Wellington Phoenix are just one game away from the Hyundai A-League Grand Final after coming
from behind to sink Newcastle Jets 3-1 after extra time in a thrilling semi-final at Westpac
Stadium, Wellington NZ, on March 7.
Urged on by 32,792 fans - another record attendance for the game in New Zealand - Wellington
started like a house on fire, with Leo Bertos' first minute corner picking out the head of
Andrew Durante, whose header was cleared off the line by the combination of Newcastle
goalkeeper Ben Kennedy and striker Ali Abbas.
The home team continued to dominate the early exchanges, but encountered stubborn resistance
from a Newcastle team which approached the match with a refreshingly positive attitude, and
a game plan to match.
But they survived another scare in the twelfth minute as, with options aplenty to choose
from, Tim Brown dithered and was caught in possession on the edge of the Newcastle penalty
area by Ben Kantarovski.
Newcastle rode out the storm, and literally silenced the massive crowd in the twentieth
minute by taking the lead. Wellington failed to clear a throw-in, and Jets captain Matthew
Thompson flew in to capitalise, burying the ball beyond Liam Reddy from the edge of the
six-yard box.
Wellington wasted little time in seeking a swift riposte. Straight from the kick-off, they
thundered downfield, and both Brown and Paul Ifill had shots blocked before Vince Lia
thundered the rebound from the latter's effort wide of the mark.
Two minutes later, Durante picked out Manny Muscat with a pass which the Maltese
international's deft touch past a defender turned into a goalscoring opportunity. But
Kennedy was alert to the danger, and swiftly advanced off his line to block at close
quarters from the midfielder.
Not used to finding themselves trailing on home turf, Wellington started to get a bit
frustrated, and conceded niggly fouls aplenty for a brief period. That all changed in the
33rd minute, however, when they fashioned a splendidly worked equaliser.
Bertos and Lia linked on the right, with the latter playing the ball through the inside
right channel to Chris Greenacre. He held off the challenge of Ljubo Milicevic before
picking out Ifill with a cross to the far post.
The Barbados international's shot was blocked by Nikolai Topor-Stanley - a rock in
Newcastle's rearguard throughout proceedings. But the striker swiftly gathered the rebound
and angled the ball into the stride of Brown, who buried the ball beyond Kennedy from eight
yards.
Now it was Newcastle's turn to take out their frustrations with a string of ill-conceived
challenges. Not before Ifill took on two opponents and evaded repeated challenges from them
before stinging Kennedy's gloves ten minutes before half-time.
Four minutes later, Bertos' free-kick to the far post found Brown arriving unmarked, but he
guided his glancing header past the upright, much to Kennedy's relief, which quickly
transformed into a right ear-bashing for the defenders in front of him as he berated their
laxness on this occasion.
Newcastle finished the half the stronger, twice going close in the minutes before half-time.
Sean Rooney's through ball rewarded the fine off-the-ball running of Song Jin Hyung in the
42nd minute, and his low cross from the by-line somehow eluded the fast-arriving figure of
Thompson as he dashed in at the near post.
Seconds later, Tarek Elrich squandered a glorious chance to restore Newcastle's lead when
played in by Abbas. The overlapping fullback found himself one-on-one with just Reddy to
beat, but he shot straight at the 'keeper to ensure the first half ended with the scores
locked at 1-1.
And that's how they remained after a vibrant second half, which saw chances aplenty created,
particularly by Wellington. A clever pass by Ifill in the 49th minute released Troy Lochhead
down the left, but his cross was partially cleared as far as Bertos, whose looping delivery,
targeting Greenacre, was plucked off his head by Kennedy.
Lia and Lochhead linked on the left moments later - the fullback's back-heeled pass was
scrumptious - to play Ifill in, only for Elrich to redeem himself for his first half miss
with a timely tackle, which sparked a Newcastle counter-attack.
Thompson was the ultimate beneficiary of the fullback's endeavours, and sent the
full-of-running Abbas buccaneering down the left at pace before dashing into the penalty
area and clipping a cross to the far post. Arriving on cue was Thompson, who somehow
contrived to bundle the ball past the post with Reddy scrambling across his goal - a great
chance spurned.
Wellington responded on the hour, Ifill evading a couple of opponents before inviting Bertos
to break down the left, from where he delivered a cross which arced narrowly over the heads
of three yellow-and-black-clad players in the penalty area.
Seconds later, another cross hurtled into Newcastle's penalty area. Elrich rose to head the
ball clear, but only succeeded in directing a looping header towards the top left-hand
corner of his own net. Kennedy produced a superb save to keep the scores level.
The resulting Bertos corner was cleared to Ifill, whose rifled twenty-five yard drive was
headed over his own crossbar by Topor-Stanley, as Newcastle continued to weather the storm.
The offside flag came to their aid in the 65th minute, as Lia, Ifill and Brown combined to
play Greenacre in through the inside left channel - Kennedy produced another solid blocking
save, despite the decision.
Two minutes later, Lochhead released the freshly introduced legs of Daniel down the left,
with the Brazilian sending a lovely ball down the line for Greenacre to latch onto and cross
to the far post for Ifill, who cut inside but shot high, wide and far from handsomely past
the far post.
A volley from Daniel flashed over the bar soon after, before a clash of the captains at the
other end of the park saw Durante prevail at Thompson's expense, as the midfielder looked to
capitalise on an opportunity afforded him by substitute Mirjan Pavlovic, who got the better
of Ben Sigmund to engineer the the opening, twenty minutes from time.
