2015 AFC Asian Cup Group D

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Group D of the 2015 AFC Asian Cup was one of four groups of nations competing at the 2015 AFC Asian Cup. The group's first round of matches were played on 12 January, the second round on 16 January, and the final round on 20 January. All six group matches were played at venues in Australia. The group consisted of title holders Japan, Jordan, Iraq and Palestine.[1] Japan and Iraq advanced as group winners and runners-up respectively, while Jordan and Palestine were eliminated.

Teams

Draw position Team Method of
qualification
Date of
qualification
Finals
appearance
Last
appearance
Previous best
performance
FIFA Rankings
March 2014[nb 1] Start of event
D1  Japan 2011 AFC Asian Cup winners 25 January 2011 8th 2011 Winners (1992, 2000, 2004, 2011) 48 54
D2  Jordan Group A runners-up 4 February 2014 3rd 2011 Quarter-finals (2004, 2011) 66 93
D3  Iraq Group C runners-up 5 March 2014 8th 2011 Winners (2007) 103 114
D4  Palestine 2014 AFC Challenge Cup winners 30 May 2014 1st 167 115
Notes
  1. The rankings of March 2014 were used for seeding for the final draw.

Standings

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  Japan 3 3 0 0 7 0 +7 9 Advance to knockout stage
2  Iraq 3 2 0 1 3 1 +2 6
3  Jordan 3 1 0 2 5 4 +1 3
4  Palestine 3 0 0 3 1 11 −10 0
Source: Asian Cup Australia 2015
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers

In the quarter-finals:

  • Japan advanced to play United Arab Emirates (runner-up of Group C).
  • Iraq advanced to play Iran (winner of Group C).

Matches

Japan vs Palestine

Japan kicked off the defence of their AFC Asian Cup title as Javier Aguirre's side notched up an empathic 4–0 win over tournament debutant and rivals Palestine at Newcastle Stadium. Yasuhito Endō, Shinji Okazaki, Keisuke Honda and Maya Yoshida were all on the scorer as the four-time continental champions showed their class to pick up all three points on a blustery evening.[2][3]

Palestine, appearing in the competition for the first time after winning the AFC Challenge Cup in May 2014, finished the game with 10 men after Ahmed Harbi was sent-off for a late challenge on Shinji Kagawa that earned him a second booking after being cautioned in first half injury time. Aguirre made his intentions clear from the start by fielding a full strength line-up against Palestine and it took just eight minutes for the defending champions to notch their opening goal. Endo, earning his 149th cap for his country and making a Japanese record 18th appearance at the AFC Asian Cup, took aim from 25 yards out and his low left foot strike gave Ramzi Saleh little chance as it settled into the goalkeeper's bottom right corner. By the 25th minute, Japan had doubled their lead with Okazaki showing razor sharp reflexes to head Kagawa's shot from the edge of the area past Saleh. And just a minute before the half-time break Honda made it 3-0 from the penalty spot after Kagawa was brought down by Mus'ab Al-Batat. Palestine saw little of the ball in the opening 45 minutes, although Ismail Al-Amour fashioned a rare opportunity five minutes before the break, only to drag his effort from the edge of the area across the face of goal.[4]

There was little let-up from Japan at the beginning of the second half with Endo trying his luck again from long distance – this time with his right foot – but Saleh was equal to the task, turning the ball around his right post. Seconds later, though, Yoshida headed home Japan's fourth, rising highest to nod in Kagawa's corner as the gulf in class between the teams became ever more apparent. Mahajna's sending off threatened to cause further problems for Palestine but, despite being down to 10 men, central defender Abdelatif Bahdari almost claimed a consolation goal eight minutes from time when his flying header went just wide. Gōtoku Sakai and Yoshinori Muto both tried their luck in the dying minutes to extend Japan's lead, but in the end the titleholders commenced their defence of the trophy in a convincing manner.[5]

