The All Whites' road trip ended predictably in the loser's
circle in Adelaide tonight as the Socceroos exploited a
travel-weary opponent to complete a 3-0 victory in their
friendly football international.
Fears a leg-weary and understrength New Zealand side could
concede a virtual cricket score at the Adelaide Oval were
unfounded but the All Whites were still no match for a
rebuilding Australian side that were ruthless enough to
punish two glaring defensive errors before James Troisi
inflated the margin in added time when he beat substitute
goalkeeper Jake Gleeson from the spot.
Positioned 40 places beneath Australia on Fifa's current
world rankings, the All Whites were never expected to achieve
a first win against their neighbours since 2004 and were
unable to replicate their brave performance at the Melbourne
Cricket Ground in April last year where the Socceroos' World
Cup send-off was in peril until Brett Holman swept home a
94th-minute winner.
The All Whites only arrived at the match venue yesterday
after a 27-hour trek from the United States, where they were
comprehensively beaten 3-0 by Mexico in Denver last Thursday.
Australia also started ominously with midfielder Troisi and
veteran Brett Emerton both going close before makeshift left
back Jeremy Brockie and goalkeeper Glen Moss combined to gift
the opener to Josh Kennedy in the 10th minute.
Brockie opted for a lobbed back pass instead of pushing
forward and Moss failed to hoof it clear at the first
opportunity - his touch under pressure from the Australian
striker enabled Kennedy to sweep the ball into an empty net
for his eighth international goal.
Undeterred by that defensive clanger, the All White were
resolute for the remainder of the half as the Socceroos
struggled for fluidity on a surface greased up by light rain
which later turned torrential.
New Zealand had their first scoring opportunity in the 20th
minute when a Brockie cross was intercepted by goalkeeper
Nathan Coe before Chris Wood could make contact.
Brockie, New Zealand's best player, also supplied another
teasing lob inside the penalty box for Shane Smeltz but Coe
leapt to punch the ball clear.
Troisi then fluffed a prime opportunity to plant Australia's
second in the 38th minute after accurate inter passing left
him unmarked at the edge of the box. However, with time on
his side he could only direct the ball within Moss's range.
New Zealand's defence was weakened by the unavailability of
Ryan Nelsen, Tommy Smith, Winston Reid and Ivan Vicelich but
the inexperienced back four - a formation used by Herbert for
the first time since the 2009 Confederations Cup -- acquitted
themselves well until Kennedy thudded home the clincher in
the 59th minute.
Kennedy rose unmarked to propel a free header past Moss via
Dario Vidosic's pinpoint delivery, a lapse that left stand-in
skipper Tim Brown fuming.
Chris Killen and Ben Sigmund were caught unawares as Kennedy
made his run while Chris Wood was also culpable and was
subbed from Aaron Clapham soon after.
Although the All Whites contributed to their own demise
Michael Boxall, who had been exposed while playing out of
position at right wing back against Mexico looked more
assured in the centre of defence.
Michael Fitzgerald bounced back from a debut to forget
against the Mexicans to put in a decent shift in his usual
right back role when he replaced an injured Andy Boyens at
halftime.
However, Herbert's ploy of starting strikers Smeltz, Wood and
Chris Killen could not unlock an Australian defence missing
skipper Lucas Neill - the trio were well contained as Brockie
and Michael McGlinchey looked most threatening on the ball.
McGlinchey did some good work on the right side of midfield
until he made way for the diminutive Marco Rojas near the
hour mark.
Moss atoned for his role in the Socceroos opener when he
bravely dispossessed substitute Robbie Kruse as he bore down
on goal though he was still dragged with 13 minutes remaining
so US-based Jake Gleeson could make his international debut.
Gleeson was sound until Ben Sigmund's challenge on Kruse
enabled Turkish-based Troisi to celebrate before his home
crowd with a sweetly taken penalty.
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.