Herald on Sunday

Nix upset odds in Sydney

- Simon Kay S. Taylor 38) Halftime: 3-0.

Sydney FC Wellington Phoenix

T1 3 he Phoenix produced one of the best away results of their 12-year history with a 3-1 win in Sydney last night. Six days after being denied a deserved victory against unbeaten leaders Perth in a match marred by an unwarrante­d red card, Wellington improved further in an excellent display across the Tasman.

The Phoenix were sharper, worked harder and played with greater desperatio­n to upset the odds and add to hopes that an unexpected transforma­tion is under way.

A couple of statistics underline the notable nature of this win — the Phoenix had lost seven and drawn one of their last eight games against Sydney; they won just one away game last season and had not even scored an away goal this season before last night.

The result was particular­ly sweet for Phoenix coach Mark Rudan, an A-League champion with Sydney FC who played alongside several of last night’s opposition staff, including coach Steve Corica.

One the back of a dire threematch losing run, Rudan successful­ly instilled confidence into his side last week for the game against Perth. The focus this week was on being brave and wanting the ball, and Wellington delivered again.

After taking six games to score their first goal from open play, the Phoenix were almost unrecognis­able from last month’s incarnatio­n. Roy Krishna scored a tidy brace and thrived on the service provided by his fellow attackers, with the likes of Sarpreet Singh, Alex Rufer and Mandi a constant threat on the ball.

The Phoenix set the pace from the outset, forcing a corner in the opening minute and taking a first shot in the fourth. For most of the first half, they completely outplayed Sydney, scoring three goals. The first two exploited Krishna’s pace superbly in the and 30th minutes.

For the first, Singh curled an outstandin­g pass in behind the Sydney defence for the Fijian to run on to, and he produced a composed rightfoot finish into the bottom corner.

For the second, Mandi passed from a similar position on the left and Krishna scored with his left foot into 21st the opposite corner. It’s been quite a week for the Fijian. He became the club’s record scorer last Sunday, then a New Zealand citizen on Thursday, and added another two goals last night before being forced off on the hour with a hamstring complaint. Given his form, the club will be hoping any injury is not serious.

Steven Taylor capped a remarkable first half by scoring his first Phoenix goal, guiding a header into the top corner from an excellent Liberato Cacace cross.

A Tom Doyle own goal proved the catalyst for a Wellington collapse against Adelaide two weeks ago, with a 1-0 lead turning into a 3-1 defeat. Andrew Durante put the ball into his own net soon after Taylor’s goal last night but the Phoenix were spared a similar examinatio­n of their mental toughness when referee Jonathan Barreiro blew for offside.

Sydney had more of the play in the second half but Wellington proved frustratin­g opponents and made the hosts work hard for their only goal, scored in the 89th minute by Michael Zullo after Louis Fenton looked to have been fouled in the build-up. But no matter, the goal was a mere consolatio­n and took little gloss off an excellent Phoenix performanc­e.

Wellington Phoenix 3 (R. Krishna 21, 30, Sydney FC 1 (M. Zullo 89).

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Roy Krishna opens the scoring for the Phoenix in Sydney last night.
Photo / Getty Images Roy Krishna opens the scoring for the Phoenix in Sydney last night.

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