12 January 2015
18:00 AEDT (UTC+11)
Japan  4–0  Palestine
Endō Goal 8'
Okazaki Goal 25'
Honda Goal 43' (pen.)
Yoshida Goal 49'
Report
Newcastle Stadium, Newcastle
Attendance: 17,147
Referee: Abdulrahman Abdou (Qatar)
Japan
Palestine
GK 1 Eiji Kawashima
RB 21 Gōtoku Sakai
CB 22 Maya Yoshida
CB 6 Masato Morishige
LB 5 Yuto Nagatomo
DM 17 Makoto Hasebe (c)
RM 4 Keisuke Honda
CM 10 Shinji Kagawa
CM 7 Yasuhito Endō Substituted off 58'
LM 18 Takashi Inui Substituted off 46'
CF 9 Shinji Okazaki Substituted off 80'
Substitutions:
MF 8 Hiroshi Kiyotake Substituted in 46'
MF 14 Yoshinori Muto Substituted in 58'
FW 11 Yohei Toyoda Substituted in 80'
Manager:
Mexico Javier Aguirre
300px
GK 21 Ramzi Saleh (c)
RB 18 Mus'ab Al-Batat
CB 4 Ahmed Harbi Yellow cardYellow cardRed card 45+1', 73'
CB 15 Abdelatif Bahdari Booked 69'
LB 14 Abdullah Jaber
CM 20 Khader Yousef Substituted off 70'
CM 23 Murad Ismail Said
RW 10 Ismail Al-Amour Booked 60' Substituted off 82'
LW 7 Ashraf Nu'man Booked 43'
SS 19 Abdelhamid Abuhabib
CF 16 Mahmoud Eid Substituted off 75'
Substitutions:
MF 8 Hesham Salhe Substituted in 70'
DF 12 Tamer Salah Substituted in 75'
DF 3 Hussam Abu Saleh Substituted in 82'
Manager:
Saeb Jendeya

Man of the Match:
Shinji Okazaki (Japan)[6]

Assistant referees:
Taleb Salem Al-Marri (Qatar)
Ramzan Saeed Al-Naemi (Qatar)
Fourth official:
Mohd Amirul Izwan Yaacob (Malaysia)
Fifth official:
Mohd Yusri Muhamad (Malaysia)

Jordan vs Iraq

Yaser Kasim scored a late winner as 2007 AFC Asian Cup champions Iraq produced a gritty 1–0 victory over 10-man Jordan at Brisbane Stadium to move level on points with Japan. Kasim struck with 13 minutes remaining in the crucial meeting between the Persian Gulf rivals ahead of their clash with Japan on 16 January. But while Iraq had more of the possession by a comfortable margin, both sides were starved for clear-cut chances in the opening half. Iraq thought they had created a chance in the 16th minute when Kasim picked out Younis Mahmoud, but Tareq Khattab came to the rescue by snuffing out the iconic striker with a sliding tackle.[7]

Jordan coach Ray Wilkins had said a day earlier that if his team failed to qualify for the quarter-finals it would not be because of a lack of effort, and his troops proved the former Manchester United and Chelsea midfielder right with an industrious performance right down to the final whistle. But equally, Jordan struggled over the last third of the pitch, missing that touch of creativity necessary to penetrate Iraq's defense as striker Odai Al-Saify was free in front of goal a minute before the hour mark only to float a back-header over the crossbar. During the following sequence, Mohammad Mustafa had another chance for Jordan from the heart of the penalty area, but mishit the ball, shooting harmlessly into the arms of goalkeeper Jalal Hasan.[8]

But just when a draw appeared to be on the horizon, Iraq put an end to the stalemate in the 77th minute through Kasim, who slashed his way into the penalty area from right angle before pulling the trigger and seeing his shot deflected off Khattab to wrong-foot goalkeeper Amer Shafi. The momentum continued to swing in Iraq's favor as in the 84th minute Jordan defender Anas Bani Yaseen was given his marching orders after collecting a second booking for a late shoulder charge on Saad Abdul-Amir.[9]

