Salah's Panenka Seals Historic Victory as Egypt Beat Australia 4-2 on Penalties to Reach Round of 16
Mohamed Salah produced a moment of ice-cold brilliance with a Panenka penalty as Egypt defeated Australia 4-2 in a shootout to reach the World Cup Round of 16 for the first time in their history, joining Morocco as African representatives in the knockout stage.
Salah's Panenka Seals Historic Victory as Egypt Beat Australia 4-2 on Penalties to Reach Round of 16
The Pharaohs made a dream start at Dallas Stadium, taking the lead in the 13th minute when Emam Ashour powered a header past Australia goalkeeper Patrick Beach. Mohamed Salah, returning from a hamstring injury, played a key role in the buildup, with his presence lifting the Egyptian side throughout the contest. Australia responded through Cristian Volpato, whose 25th-minute strike clipped the top of the crossbar, but Egypt held firm to take a 1-0 lead into the break.
The second half saw Australia pile on the pressure, and their persistence paid off in the 55th minute when Egypt defender Mohamed Hany inadvertently levelled the scores. Hany became the first player in World Cup history to score two own goals in the same tournament, with his unfortunate touch from Aiden O'Neill's curling free kick finding the back of the net. The own goal gave Australia renewed hope as both sides pushed for a winner.
Patrick Beach produced the save of the tournament in stoppage time, soaring through the air to deny Ramy Rabia's glancing header that looked destined for the top corner. His heroics sent the match into extra time, where Salah had a golden opportunity to win it but fired his right-footed effort over the bar. The game remained deadlocked at 1-1 after 120 minutes, forcing a penalty shootout.
Australia coach Tony Popovic made a bold call before the shootout, bringing on veteran goalkeeper Mat Ryan, who hadn't played a single minute at this World Cup, to replace Beach specifically for the penalties. However, the decision backfired as Ryan failed to save any of Egypt's four spot-kicks.
Harry Souttar missed Australia's first penalty, sending his effort over the bar, while Lucas Herrington struck the post with his attempt . Salah stepped up for Egypt's third penalty and cheekily chipped the ball down the middle in Panenka style, leaving Ryan helpless and sealing Egypt's place in the Round of 16.
The victory marks a historic achievement for Egyptian football, as this is the first time the Pharaohs have ever won a World Cup knockout match. Egypt will now face either Argentina or Cape Verde in the next round, continuing Africa's impressive showing at this tournament alongside Morocco.
Source: TrendyBeatz