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Sky Blues Unable to Break Deadlock in Semi Final Opener

Sydney FC 1 (Stamatelopoulos 50’) draw Newcastle Jets 1 (Adams 58’)

Sydney FC dominates but were left frustrated in a 1-1 draw against Newcastle Jets

Moments That Mattered:

4’ | GRANT HEADER – Sydney FC threaten early as a pinpoint corner delivery finds Grant, whose header narrowly misses the back of the net

28’ | QUISPE FIRES – Sharp attacking play from the Sky Blues sees Quispe pick up possession on the edge of the area, with his strike drifting just wide

32’ | KAMIJO ATTEMPT – Kamijo picks up possession outside the area and unleashes a powerful strike, but the Newcastle keeper gathers comfortably

THE COVE IN FULL. (Photo by Darrian Traynor/Getty Images)

35’ | SYDNEY FC TRICK PLAY – A smart set piece routine from the Sky Blues opens up the Newcastle defence before a dangerous cross is cleared by the goalkeeper

49’ | QUINTAL BRILLIANCE – Quintal weaves his way into space outside the box and fires a powerful shot at goal, forcing a spill from the keeper before the rebound escapes Sydney FC

50’ | STAMA CAPITALISES – Sydney FC force another dangerous moment as Stamatelopoulos pounces on a Newcastle defensive mistake inside the area and calmly slots a header into the back of the net

Apostolos Stamatelopoulos battling for the ball. (Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)

58’ | QUINTAL STRIKE – Quintal cuts inside dangerously and forces the Newcastle goalkeeper into action with a well struck effort

58’ | NEWCASTLE GOAL – A blocked Sydney FC attempt sparks a rapid Newcastle counter attack, ending with the visitors calmly converting to make it level

64’ | STAMA CHANCE – Stamatelopoulos creates space brilliantly inside the area and bends a low effort inches wide of the target

88’ | ARSLAN PENALTY APPEAL – Sydney FC appeal strongly for a spot kick after Arslan is brought down while shaping to shoot inside the box, but play continues

That should’ve been a penalty. (Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)

Match Report:

Sydney FC controlled much of the Semi-Final first leg at Allianz Stadium but were forced to settle for a frustrating 1-1 draw against Newcastle Jets despite creating the better chances throughout the night

Sydney FC Head Coach Patrick Kisnorbo has kept faith with the same starting XI that secured victory over Melbourne Victory in last week’s Elimination Final, naming an unchanged side for tonight’s blockbuster Semi Final clash against Newcastle Jets at Allianz Stadium.

The Sky Blues will be hoping consistency and momentum can help extend their unbeaten run and deliver a crucial first leg win on home soil.

Sydney FC entered the game with intent from the opening whistle, immediately pressing high and forcing Newcastle Jets deep into their own half. The energy of the Sky Blues’ younger players was evident early, with Patrick Kisnorbo’s decision to retain the same starting side from last week’s Elimination Final already looking to pay off through the side’s chemistry and fluidity of play.

The hosts nearly found an early breakthrough in the 4th minute when a pinpoint corner delivery picked out Rhyan Grant, whose header narrowly missed the back of the net. Sydney continued to dominate possession throughout the opening stages, with the midfield trio controlling the tempo and repeatedly winning the ball high up the pitch.

THE Akol AKON. (Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)

Their aggressive press and sharp passing combinations continued to trouble the Jets as the half progressed, although moments of complacency occasionally allowed Newcastle brief openings. Despite this, Sydney’s defensive structure remained solid, quickly recovering from mistakes and preventing the visitors from creating meaningful opportunities.

As the pressure mounted, Sydney began carving out more chances through their slick interplay around the edge of the area. In the 28th minute, sharp attacking football allowed Piero Quispe to receive possession just outside the box before firing narrowly wide of the target. Just minutes later, Wataru Kamijo tried his luck from distance with a powerful strike, although the Newcastle goalkeeper was able to gather comfortably.

Wataru Kamijo bossing the midfield. (Photo by Darrian Traynor/Getty Images)

The Sky Blues continued to push forward with confidence and creativity, producing a clever set piece routine in the 35th minute that opened up the Jets defence before a dangerous cross was eventually cleared by the goalkeeper. By this stage, Sydney had fully regained control after a brief Newcastle spell of pressure, repeatedly forcing turnovers high in the attacking half.

However, despite the match remaining scoreless, Sydney FC will take plenty of confidence from a dominant first half display. The Sky Blues controlled possession, won the ball high up the pitch and consistently threatened the Newcastle defence, with their energetic attacking play and midfield chemistry laying a strong foundation heading into the second half.