12 January 2015
19:00 AEST (UTC+10)
Jordan  0–1  Iraq
Report Kasim Goal 77'
Jordan
Iraq
GK 1 Amer Shafi (c)
RB 11 Oday Zahran
CB 3 Tareq Khattab
CB 19 Anas Bani Yaseen Yellow cardYellow cardRed card 54', 84'
LB 21 Mohammad Al-Dmeiri
DM 5 Mohammad Mustafa
RM 13 Khalil Bani Attiah Substituted off 60'
LM 18 Ahmed Elias Booked 8' Substituted off 87'
AM 9 Ahmed Sariweh Substituted off 81'
CF 10 Ahmad Hayel
CF 8 Odai Al-Saify Booked 87'
Substitutions:
MF 23 Yousef Al-Rawashdeh Substituted in 60'
FW 7 Mahmoud Za'tara Booked 90+2' Substituted in 81'
MF 14 Abdallah Deeb Substituted in 87'
Manager:
England Ray Wilkins
300px
GK 12 Jalal Hasan
RB 23 Waleed Salem
CB 2 Ahmad Ibrahim
CB 14 Salam Shaker
LB 15 Dhurgham Ismail
CM 5 Yaser Kasim Booked 51'
CM 21 Saad Abdul-Amir
RW 7 Amjad Kalaf Booked 83'
AM 17 Alaa Abdul-Zahra Booked 19'  Substituted off 90'
LW 11 Humam Tariq Substituted off 57'
CF 10 Younis Mahmoud (c) Substituted off 73'
Substitutions:
FW 8 Justin Meram Substituted in 57'
MF 9 Ahmed Yasin Substituted in 73'
MF 13 Osama Rashid Substituted in 90'
Manager:
Radhi Shenaishil

Man of the Match:
Yaser Kasim (Iraq)[10]

Assistant referees:
Badr Al-Shumrani (Saudi Arabia)
Abdulah Al Shalwai (Saudi Arabia)
Fourth official:
Crishantha Dilan Perera (Sri Lanka)
Fifth official:
Palitha Hemathunga (Sri Lanka)

Palestine vs Jordan

Hamza Al-Dardour became only the fourth player in the history of the AFC Asian Cup to score four goals in a single game as two-time quarter-finalists Jordan kept their knockout stage hopes alive with a resounding 5–1 win over Palestine. Yousef Al-Rawashdeh's eye-catching strike 12 minutes before half-time at Melbourne Rectangular Stadium settled any nerves for Jordan, who had previously not won a match since their final AFC Asian Cup qualifier in March 2013 having suffered a 1–0 defeat by Iraq in their tournament opener.[11]

And with recalled striker Al Dardour netting twice inside the final ten minutes of the first half before scoring twice inside the final 15 minutes, Jordan would remain in Melbourne to face defending champions Japan on 20 January still in contention to maintain their 100% record of qualifying for the quarter-finals. Debutants Palestine, though, would travel to Canberra to face Iraq facing an uphill battle to still progress having earlier lost 4–0 to Japan despite Jaka Ihbeisheh netting their historic first AFC Asian Cup goal with five minutes remaining.[12]

With both sides looking to bounce back from opening defeats, 2014 AFC Challenge Cup winners Palestine almost opened the scoring after just five minutes as only an alert one-handed save from Jordan goalkeeper Amer Shafi turned Hesham Salhe's vicious dipping strike from 25 yards onto the crossbar. Jordan did settle into the contest as the half progressed, although Palestine goalkeeper Ramzi Saleh remained largely untested as Abdallah Deeb flashed an effort just wide of the post midway through the opening 45 minutes. But Saleh could do little 12 minutes before half-time as Jordan quickly worked the ball across and into the left hand corner of the penalty area for Ahmad, and with the midfielder given time to steady himself and pick his spot, he expertly curled the ball into the top corner past the despairing dive of the Palestine goalkeeper.[13]

