Australia's World Cup qualification bid takes hit as Japan, Saudi Arabia make finals

Australia's bid to reach the World Cup in Qatar hit an obstacle as they suffered a 2-0 defeat to Japan on Thursday.
Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images

Australia's hopes of automatic qualification for the World Cup are over after suffering a late 2-0 defeat at the hands of Japan in Sydney.

Kaoru Mitoma popped up for Japan with a brace in the final minutes to book his country's direct route to Qatar on a wet Thursday at Accor Stadium when the visitors could have scored five or six.

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The defeat in front of a damp and despondent 41,852-strong crowd was the Socceroo's first live World Cup qualifier loss on home soil in 40 years.

Coach Graham Arnold, who returned to the dugout after spending time in COVID-19 isolation, must now steer a side that has just one win from its last six through the intercontinental playoffs to get to Qatar 2022.

Australia's final Group B game is against Saudi Arabia in Jeddah next week but the game is a dead rubber before they face the third-placed team in Group A -- either Syria, Lebanon or United Arab Emirates.

Should they advance they will then have to beat South America's fifth-best team.

The home side struggled to mount anything in attack, their defence was often overrun on the counter and they did not look like a team that would have the quality to do anything should they get to the World Cup.

Australia were given an early warning of what was to come when Japan forward Takumi Minamino fizzed a shot at Mat Ryan after less than a minute of play but the Socceroos' only clear cut chance came from a corner.

Trent Sainsbury challenged goalkeeper Shuichi Gonda and the ball was turned in for an own goal by defender Miki Yamane at the back post.

Bahraini referee Nawaf Shukralla immediately ruled the goal out even though replays showed the faintest of contact from Sainsbury.

Quickly Minamino flashed two headers onto the bar with Ryan well beaten to the ball both times but able to remove the threat.

Australia's best chance came right at the end of the second half with an Ajdin Hrustic cross finding Mitchell Duke unmarked in the middle of the box but he could only limply fire his header straight at Gonda.

Duke was largely ineffective and he was replaced by 34-year-old Uruguayan-born striker Bruno Fornaroli.

Melbourne City youngster Marco Tilio also entered the fray in the second half and he looked the most likely of any Socceroos player to conjure anything.

But it was another substitute, Mitoma, who made the difference.

A ball was cut back from the byline in the 89th minute and the 23-year-old fizzed a bobbling ball past Ryan to put Japan ahead.

Arnold looked to the sky and then a second came late into stoppage time as Mitoma weaved in through some lax Australian defending from the left.

He fired at Ryan who didn't have enough to prevent the ball from trickling into the goal.