice about spending so much on a 30-year-old, given the significant rehabilitation time and threat of reinjury.

    And should she leave Chelsea, she will do so stranded just one goal short of a century of strikes for the club.

    Sam Kerr and Chelsea manager Emma Hayes.Source: Getty Images

    While her club future remains up in the air, there’s no doubt it is also a massive blow to the Matildas, who appeared primed to again compete for a first-ever Olympic medal.

    The Matildas finished a best-ever fourth at the Tokyo Olympics, and matched that feat at last year’s Women’s World Cup.

    Finishing just short of the medals two major tournaments in a row left the Matildas feeling gutted.

    “We’re really disappointed – to come fourth again kind of feels like the worst position to come,” said Kerr at the time.

    Caitlin Foord said: “We did the exact same thing that happened at the Olympics. That was my worst nightmare for that to happen again, and it has happened again. So we just need to grow and learn from it and never let this happen again.”

    She added that she believes the Matildas squad has the quality to win a World Cup.

    “We have the team to do it, and I guess we just need to be at our best every single game and every moment,” she said.

    But without Kerr, that proposition becomes markedly more difficult.

    Matilda Katrina Gorry joins West Ham | 00:34

    THE SILVER LINING FROM WORLD CUP PAIN

    However, the silver lining to Kerr’s painful last eight months has been that the Matildas now have experience playing in major tournaments without her.

    Caitlin Foord and Mary Fowler played exceptionally as a strike partnership throughout the group games, and at times the Matildas attack appeared to flow better than with Kerr leading the line. Indeed, one of the Matildas’ long-running issues has been an over-reliance on Kerr in attack, which is understandable given her propensity to score bags of goals.

    Veteran Emily van Egmond impressed as a hold-up forward at times in the World Cup, while a host of young talents are pushing the established core in the selection race.

    Foord and Hayley Raso led the goalscoring for Australia at the World Cup, while Fowler improved in leaps and bounds and looms as the new focal point for the Matildas at the 2024 Olympics – should Australia qualify.

    First, they need to beat world number 47 Uzbekistan in a two-leg playoff next month, the second leg taking place at Melbourne’s Marvel Stadium on February 28.

    Australia proved in the World Cup that the team is far more than just one star.Source: Getty Images

    Coach Tony Gustavsson has been trying to re-engineer the team in the wake of the World Cup, adopting a more possession-based style of play rather than the typical Matildas’ counterattacking transitional approach.

    Part of that tactical development was surely intended to provide a tactical alternative if the team is without Kerr.

    After the two defeats to Canada in December, he said: “What concerns me a little bit now is the lack of pacy options up front in the four front positions.

    “With [Holly] McNamara getting injured again and then [Cortnee] Vine being out and Sam [Kerr] out, that’s something we need to look into how to handle that going forward.

    “Because we had a very clear idea of how to do that in the World Cup … we managed to play without Sam and I thought the team handled that [challenge] well.”

    McNamara, a 20-year-old striker, would have been among the candidates to replace Kerr in the Olympics squad. But the Melbourne City starlet suffered a third ACL tear of her career last November, just after being recalled to the Matildas squad.

    McNamara is one of six A-League Women’s players to suffer the injury in the first half of this season, ten NRLW players and nine AFLW players suffered an ACL injury last season.

    Fellow Matildas Ellie Carpenter, Kyah Simon, Chloe Logarzo and Elise Kellond-Knight have all done the same injury in the last two years.

    According to some studies, elite women’s athletes are up to six or seven times more likely to damage their ACL than men, with a host of superstars forced to miss the 2023 Women’s World Cup through the injury.

    That list included Vivianne Miedema (Netherlands), Beth Mead and Leah Williamson (England), Catarina Macario and Christen Press (USA), and Janine Beckie (Canada) among plenty of others.

    Leah Williamson starred for England at the 2022 European Championships before an ACL ruled her out of the World Cup.Source: AFP

    FIFA last year dedicated a taskforce to the growing epidemic of ACL injuries among women’s footballers, and the causes of the high rates of the prevalence of the injury are not yet well known.

    Among the contributing factors is the overloading of players in an increasingly condensed fixture calendar – something which has seen Sam Kerr and other veterans have their Matildas playing minutes restricted in recent years to allow them to rest. Other factors researchers are investigating include the quality of fields, their boots (often designed to accommodate male feet), and strength and conditioning programs.

    If there’s a second positive that may come out of Kerr’s injury, it is that her high profile may help to reinforce the need for ACL injuries to be better researched and understood.

    In isolation, Kerr’s injury is a devastating setback to the Matildas’ hopes of ending their run of tournament near-misses.

    But, like Tony Gustavsson said after Kerr injured her calf on the eve of the World Cup, injuries are a part of football. That’s especially – and sadly – the case with women’s players and ACLs.

    The silver lining in last year’s heartbreak was that the Matildas squad proved they could step up without their talismanic striker.

    Now they’ll have to do it again.

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