Less than two minutes later Saleh was again beaten as the custodian was drawn out of position by Deeb as the striker charged into the area before the Jordan forward played the ball across the six yard area for Al Dardour to slide in bravely at the back post. And with the last kick of the first half Jordan added a third in stoppage time as Al Dardour, who did not feature during the opening defeat by Iraq, stabbed home from close range as Saleh was unable to cut out Odai Al-Saify's drilled first-time cross. Palestine looked to recover from a disastrous end to the first half and came out strongly after half-time, with only a superb one-handed block from Shafi denying Abdelhamid Abuhabib, although at the other end, Saleh had to be on his toes to push Oday Zahran's lofted effort over the crossbar. Saeb Jendeya's side continued to press in the closing stages, but with 15 minutes remaining, Al Dardour completed his hat-trick with a superb solo goal as the striker coolly beat Saleh having picked the ball up just inside Palestine's half. And five minutes later, Al Dardour joined Iranian duo Behtash Fariba and Ali Daei and Bahrain's Ismail Abdul-Latif on the list of players to score four goals at the AFC Asian Cup as the striker stabbed home Zahran's cross from just outside the six yard area. There was, though, still time for Palestine to net their first AFC Asian Cup goal as Ihbeisheh netted from close range with five minutes remaining.[14][15]

16 January 2015
18:00 AEDT (UTC+11)
Palestine  1–5  Jordan
Ihbeisheh Goal 84' Report Al-Rawashdeh Goal 32'
Al-Dardour Goal 34'45+2'75'79'
Palestine
Jordan
GK 21 Ramzi Saleh (c) Booked 80'
RB 18 Mus'ab Al-Batat
CB 15 Abdelatif Bahdari
CB 12 Tamer Salah
LB 14 Abdullah Jaber
RM 3 Hussam Abu Saleh Substituted off 55'
CM 8 Hesham Salhe Substituted off 80'
CM 23 Murad Ismail Said
LM 13 Jaka Ihbeisheh
SS 19 Abdelhamid Abuhabib
CF 7 Ashraf Nu'man Substituted off 73'
Substitutions:
FW 10 Ismail Al-Amour Substituted in 55'
FW 16 Mahmoud Eid Substituted in 73'
MF 20 Khader Yousef Substituted in 80'
Manager:
Saeb Jendeya
300px
GK 1 Amer Shafi (c)
RB 11 Oday Zahran
CB 3 Tareq Khattab
CB 5 Mohammad Mustafa
LB 21 Mohammad Al-Dmeiri
DM 18 Ahmed Elias
RM 8 Odai Al-Saify
LM 23 Yousef Al-Rawashdeh Substituted off 69'
AM 6 Saeed Murjan Substituted off 52'
CF 20 Hamza Al-Dardour Substituted off 81'
CF 14 Abdallah Deeb
Substitutions:
MF 13 Khalil Bani Attiah Substituted in 52'
MF 9 Ahmed Sariweh Substituted in 69'
MF 15 Mohammad Al-Dawud  Substituted in 81'
Manager:
England Ray Wilkins

Man of the Match:
Hamza Al-Dardour (Jordan)[16]

Assistant referees:
Jeong Hae-sang (South Korea)
Yoon Kwang-yeol (South Korea)
Fourth official:
Ammar Al-Jeneibi (United Arab Emirates)
Fifth official:
Mohd Yusri Muhamad (Malaysia)

Iraq vs Japan

Man of the match Keisuke Honda's penalty helped Japan to their second straight victory as the defending champions eked out a 1–0 win over Iraq. Honda netted from the spot midway through the opening half as Javier Aguirre's side stayed on top of the group with the maximum six points, three points more than Iraq and Jordan, who defeated Palestine 5–1 earlier in the day. Japan's qualification for the quarter-finals rests on their last first round game on 20 January in Melbourne against the Jordan.[17][18]

