Socceroos Criticise Referee Zwayer After 2-0 World Cup Loss to USA
Socceroos Slam Referee Zwayer After Loss to USA

Referee Felix Zwayer has come under fire from the Socceroos, who labeled the German official's performance a "stinker" after what they perceived as a series of injustices in their 2-0 defeat to the USA in a World Cup match in Seattle.

Contentious Officiating

The co-hosts' second goal was awarded by the video assistant referee, sparking controversy due to an apparent offside player near goalkeeper Patrick Beach as he attempted to recover from a misdirected shot. However, the primary grievance was a string of non-calls throughout the match. Connor Metcalfe appeared to be tripped in the penalty area, and forward Nestory Irankunda was taken out off the ball by American defender Chris Richards. Several other players' appeals to the referee were ignored during the game.

Irankunda stated the team was unlucky. "If you look at how the referee was today, [there's] not much I can say about that," he said. When asked to elaborate, his criticism became more pointed: "The ref was having a stinker today, but I mean it is what it is. He was giving every call to the USA. I get it, but at the same time, we know there's two teams on the field, so you have to give the calls both ways and he didn't do that today."

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Coach Tony Popovic remarked that the contest was not overly physical, but the whistle was inconsistent. "I thought the referee gave too many fouls away, in all honesty," he said. "Sometimes you didn't have to do much to win a foul, and on other occasions you had to do a fair bit to get one."

Match Summary

Despite the result, the Socceroos believe they can quickly correct their listing World Cup campaign. Australia found themselves down 2-0 at half-time after being outplayed in the opening half. The result at the 68,000-capacity Seattle Stadium secured a berth in the knockout rounds for the US, who later learned they had won Group D following Paraguay's victory over Turkey. However, it leaves Australia's campaign on the bubble ahead of their final group-stage match against the South Americans in San Francisco next week. A win or draw will be enough for them to qualify in second place, but it remains uncertain whether a defeat will end their hopes of progressing to the last 32.

Captain Harry Souttar was downcast after the match and admitted it was a frustrating afternoon, but said the Socceroos know they can still progress to the last 32. "[The reaction] has got to be a positive one tomorrow," he said. "We can look back at the game properly and take bits that we did well and that we didn't do well – there's a lot of them."

"We're in that position where we know we can go through, if we get a result. So yeah, full focus and positivity has got to be [there] for that last game," Souttar added.

The Socceroos worked their way into the contest in the second half but were unable to find a way back into the match against an opposition that was hungry and composed. "We didn't start well enough," Souttar said. "They were in our faces, we couldn't keep the ball down, we were always trying to get in behind early, we just didn't really show that composure that I think you think you needed. But the reaction was good."

Second Half Improvements

Nestory Irankunda and Connor Metcalfe – goalscorers against Turkey last week – came on during the break and were impressive, alongside Cristian Volpato, who made his World Cup debut. Midfielder Aiden O'Neill said the Socceroos "still believe" and can take positives into the clash against Paraguay after the second-half performance. He noted that Volpato had a "massive impact," as did the other substitutes, helping to turn around the match.

"The boss always talks about the belief in the squad and I think maybe in the second half we really truly believed that we would get back into it," O'Neill said. "Maybe you could see that on the field, and we gave everything. I think everyone can see that."

Popovic could not fully explain the first-half performance. "I don't know if it's the occasion, but we looked sluggish, heavy legged, dull," he said. "They won every duel, they won every second ball and when you do that, it makes it very difficult to get any, gain any momentum." He described the second-half response as "outstanding" and a platform to take into the next match.

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"We've got to accept what happened today, and I'm really delighted with the second half, to be honest, with all the players that came on, and the players that didn't have a good first half," he said. "It's a World Cup. We move on to Paraguay and we'll work hard to be ready for that."