Sydney FC began the second half with the same intensity and control they displayed throughout the opening 45 minutes, immediately pinning Newcastle Jets deep inside their own half. The Sky Blues’ midfield once again laid the platform for the side’s attacking pressure, dominating possession and preventing the visitors from creating any meaningful early opportunities.

Just minutes after the restart, Sydney nearly found the breakthrough through Tiago Quintal, who weaved his way into space outside the box before firing a powerful effort at goal, forcing a spill from the Newcastle goalkeeper as the rebound narrowly escaped the hosts. The pressure continued moments later as Apostolos Stamatelopoulos pounced on a defensive mistake inside the area, calm header finishing to give Sydney FC a deserved breakthrough following their relentless high press.

The Sky Blues remained firmly on top and looked increasingly dangerous moving forward, with Quintal again threatening in the 58th minute after cutting inside and forcing another strong save from the Newcastle keeper. However, despite Sydney’s dominance, the visitors found a way back into the contest almost immediately.

Following a blocked Sydney FC attack, Newcastle launched a rapid counter attack that caught the hosts off guard before calmly converting the equaliser against the run of play. The goal shifted momentum briefly, with Sydney beginning to show signs of complacency after controlling much of the match.

Despite the setback, Sydney FC remained composed and continued to push forward with intent, refusing to allow the equaliser to derail their attacking approach. Stamatelopoulos came close to restoring the lead in the 64th minute after creating space brilliantly inside the box, only to see his curling low effort drift inches wide of the post.

As the half wore on, both sides began to trade attacking chances in a more open contest. Sydney still managed to penetrate through the Newcastle defence regularly, although their lack of finishing continued to frustrate the home side. While cracks occasionally appeared in Sydney’s defensive structure, the midfield continued to work tirelessly to regain control and limit Newcastle’s possession following their goal.

Our Number 20. (Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)

Entering the final stages, the game became increasingly scrappy as fatigue began to set in for both sides. Sydney FC briefly lost their earlier control of the contest, allowing Newcastle back into the game as momentum swung between the two teams. However, the Sky Blues found renewed energy late on, returning to their aggressive press and once again forcing Newcastle deep into their own half.

The biggest moment of the closing stages came in the 88th minute when Sydney FC appealed strongly for a penalty after Ahmet Arslan was brought down while shaping to shoot inside the area, although the referee waved away the claims. Despite their relentless pressure throughout the second half, Sydney FC were ultimately unable to find a winner, leaving the Semi Final finely poised heading into the second leg.

What They Said:

Patrick Kisnorbo:-

“Yeah, I think it’s probably been our best performance since I’ve been here. So look, I’m very proud of the players. Obviously, they’ll be frustrated with the goal against, but I can’t fault their effort or attitude. They were really good tonight.”

“Yeah, of course. I think the players realise they can do things in a different way, and today they showed that, which is really positive. It’s something we’ve been working on since the day I came here. To see it come to fruition is pleasing, but now we’ve got to recover, get ready and go again next week.”

Our Gaffer. (Photo by Josh Chadwick/Getty Images)

“Yeah, I think they were two different scenarios, to be honest. Obviously, last week was last week. Considering where they’ve come from, maybe the occasion got to them a little bit — maybe a bit of pressure, which I don’t think they should’ve felt. But today they let that go and really pushed the way we wanted to push and the way we’ve been working towards. Again, I can’t fault them. They were great.”

“Not really. I can’t control ages and things like that. I’ve only just come in, so I don’t really focus on age brackets.”

“I focus on the way we play, the way we go about things, and what we can do.”

“I think it was just us being ourselves — the way we wanted to play and the identity we want to show. The players did that for large spells of the game. Consistency is a big thing, but we need to keep progressing and doing the same things.”

“Look, you see them given and you see them not given. The referee has to make a decision and whoever’s upstairs has to make one too. Sometimes you get them, sometimes you don’t. For me, I’m not really focused on that. I’m focused on next week and how we go about it.”

“Yeah. He’s been out for a long time and he’s worked really hard behind the scenes to get fit as quickly as possible. Today he got his reward for all that hard work. I’m pleased he got some minutes under his belt because, coming back from a long injury, you need that. He definitely deserved the ovation from the Sydney crowd.”

Patrick Kisnorbo looks on. (Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)

“I think every player says they’re ready, to be honest. I just give them the straight answer. We knew Joe was ready. I didn’t need him to tell me that. I expect players to be ready when they’re called upon, and he was tonight.”

“I don’t know. We’ll have to see how he pulls up after tonight. It’s his first match in a long time, so we’ll see how he recovers tomorrow and then start preparing for Saturday.”