Honda was involved in all of Japan's best moments in the first half, starting with a through ball for Shinji Kagawa that the Borussia Dortmund man fired wide in the 11th minute. Iraq returned the favour four minutes later from a corner, Ahmad Ibrahim Khalaf calling Eiji Kawashima into action with a soaring header the Standard Liège custodian managed to keep out. Honda headed off the bottom of the right-hand post in the 17th minute before Yasuhito Endō, making his 150th appearance for Japan, started a sequence through the box that Kagawa should have finished on 21 minutes from close range. A minute later, though, Aguirre's men managed to put themselves on the scoreboard as Honda was taken down in the area by Ali Adnan. Honda stepped up to the spot himself, converting for his second goal of the tournament to push the holders in front.[19][20]

Shinji Okazaki, said to be on the shopping list of several Premier League clubs this winter, should have doubled Japan's lead after 33 minutes but missed a free header that kept the Iraqis within one goal going into half-time. Two minutes after the break, Honda picked up where he left off in the first half, smashing against the crossbar with his weaker right foot from 20 yards out, and he had the best chance of the game four minutes past the hour that should have all but ended the contest.[21]

Substitute Hiroshi Kiyotake, who gave Japan a lift after coming on, set up Honda with a slick pass across the face of the goal but the A.C. Milan man, despite being completely free at the far post, somehow uncharacteristically missed, hitting the upright. Japan continued to flirt with the idea of scoring a second but came up short before the final whistle ended what turned out to be a relatively tame meeting between the winners of the last two Asian Cups.[22]

16 January 2015
19:00 AEST (UTC+10)
Iraq  0–1  Japan
Report Honda Goal 23' (pen.)
Brisbane Stadium, Brisbane
Attendance: 22,941
Referee: Alireza Faghani (Iran)
Iraq
Japan
GK 12 Jalal Hasan
RB 23 Waleed Salem
CB 2 Ahmad Ibrahim
CB 14 Salam Shaker Booked 61'
LB 15 Dhurgham Ismail
CM 21 Saad Abdul-Amir
CM 5 Yaser Kasim
RW 7 Amjad Kalaf Substituted off 82'
AM 17 Alaa Abdul-Zahra Booked 51'
LW 6 Ali Adnan Substituted off 67'
CF 10 Younis Mahmoud (c) Substituted off 54'
Substitutions:
FW 8 Justin Meram Substituted in 54'
MF 9 Ahmed Yasin Substituted in 67'
MF 13 Osama Rashid Substituted in 82'
Manager:
Radhi Shenaishil
300px
GK 1 Eiji Kawashima
RB 21 Gōtoku Sakai
CB 22 Maya Yoshida
CB 6 Masato Morishige
LB 5 Yuto Nagatomo
RM 10 Shinji Kagawa
CM 17 Makoto Hasebe (c)
LM 7 Yasuhito Endō Substituted off 63'
RW 4 Keisuke Honda Substituted off 89'
LW 18 Takashi Inui Substituted off 63'
CF 9 Shinji Okazaki
Substitutions:
MF 8 Hiroshi Kiyotake Booked 73' Substituted in 63'
MF 15 Yasuyuki Konno Booked 90+2'  Substituted in 63'
MF 14 Yoshinori Muto Substituted in 89'
Manager:
Mexico Javier Aguirre

Man of the Match:
Keisuke Honda (Japan)[23]

Assistant referees:
Reza Sokhandan (Iran)
Mohammad Reza Abolfazli (Iran)
Fourth official:
Crishantha Dilan Perera (Sri Lanka)
Fifth official:
Palitha Hemathunga (Sri Lanka)

