Malta Independent

Syria draws with Australia 1-1 in World Cup qualis playoff

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Omar al-Soma scored a late penalty for war-torn Syria to draw with Australia 1-1 in a World Cup qualifying playoff on Thursday.

Syria scored in the 85th minute after Mathew Leckie was penalized for his aerial challenge on alSoma.

The Syrians, who have never before qualified for a World Cup, are facing Australia in a two-leg Asian playoff for the right to go into an interconti­nental playoff.

The next stage is a two-leg series against the fourth-place team from the North American region, meaning a possible showdown with the United States.

Before that, though, is the return leg of the Asian playoff in Sydney on Tuesday.

The Australian­s dominated the first half and led 1-0 at the break on neutral ground in Malaysia, where Syria is hosting its World Cup qualifying matches because of the ongoing conflict at home. Robbie Kruse timed his run perfectly to get a touch on Leckie's shot and angle it past goalkeeper Ibrahim Alma in the 40th minute.

The Syrians rallied in the second half, with al-Soma and Omar Khribin creating opportunit­ies. The tempo lifted further when veteran forward Firas Al Khatib came on in the 75th.

"We were a bit unlucky. I'm not sure what happened with the penalty — maybe it touched his hand?" Australia stand-in captain Mark Milligan asked. "We're very confident. We'll go home and get them on a good pitch in front of our home fans."

Tomi Juric hit the left post twice within a matter of seconds at the start of the second half, missing a chance to double Australia's lead.

From then on, Syria started gaining the momentum and launching counteratt­acks against a tiring defense. And the small but vocal crowd in Malacca was heavily behind the underdogs.

A speedy burst from Khatib and a header from al-Soma forced a reflex save from Mat Ryan in the 78th and the Australia goalkeeper tipped a hard shot from Moayad Ajan over the bar in injury time to preserve the draw, only moments after Alma made a game-saving stop for Syria at the other end.

Syrians celebrated in Damascus, despite the match being staged much closer to Australia and in an almost empty stadium.

Crowds thronged to Umayyad Square in Damascus to watch the match on a giant TV screen, waving flags and chanting for their team. Children were sent home early from school to avoid traffic jams before the broadcast.

The Australian­s have qualified for the last three World Cups, and were forced into the Asian playoff only after finishing behind Saudi Arabia on goal difference and narrowly missing the second qualifying spot from their group.

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