Reddy saved at the feet of Thompson six minutes later after the Newcastle man had tangled
with Sigmund inside the area, an example of the last-ditch defensive work which, along with
the interceptions, stray passes and thrilling counter-attacking, were making this a real
edge-of-the-seat affair off which you daren?t take your eyes lest something be missed.
Back steamed Wellington, Daniel picking out Ifill on the right with a peach of a pass, which
the striker turned into a scoring opportunity after superbly wrong-footing an opponent. He
pulled the ball back into the goalmouth, and with Newcastle unable to clear the threat,
Brown directed the ball towards substitute Eugene Dadi, who directed his close-range header
over the bar.
Two minutes from time, Ifill was hauled down on the edge of the penalty area as he dashed
between two opponents. Daniel's free-kick was scrambled to safety by Newcastle, who had the
chance to win the game with a ninetieth minute counter-attack.
Abbas led it, working a one-two with evergreen substitute Sasho Petrovski before picking out
the unmarked Pavlovic with an inviting cross. The substitute had the goal in his sights, but
blazed wildly over the target, much to the relief of the Wellington fans, who urged their
charges on as stoppage time loomed.
Like Newcastle, the home team had the chance to win at the death, and it really was at the
death in this instance, the fourth minute of stoppage time, to be precise. And of all
people, it was Ifill who spurned a chance he would normally have converted with his eyes
closed.
Backing up Greenacre, as Wellington mounted a last-ditch assault on the Newcastle goal, the
ball broke for Ifill, who quickly swept past a challenge to leave himself one-on-one with
Kennedy. He rounded the 'keeper, but with the goal gaping before him, he couldn?t get the
ball under control in time, allowing Kennedy to recover and the visitors to clear their
lines.
Referee Chris Beath - he hardly put a foot wrong all day - blew the final whistle, which
meant another Hyundai A-League play-off series fixture was destined to go on for at least
thirty more minutes.
This one started with a bang, or, rather, a thud - Ifill smashed a shot against the base of
the post as Wellington attacked straight from the kick-off, the rebound careering past the
outstretched leg of Dadi as he attempted to turn the ball home.
Newcastle continued to live dangerously, some lovely combination play down the left between
Dadi, Lochhead and Daniel culminating in the last-mentioned picking out Ifill on the far
post with a measured cross which invited a volleyed finish.
The striker opted to control the ball, and the chance was lost, albeit temporarily. For
Muscat was up in support of Ifill, and promptly delivered the ball into the danger zone for
Dadi, who was unable to direct the sphere towards the target.
Back came Newcastle, substitute Labinot Haliti - a surprise non-starter - looping a volley
from an Abbas free-kick onto the roof of Wellington?s net, before Abbas and Pavlovic caused
problems in the heart of the home team?s rearguard, engineering an opportunity for
Petrovski. His curled twenty-yarder beat Reddy all ends up, only to ricochet to safety off
the post in the 101st minute.
Wellington stormed straight downfield on the counter-attack, with Ifill, Dadi and Daniel all
attempting to shoot at the target, only for Topor-Stanley, Kantarovski and company to stand
firm.
But on the stroke of half-time in extra-time, the resilience of Newcastle?s defence was
broken by the talismanic Ifill. Sigmund broke out of defence and picked out Brown, who
sprayed the sphere towards the striker, near the edge of the penalty area. Ifill swept past
an opponent before battering the ball beyond Kennedy and into the far corner of the net.
How Wellington's fans rejoiced! But there was still fifteen minutes for them to endure
before their team could be certain of progressing to the last three. And there was no way
Newcastle were going to take this setback lying down.
Straight from the start of the second half of extra time, Petrovski was prowling around the
penalty area, and lashed a twenty-yarder towards the target. Reddy grabbed this, and
scrambled a Pavlovic shot to safety four minutes later after the striker had taken on and
bettered three Wellington defenders at the sharp end of another slick counter-attack.
Still Newcastle pressed, this time earning a free-kick in the 113th minute. Kantarovski?s
delivery was headed clear, and immediately Daniel commandeered possession, his raking
cross-field ball picking out Ifill on the right. He side-stepped a challenge before darting
into the penalty area and squaring the ball, only to find no-one up in support of him on
this occasion.
That wasn't the case two minutes later, however, as Wellington finally finished off
Newcastle's season. It was the substitutes who combined, and again it stemmed from a
counter-attack as they cleared a free-kick from the visitors.
Dadi did the deed inside his own penalty area, his clearance releasing Daniel down the left.
As his cross-field ball arced towards Diego Walsh, who was steaming through the inside-right
channel, the uniquely coiffured Dadi was powering through the middle of the park.
As Diego Walsh's low cross careered across the goalmouth, the man who ignited the move was on hand
to finish it, ramming the ball emphatically into the roof of the net to lift the lid off
'The Caketin'!
3-1 Wellington, and they weren?t done with yet! Urged on by the fans, they went all out for
a fourth goal, Kennedy blocking from Ifill after more fine work down the left by Daniel -
his introduction was the key to the home team's success.
And two minutes from time, referee Beath turned away penalty claims as Dadi, having been
released by Muscat down the right, was thwarted inside the area by the hard-working
Kantarovski, whose efforts, and those of his team-mates, weren't enough to deny Wellington?s
passage into the preliminary final, a 3-1 extra-time win ensuring the victors' involvement
will last until at least the penultimate week of the campaign.
A-League 2009/2010 - Elimination Semi-Final - Week 2
4pm, Saturday 7 March, 2010 - Westpac Stadium, Wellington NZ