Japan vs Jordan

Keisuke Honda scored for the third consecutive game as defending champions Japan finally confirmed their place in the quarter-finals of the tournament as 2–0 win over a brave Jordan completed a 100% record in Group D. The four-time winners only needed a point in front of a 25,000 crowd at Melbourne Rectangular Stadium having earlier beaten Palestine and Iraq, but Honda's 24th-minute strike and a late second from Shinji Kagawa saw Javier Aguirre's side claim the win. Having ended Jordan's hopes of an appearance in the last eight as Iraq claimed second place in Group D after beating Palestine in Canberra, Japan would face Group C runners-up the United Arab Emirates in Sydney on 23 January for a place in the semi-finals. Japan coach Aguirre named the same side for a third consecutive game with the defending champions only needing a point to qualify for the quarter-finals as Group D winners, while opposite number Ray Wilkins made one change with Anas Bani Yaseen returning from suspension to replace Saeed Murjan and with Jordan needing to at least avoid defeat to keep their quarter-final hopes alive, Ray Wilkins' side showed their intentions, lining up in an attacking 4-3-3 formation and pressing Japan from the first whistle.[24]

Jordan's plans, though, were almost dealt a huge blow after just 10 minutes as Takashi Inui smashed home Kagawa's pull-back only for the assistant referee's flag on the near side to rule the ball had crossed the line prior to the delivery from the Borussia Dortmund midfielder. But Japan eventually took the lead midway through the first half as Jordan goalkeeper Amer Shafi could only parry Shinji Okazaki's angled strike from Inui's clever pass across goal and Honda was on hand to net from a tight angle. Shafi, though, denied the defending champions a second five minutes later as the Jordan goalkeeper showed superb reflexes to push Masato Morishige's point-blank header from Honda's vicious corner over the crossbar as Japan continued to control the game and restrict their opponents to rare forays forward. Needing to at least avoid defeat, striker Ahmad Hayel and midfielder Munther Abu Amarah were introduced at half-time for Jordan, and the move paid off as Wilkins' side started the second 45 minutes with added vigor after Japan had enjoyed nearly 75 percent possession in the first half.[25]

Japan, though, still remained the more likely to add to their lead and Shafi had to be on his toes to push away Honda's strike from just outside the area with 19 minutes remaining, with Jordan beginning to tire as the half progressed having valiantly tried to keep up with their opponents' superior passing and movement. The Japanese made sure of the three points with eight minutes remaining when a cross from substitute Yoshinori Muto found the onrushing Kagawa close to the penalty spot and Shafi was only able to help the first-time strike into the back of the net. Japan came close to adding a third in the first minute of stoppage time, but Honda was unfortunate to see his low drilled strike from inside the area crash into the post with Shafi rooted to the spot.[26][27]

20 January 2015
20:00 AEDT (UTC+11)
Japan  2–0  Jordan
Honda Goal 24'
Kagawa Goal 82'
Report
Japan
Jordan
GK 1 Eiji Kawashima
RB 21 Gōtoku Sakai
CB 22 Maya Yoshida
CB 6 Masato Morishige
LB 5 Yuto Nagatomo
DM 17 Makoto Hasebe (c)
RM 4 Keisuke Honda
CM 7 Yasuhito Endō Substituted off 86'
CM 10 Shinji Kagawa
LM 18 Takashi Inui Booked 48'  Substituted off 49'
CF 9 Shinji Okazaki Booked 46'  Substituted off 78'
Substitutions:
MF 8 Hiroshi Kiyotake Substituted in 49'
MF 14 Yoshinori Muto Substituted in 78'
MF 20 Gaku Shibasaki Substituted in 86'
Manager:
Mexico Javier Aguirre
300px
GK 1 Amer Shafi (c)
RB 11 Oday Zahran
CB 3 Tareq Khattab
CB 19 Anas Bani Yaseen
LB 21 Mohammad Al-Dmeiri
DM 5 Mohammad Mustafa Booked 11'
RM 23 Yousef Al-Rawashdeh  Booked 38'  Substituted off 46'
LM 18 Ahmed Elias
AM 8 Odai Al-Saify
CF 20 Hamza Al-Dardour Substituted off 73'
CF 14 Abdallah Deeb Substituted off 46'
Substitutions:
FW 10 Ahmad Hayel Substituted in 46'
MF 16 Munther Abu Amarah Substituted in 46'
MF 13 Khalil Bani Attiah Substituted in 73'
Manager:
England Ray Wilkins

