19. Harry Souttar (6)
Football’s answer to Conan O’Brien (looks-wise as his comedy stylings remain largely undocumented) led the defence well. Can’t be blamed for either of the nightmare goals the side conceded.
17. Hayden Matthews (5)
Tony Popovic has never been afraid to give young players a chance if he believes they’re ready. In a match of this importance, throwing a 20-year-old who hadn’t played a professional match 10 months ago into the fray from the get-go was next level. Bahrain’s second goal came from a defensive header he couldn’t control.
16. Aziz Behich (5)
For better or worse, you know what you’re getting from Behich. Tireless running, adroit defending and the odd baffling moment when he is in attacking positions. In his 60-odd minutes on the field, his contribution on this night was enough.
3. Lewis Miller (5.5)
Hard to remember him being out-muscled, or out-worked, during his time in Australian colours. More of the same on this night. His night was over before the defensive madness commenced.
22. Jackson Irvine (4.5)
Effort and defensive application will never be questioned. But too many times the play either slows to a crawl or stops altogether when the ball is at his feet in good attacking areas. His spot in the team shouldn’t be questioned, but his tactical use is worthy of a re-think. Was removed from the action with 30 minutes remaining.
7. Anthony Caceres (6)
It took 32 years on this planet for Caceres to make his first start in the national team shirt. He largely made it count. His night wasn’t perfect, but he asked enough questions and worked plenty hard.
23. Craig Goodwin (6)
Any Australian side that Goodwin is in is better for it. The only genuine game-breaker we have at this level. Things were looking great when he was taken off. After not playing against Saudi Arabia, did he need to be taken off with so long remaining?
14. Riley McGree (7)
Australia’s best player in the first half. Hard to recall an error, easy to remember the positive influences. Handed Kusini Yengi a great chance to score midway through the term. Nothing will ever beat his “Scorpion King” goal in 2018 while playing for Newcastle in the A-League, but this showing was more important regarding the bigger picture.
9. Kusini Yengi (4)
Where do you start? Yep, he did score after just 38 seconds. And then he scored in the 96th minute to make the score 2-2. But, in the 94 minutes in between he struggled to keep out of his own way. Had three more great chances to score but messed each of them up. Those wasted opportunities kept the door open for the hosts. Good reliable strikers are the hardest thing to find in world football. Australia’s search continues.
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Substitutes:
5. Jordan Bos (4.5)
Not many questions were asked but (thankfully) no mistakes of note made. No real impact in attacking situations on the wing.
8. Jason Geria (4.5)
Same scenario as Bos.
10. Ajdin Hrustic (4)
Was on the field for long enough to have made more of an impact in attack. This guy was Australia’s premier attacking midfielder a couple of years back. It’s difficult to prosecute that argument today.
11. Brandon Borrello (N/A)
Was involved in the lead-up to Yengi’s second goal but aside from that, chances were limited.
13. Aiden O’Neill (4)
A like-for-like swap with Irvine. His introduction was the right thing to do when leading 1-0. But once the score was 2-1 to Bahrain, a more attack-focused midfielder would have been ideal.