Steph Catley gets floored and Ellie Carpenter rages as Alanna Kennedy continues her hot streak.
Here are the quick hits from Matildas vs South Korea at the Women’s Asian Cup in Sydney.
1. Catley cops a nasty falcon
Steph Catley was struck on the head by the ball as she attempted to defend an early Korean cross. (Getty Images: Brendon Thorne)
The Matildas’ night started off in somewhat nightmare fashion for Steph Catley after she was floored trying to defend a cross.
Less than seven minutes into the game, Catley, Australia’s right-back, was tracking back as Korea looked to fling a ball into the box.
Catley got herself in good position to defend the cross, but unfortunately was left in pain after the ball cannoned into her head.
The 32-year-old required some running repairs from the Matildas medical staff and initially remained on the pitch.
However, her recovery was short-lived as she called for a substitution in the 18th minute, barely 10 minutes after she copped the brutal blow.
2. Kennedy continues to be lethal in front of goal
Alanna Kennedy has spent much of her long career as a central defender and midfielder.
Her club career began in 2010 and in that time, she’s scored 27 goals in 274 games — one goal every ten games.
That stat is matched in her international career. Prior to Sunday night, she’d scored 14 goals in 144 matches — again, one goal every ten games.
After scoring a brace against Iran, Kennedy added two more against South Korea.
The first came when she got on the end of a penalty area scramble to open Australia’s scoring in the first half. The second was the equaliser in the eighth minute of extra time in the second half, when she rifled a loose ball home.
Unfortunately, for the Matildas it was too little, too late.
It may be that Kennedy’s goal-scoring spree is a statistical anomaly, but with four goals in three games, she’s Australia’s top scorer during this Asian Cup and her confidence will be sky-high.
3. Korea flips script with two goals in three minutes
Kim Shin-Ji scored from the penalty spot after VAR deemed the Matildas to have committed a handball inside the box. (Getty Images: Matt King)
Australia finished the second half on top but that all changed early in the second half as Korea scored two goals in three minutes.
The first came via a penalty after the VAR ruled Courtney Nevin had touched a shot with an arm away from her body. A sheepish Nevin looked on knowing she’d made an error, while the referee checked the video and subsequently pointed to the spot.
The penalty was taken by Kim Shin-Ji who sent Mackenzie Arnold the wrong away to score her second and equalise.
Three minutes later Kang Chae-Rim received the ball on the right of the penalty area after an extended build-up by South Korea that included several parried shots on goal.
Her low and hard shot, beat Nevin, and found the left-hand corner of the net to the right of a sprawling Arnold.
4. Carpenter fumes at sideline referee’s goal kicks
Ellie Carpenter was one of several Matildas players who cut a frustrated figure as the second half wore on.
Carpenter and a number of her teammates were visibly frustrated at the sideline referee over her refusal to award Australia corner kicks.
On a number of occasions, when it looked as if the Matildas should have received a corner kick, the sideline referee awarded a goal kick instead.
Carpenter was seen yelling at the referee on multiple occasions, claiming she didn’t touch the ball when Korea was awarded another goal kick.
The sideline referees struggled all game, with the Koreans also denied corner kicks at various stages of the night.
5. Sydney continues to turn up for the ‘Tillies’
Fans packed out the stands once again as the Matildas grappled with Korea in Sydney. (Getty Images: Ayush Kumar)
The Sydney crowd always turns up for the Matildas.
On a Sunday school night, 60,279 punters turned up at the end of a dreary, rainy day to set a new Women’s Asian Cup record crowd. Fortunately, the rain held off during the game.
That number beat the previous record set in Perth last Sunday when 44,379 people saw Australia begin their campaign with a 1-0 win over the Philippines.
Another 22,398 watched Australia beat Iran 4–0 on the Gold Coast
The all-time Matildas record crowd was also set in Sydney when 76,798 filled the Olympic Stadium to see the Matildas defeat China 2-0 in a friendly just prior to the Olympics.
The attendance also beat the 50,276 crowd recorded at the 2015 AFC Men’s Asian Cup group stage match between the Socceroos and Oman. It makes Sunday’s Sydney match the highest-attended Asian Cup group stage match ever staged in Australia in either men’s or women’s competitions.















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