Man of the Match:
Shinji Kagawa (Japan)[28]

Assistant referees:
Abdukhamidullo Rasulov (Uzbekistan)
Bakhadyr Kochkarov (Kyrgyzstan)
Fourth official:
Ammar Al-Jeneibi (United Arab Emirates)
Fifth official:
Palitha Hemathunga (Sri Lanka)

Iraq vs Palestine

Goals from Younis Mahmoud and Ahmed Yasin led Iraq into the quarter-finals and a meeting with arch-rivals Iran, after a 2–0 victory against Palestine at Canberra Stadium. Mahmoud's first goal in the tournament Down Under came on 48 minutes and was his seventh in AFC Asian Cup competitions, meaning he has now scored in four consecutive continental championships since he first appeared at the 2004 edition. Mahmoud's could have had a second just before the hour mark, too, but Palestine's back-up goalkeeper Tawfiq Ali, who put on an impressive show throughout in the absence of the injured Ramzi Saleh, saved the forward's spot-kick.[29]

But two minutes before the end midfielder Yasin, making his first start of the tournament, sealed the points and the victory for Iraq. The win means Iraq finish second in Group D, behind defending champions Japan who topped Jordan 2–0 in the day's other game, and Radhi Shenaishil and his team would remain in Canberra for their last-eight showdown with Group C winners Iran on 23 January. Handed his first start of the tournament, Justin Meram went close to justifying his coach's decision after just three minutes as he jinked inside following a long throw on the left and into the area but he was closed down quickly and his shot stuttered into the hands of goalkeeper Ali. Palestine themselves could have taken a shock lead on 20 minutes as Jalal Hasan made a hash of Ashraf Nu'man's corner but the ball was cleared just before Abdelatif Bahdari could pounce on the loose ball.[30]

While Iraq dominated the first period, they found Ali showing no signs of nerves in his first start and in confident form. The 24-year-old goalkeeper saved a swerving long-range effort from Waleed Salem 20 minutes into the contest before diving low to his right to block Mahmoud's header five minutes before the interval. And Iraq's profligacy continued in just the second minute of the restart as Mahmoud blazed wide when the influential Yasin's pull-back found him inside the penalty area. But the striker’s woes in front of goal would last only another minute. From half-time substitute Ali Adnan's corner, Mahmoud's rose highest to direct a firm header past Ali. Almost immediately after that setback, Palestine then had their best chance of the night as a poor pass from Salam Shaker fell into the pass of the alert Nu’man but Hasan pulled off an impressive save with his feet to block the goal-bound effort.[31]

The game began to open up as both teams looked for goals before Ahmed Harbi brought down Meram inside the area for a penalty to Iraq just before the hour-mark. Mahmoud stepped up, looking for his second of the night, but Ali continued his impressive performance by diving the right way, low to his left, and parried the ball away. Iraq continued to hammer away at the Palestine defence and eventually a second goal came their way in the game's dying minutes as Yasin scored the goal his fine performance warranted with a powerful low strike from the edge of the area that zipped into the back of the net and Adnan could have made it three late on with an effort that hit the upright, but the points were safe as the final whistle blew shortly after to the delight of the large contingent of Iraqi fans.[32][33]

