HomeNewsSportMatildas held to 3-3 draw after missed chances against Korea

Matildas held to 3-3 draw after missed chances against Korea

The Matildas walked off Stadium Australia’s pitch last night with a 3-3 draw that felt far closer to a missed opportunity than a shared thriller, despite an electric record crowd and long spells of dominance over South Korea.

Australia entered the Group A decider riding high from two clinical wins, having edged the Philippines 1-0 in their opener before dismantling Iran 4-0 to book a quarterfinal spot with a game to spare. Those first two outings showed a ruthless efficiency at both ends: just one goal conceded across 180 minutes and five scored, with the attack building fluency and the defence largely untroubled.  Last night, however, the script flipped slightly as the Matildas produced arguably their most fluent football of the tournament but failed to translate superiority into a statement victory. 

Roared on by more than 60,000 fans, part of an Asian Cup that has already smashed the tournament’s overall attendance record, the Matildas flew out of the blocks. The noise inside Stadium Australia was relentless, a rolling wave of green-and-gold energy that turned a group-stage clash into something closer to a knockout epic. Every press, tackle and forward surge was met with a roar, underscoring just how special this home Asian Cup has already become for Australian football. 

On the pitch, Australia controlled large stretches of the contest, pinning Korea back with sustained pressure, aggressive pressing and clever movement between the lines. They created enough chances to win the game outright, only to be punished repeatedly on transition as Korea capitalised on rare lapses to snatch goals against the run of play. A VAR-assisted penalty and a clinical counter left the Matildas chasing, before a dramatic stoppage-time equaliser from Alanna Kennedy salvaged a point that still wasn’t enough to secure top spot in the group. 

Online reaction mirrored the mood in the stands: admiration for the spectacle and the team’s fight, but frustration at defensive errors and wayward finishing that allowed Korea to escape. With seven points from three games and a quarterfinal in Perth now looming, the Matildas remain firmly in contention, yet last night’s raucous, record-setting occasion carried a nagging sense of what might have been if dominance had matched the scoreboard. 

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