Home Blog Page 9

Australia reach FIFA World Cup knockout phase after goalless draw with Paraguay

0



Australia booked their place in the World Cup’s round of 32 on Thursday with a cagey 0-0 draw against Paraguay that delighted pragmatic coach Tony Popovic but left the South Americans with a nervous wait to see if they will advance.

In a physical, scrappy contest at San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, Paraguay pushed late after being dominated early but it ended with the Socceroos holding on to make the tournament’s knockout phase for a third time, four years after reaching the last 16 in Qatar.

Popovic’s team sealed second place in Group D behind the United States and will head to Dallas to meet the second-placed team in Group G, which remains wide open before Egypt face Iran and Belgium meet New Zealand on Friday.

It was hardly a performance that will have Australia’s next opponents shaking in their boots, but players and staff celebrated with hugs and back-slapping, and soaked up a warm ovation from thousands of lingering Aussie fans.

“I’d like to think that we dominated the game in a crucial World Cup qualifier with a very young squad in the third match, when everything’s on the line, and the players showed composure, patience, quality, and resilience,” Popovic told reporters.

“Well, now go to Dallas and try and do something special.

“Overall we deserved it. We were very good today.”

Paraguay, on four points, may have done enough to advance as one of the eight best-finishing, third-placed sides but the 2010 quarter-finalists will need to wait for other results in the final group matches.

“Well, the feeling I have is that that was not enough, that was not the result we were aiming for,” said Paraguay coach Gustavo Alfaro.

“Now we have to wait, there is some uncertainty … I’m very optimistic, however, and I think that we will go to the knockout stage and we will continue in the World Cup.”

Popovic made six changes to his starting 11 in a bold shake-up, bringing back livewire Nestory Irankunda and Connor Metcalfe, while adding Cristian Volpato to his forward line in a signal of attacking intent.

The changes came after he was roundly criticised for benching Irankunda and Metcalfe for the 2-0 defeat against the US, with both having scored goals in the 2-0 win over Turkiye.

With Jordan Bos switching from left back to right to cover for the injured Jacob Italiano, Australia made promising raids down the right but the finishing touch proved elusive. Minutes after kickoff, Volpato set up Jackson Irvine on the right of the penalty area but he thumped an angled shot straight at Paraguay goalkeeper Orlando Gill.

Bos and Volpato drew saves from Gill late in the half without genuinely testing him. With Paraguay restricted to one shot in the half, Alfaro injected Mauricio at the break, and the Brazilian-born attacker blazed fruitlessly from distance five minutes after the restart.

The Paraguayans grew into the contest with the help of the energetic Julio Enciso, who repeatedly sliced through Australia’s defence.

He blew one of Paraguay’s better chances with a low shot that flashed well wide of the left post eight minutes from time.

In an end-to-end finish, Bos had Socceroos fans rising from their seats in the 89th minute as he split two defenders, charged into the box from the right and sent his shot fizzing by the far post.

Mauricio gave Beach a late test when he found a sliver of room on the edge of the area but his tepid, low shot was easily dealt with and Australia held on to advance with more substance than style.

Climate Change Fueling Europe’s Ferocious Heat Wave, Scientists Find

0



A scientific analysis concluded that such high temperatures, across so much of the continent, would “not have been possible” without global warming.

The Closed-Border Paradox

Why Pakistan’s Geo-Economic Pivot is Paralyzed by Regional Disconnect

In modern international relations, a state’s survival depends heavily on how well it adapts its foreign policy to global economic realities. Recognizing this, Pakistan officially announced a major shift in its recent National Security Policy. The state promised to move away from traditional, security-focused geopolitics and adopt a modern doctrine of “geo-economics.”

Medical Journal Retracts Study Claiming Cancer Therapy Is More Effective When Given in the Morning

0



In a notice flagging a series of problems with a clinical trial, the journal Nature Medicine said its editors “no longer have confidence in the integrity of the results.”

Officials Shut Down Kenya’s Capital to Block Protest

0



The protest, an annual event, has become a showcase of the growing political power of Kenya’s youth.

Congo Ebola Crisis: Contact Tracing Is Dangerously Behind, Officials Warn

0



Most of the people testing positive for Ebola in the Democratic Republic of Congo are not on health workers’ radar, suggesting that contact tracing is lagging dangerously behind.

Can a Youth Boom Survive South Sudan’s Education Crisis?

0



South Sudan is the world’s newest nation and its education system is on the verge of collapse, putting an entire generation at risk.

The Ebola Outbreak’s Central Mystery: Where Did This Virus Come From?

0



Scientists believe that the Bundibugyo virus persists in an animal species, occasionally spilling over into humans. But they have yet to identify the species.

A Loophole Brings Cystic Fibrosis Patients a ‘Miracle Drug’ in Generic Form

0



A generic version of a breakthrough cystic fibrosis drug, manufactured in Bangladesh for a fraction of the American price, may give some families around the world an unlikely lifeline.

U.S. Warns of ‘Imminent’ Atrocities in El Obeid, Sudan

0



A highway running through El Obeid links Darfur in west Sudan to the east, making it a strategically significant battleground.

Popular Posts

My Favorites

US Supreme Court sides with Trump in asylum-processing case

0
WASHINGTON: The U.S. Supreme Court handed President Donald Trump a victory on Thursday by backing the federal government’s authority to turn away asylum seekers...