20 January 2015
20:00 AEDT (UTC+11)
Iraq  2–0  Palestine
Mahmoud Goal 48'
Yasin Goal 88'
Report
Iraq
Palestine
GK 12 Jalal Hasan
RB 23 Waleed Salem
CB 2 Ahmad Ibrahim
CB 14 Salam Shaker
LB 15 Dhurgham Ismail
CM 21 Saad Abdul-Amir
CM 5 Yaser Kasim
RW 7 Amjad Kalaf Substituted off 46'
AM 8 Justin Meram Substituted off 71'
LW 9 Ahmed Yasin
CF 10 Younis Mahmoud (c Substituted off 79'
Substitutions:
DF 6 Ali Adnan Substituted in 46'
MF 13 Osama Rashid Substituted in 71'
FW 16 Marwan Hussein Substituted in 79'
Manager:
Radhi Shenaishil
300px
GK 1 Tawfiq Ali
RB 4 Ahmed Harbi Booked 59'
CB 9 Khaled Salem
CB 15 Abdelatif Bahdari (c)
LB 14 Abdullah Jaber
RM 10 Ismail Al-Amour Substituted off 67'
CM 20 Khader Yousef
CM 8 Hesham Salhe Booked 21'
LM 11 Ahmed Maher
SS 7 Ashraf Nu'man
CF 16 Mahmoud Eid Substituted off 79'
Substitutions:
MF 13 Jaka Ihbeisheh Substituted in 67'
MF 19 Abdelhamid Abuhabib Substituted in 79'
Manager:
Saeb Jendeya

Man of the Match:
Saad Abdul-Amir (Iraq)[34]

Assistant referees:
Mohamed Al Hammadi (United Arab Emirates)
Hasan Al Mahri (United Arab Emirates)
Fourth official:
Mohd Amirul Izwan (Malaysia)
Fifth official:
Mohd Yusri Muhamad (Malaysia)

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Japan far too strong for Palestine
  3. Historic moment awaits Palestine football team after painful journey
  4. Asian Cup: Japan thumps Palestine 4-0 to begin defence of continental crown
  5. Asian Cup: Japan's Keisuke Honda criticises standard of refereeing in Palestine encounter
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. Yaser Kasim strikes it lucky as Iraq beat Jordan in Asian Cup
  8. Jordan 0-1 Iraq: Kasim steals win with late goal
  9. Asian Cup 2015: Iraq take points against Jordan in lacklustre game
  10. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  11. Asian Cup 2015: Jordan beat Palestine 5-1, as Hamza Aldaradreh bags four goals
  12. Asian Cup 2015: Palestine 1-5 Jordan
  13. Asian Cup: Japan hold off Iraq as Jordan hammer Palestine
  14. Jordan thrash winless Palestine 5-1 to keep hopes alive
  15. Asian Cup: Jordan hammers Palestine 5-1 as Hamza al Daradreh scores four goals
  16. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  17. Asian Cup: Japan defeats Iraq 1-0 in Brisbane to continue strong start
  18. Asian Cup: Japan beat Iraq, Jordan trounce Palestine
  19. Japan motors on as Honda penalty sinks Iraq
  20. Asian Cup: Japan to adopt attacking mind-set against Iraq in group match
  21. Honda spot on as Japan edge Iraq
  22. Asian Cup: The lowdown: Japan v Iraq
  23. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  24. Asian Cup: Honda-powered Japan cruise past Jordan into quarter-finals
  25. Japan, Jordan, Iraq all bidding to advance from Group D
  26. Japan-Jordan Preview: Yoshida wants improved officiating
  27. Japan defeat Jordan 2-0 to earn top spot in Group D and a place in the Asian Cup quarter-finals
  28. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  29. Iraq to play Iran in Asian Cup quarter-final after win over Palestine
  30. Iraq 2 Palestine 0: Captain Mahmoud helps makes sure of qualification
  31. The Lowdown - Asian Cup: Iraq v Palestine
  32. Iraq and Palestine leave troubles at home and flourish at Asian Cup
  33. Asian Cup: Iraq ensure quarter-final berth with 2-0 win over Palestine in Canberra
  34. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links