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Friday, January 28, 2011

Asian Cup Semi Finals: Japan and Australia For Final Showdown

Tue 25/01/11 Japan P 2 - 2 P Korea Republic View events More info
Wed 26/01/11 Uzbekistan 0 - 6 Australia View events More info

Japan 2 South Korea 2 (Japan won 3-0 on penalties)
South Korea took the lead when Konno's innocuous challenge on Manchester United's Park Ji-Sung resulted in a harsh penalty decision, with Ki stepping up and converting the spot-kick with aplomb.
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2009/03/08/sports/08tokyo.600.jpg
Ooops, wrong sport.
http://www2.pictures.zimbio.com/gi/Cho+Yong+Hyung+South+Korea+v+Japan+0q422ZhXYd2l.jpg
Yeap, this one.

Japan responded when Honda drew three defenders before releasing Nagatomo down the left, who produced a defence-splitting pass for Ryoichi Maeda to score from six yards.

Both sides finished the 90 minutes locked at 1-1.

Ki and Koo both had early attempts in the added period for South Korea before another questionable penalty was given, when Okazaki was checked on the edge of the area by Hwang.

Honda's effort from the penalty spot was saved by Jung, but substitute Hosogai was quickest to react as he smashed the rebound into the back of the net.

Alberto Zaccheroni's side booked their place thanks to spot-kicks from Keisuke Honda, Shinji Okazaki and Yasuyuki Konno, while goalkeeper Eiji Kawashima was the hero, saving two penalties in the impending shootout.

Australia 6 Uzbekistan 0
Matt McKay, who was favoured to make way for Emerton, paid dividends for Osieck in the just the fifth minute when the Brisbane Roar captain combined with Harry Kewell for the opening goal.

After receiving the ball from Kewell in Uzbekistan's defensive third, McKay produced a deft turn before threading a pass back to the Socceroos striker, whose intuitive run saw him edge behind the defence and power the ball beyond the outstretched arm of Timur Juraev.

Uzbekistan responded strongly to the early setback, sticking to the possession-based game that has seen them play some of the most eye-catching football of the tournament, but could not find a way through a resolute Australian defence.

Making his record-equalling 87th appearance for his country, Socceroos goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer was called into action in the 21st minute when he comfortably saved Server Djeparov's deflected long-range effort.

Unable to claim a decent share of possession, Australia opted to suffocate their opponents' attacks before responding through quick bursts on the counter.

It was a tactic evidenced by David Carney's galloping 31st minute run that saw him swerve past a couple of challenges before producing a clever chip that was palmed away by Juraev.

Just four minutes later, a looping free kick into the penalty area led to Sasa Ognenovski extending Australia's advantage, the centre-back capitalising on some threadbare defending before sending a sharp left-footed volley into goal.

http://images.theage.com.au/2011/01/26/2152103/australiavuzbekistan--6--420x0.jpg

Sasa Ognenovski

After a subdued start to the second half, Carney gave Uzbekistan an insurmountable task when he made it 3-0 after being played through onto goal by McKay in the 65th minute.

Uzbekistan responded as Odil Akhmedov struck the ball powerfully at goal only to be denied by an instinctive save from Schwarzer.

But any chance of a late rearguard dissipated amid a spate of defensive blunders that will ultimately leave a blemish on an otherwise memorable tournament for the Central Asian nation.

Australian substitutes Robbie Kruse and Brett Emerton combined to make it 4-0 in the 74th minute, as Kruse darted beyond a static backline before setting Emerton up to fire into an empty net.

McKay capped a superb display with his third assist, this time setting up Carl Valeri for the fifth goal, before Kruse, who injected notable spark after coming on for Kewell, netted his first international goal, albeit following some dreadful goalkeeping from Juraev.

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