For Australia the long wait is over. After 32 years the Socceroos will
return to Germany, scene of their one previous FIFA World Cup™ finals
appearance in 1974, for the 2006 edition of the tournament after
beating Uruguay 4-2 on penalties in the second leg of the
intercontinental play-off at Sydney's Telstra Stadium.
Substitute John Aloisi converted the decisive spot-kick to send them
through after goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer had produced superb saves to
deny Dario Rodriguez and Marcelo Zalayeta, as Australia finally
savoured success in a play-off after four previous failures. Trailing
1-0 from the first leg, Marco Bresciano had drawn Australia level on
aggregate with a 34th-minute goal before Guus Hiddink's side held their
nerve in the climactic shoot-out to book their ticket to Germany.
The initial preliminary rounds were a relatively straightforward task
for the Socceroos. In Oceania’s group stage they finished top with four
wins and one draw from their five matches. The play-off to decide who
would meet South America’s fourth-placed side for a place at Germany
2006 was also a formality as they defeated the Solomon Islands 9-1 over
two legs to set up the decisive match with Uruguay.
Australia's qualification triumph is another landmark for their Dutch
coach Hiddink. Brought on board in the summer of 2005, following the
departure of Frank Farina, the man who led Korea Republic to the
semi-finals of the last FIFA World Cup™ has produced another act of
alchemy, helping Australian football erase the pain of previous
play-off defeats in 1985, 1993, 1997 and 2001.
England is the preferred destination for the vast majority of the stars
of the Socceroos’ qualifying campaign with Schwarzer, Lucas Neill, Tim
Cahill, Mark Viduka, Craig Moore, Harry Kewell and Brett Emerton all
currently playing Premier League football. Aloisi and Bresciano are in
Spain and Italy respectively, but at the moment all Aussie eyes are
currently turning to another European country – namely Germany.
For the fans, bittersweet memories of 1974 will be evoked. On that
occasion Australia met Chile, German DR and Germany FR in the group
stages – and failed to score a single goal. They will also want to do
better than their showing in the FIFA Confederations Cup Germany 2005
when they failed to win a single match. However, with Hiddink at the
helm, hopes are high. With one dream already realized for Australia,
another is just beginning.