“At the end of the day, there are two goals, a pitch, and you’ve got to play. Home or away doesn’t really matter.”

“No, I think we just need to concentrate on ourselves and what we do. Recovery starts tonight, then we prepare properly during the week and get ready for Saturday.”

“Everything. There’s not just one thing. We want to get better in every phase of play and every moment of the game, so we’ll start working on that tomorrow.”

“To be honest, I haven’t spoken to him yet. But we forget he’s still a 16-year-old kid, and we’ve called on him a lot recently. He’s been fantastic. He’s played a lot of minutes since I came in. He’s young, he’ll recover, and he’ll get on with it.”

Sydney FC Army. (Photo by Darrian Traynor/Getty Images)

Paul Okon JNR:-

Apostolos Stamatelopoulos:-

“Yeah, definitely. I think so. It was probably our best game going forward. I think everything finally clicked. We definitely could’ve had two more goals easily, I reckon.”

“Yeah, definitely. I think we all said after the game that it was our best performance under the new boss, and we’re all very confident going into the next game.”

“Not sure. Maybe the occasion, maybe just working on it a lot with the new gaffer. Sometimes it just happens and everything clicks. Everyone performed well tonight.”

“Yeah, definitely. We set up in a certain way to stop them getting through the middle, and I think we did that really well.”

“Yeah, I definitely needed it, I think. Obviously I haven’t been as prolific as I was up there, but I’ve still got massive respect for the club. But I’m here now, I’ve got a job to do here, and we want to make the Grand Final, so we’ve got to go again next week.”

“Yeah, definitely. Happy to be the villain. I still have respect for the club, but I’m at Sydney now and I want us to win the Grand Final.”

“Yeah, definitely. I don’t think it’s reinvigorated me because I felt like I was doing well over there. But last season killed me a bit with injuries and stuff, so I just needed a season where I could get back to being sharp and fit. It’s taken a little bit of time, but I feel like I’m getting back to myself again.’

“Yeah, definitely. The crowds are bigger, everything feels more important, and it’s great. I’d only really been involved in finals once before — I think it was my first season at Adelaide. So this is basically my first real run of finals football and it’s been unreal so far.”

“I think the way we attacked. As a centre forward, I thought we pressed them really well and executed the press exactly how we wanted to. Defensively, I didn’t feel like they had too many big chances apart from the transition moment for their goal. Maybe we could’ve fouled a bit earlier and stopped it completely, but overall I felt like we controlled large parts of the game.”

“Yeah, definitely. Young McCall has done unbelievably well — I thought he was really good both last week and this week. But when someone like Joe comes on, it changes things. It makes it easier for me because defenders start shifting more attention towards him. For a striker, it’s perfect having someone that deadly around you because defenders can switch off for a second.”

“No, I’ve got to head back on June 18. Hopefully we make it all the way to the Grand Final first, then I’ll head to Adelaide with the missus and the little one for a bit before going back over.”

Sydney FC | 12. Harrison Devenish-Meares (GK), 4. Jordan Courtney-Perkins, 7. Piero Quispe (9. Victor Campuzano 86’), 8. Wataru Kamijo, 17. Ben Garuccio, 20. Tiago Quintal (70. Ahmet Arslan 66’) , 23. Rhyan Grant (C), 24. Paul Okon-JNR, 41. Alexandar Popovic, 44. Akol Akon (10. Joe Lolley 76’), 80. Apostolos Stamatelopoulos (13. Patrick Wood 66’)

Unused Subs | 1. Gus Hoefsloot (GK), 16. Joel King, 36. Rhys Youlley

Head Coach | Patrick Kisnorbo

Yellow Cards | 24. Paul Okon-JNR 17’

Red Cards | N/A

Newcastle Jets | 1. James Delianov (GK), 5. Joseph Shaughnessy (17. Kostandinos Grozos 75’), 7. Eli Adams, 8. Lachlan Bayliss, 11. Ben Gibson (43. Xavier Bertoncello 65’), 13. Clayton Taylor (18. Kota Mizunuma 75’) 14. Max Burgess (C), 22. Joel Bertolissio, 23. Daniel Wilmering, 28. Will Dobson (10. Zach Clough 65’), 33. Mark Natta

Unused Subs | 40. Jordan Baylis (GK), 24. Alexandro Nunes, 42. Maxwell Cooper

Head Coach | Mark Milligan

Yellow Cards | 5. Joseph Shaughnessy 73’

Red Cards | N/A

Venue | Allianz Stadium

Referee | Daniel Elder

Attendance | 17,771

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