2023 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage

The knockout stage of the 2023 AFC Asian Cup was the second and final stage of the competition, following the group stage. It began on 28 January with the round of 16 and ended on 10 February with the final match, held at the Lusail Stadium in Lusail. A total of 16 teams (the top two teams from each group, along with the four best third-placed teams) advanced to the knockout stage to compete in a single-elimination style tournament.[1]

All times are local, AST (UTC+3).[2]

Format edit

In the knockout stage, if a match was level at the end of 90 minutes of normal playing time, extra time was played (two periods of 15 minutes each). If still tied after extra time, the match was decided by a penalty shoot-out to determine the winner. This was the second time there was no third place play-off, after the 2019 edition.

The AFC set out the following schedule for the round of 16:[1]

  • R16-1: Group A runners-up v Group C runners-up
  • R16-2: Group D winners v Group B/E/F third place
  • R16-3: Group B winners v Group A/C/D third place
  • R16-4: Group F winners v Group E runners-up
  • R16-5: Group C winners v Group A/B/F third place
  • R16-6: Group E winners v Group D runners-up
  • R16-7: Group A winners v Group C/D/E third place
  • R16-8: Group B runners-up v Group F runners-up

Combinations of matches in the round of 16 edit

The specific match-ups involving the third-placed teams depended on which four third-placed teams qualified for the round of 16:

  Combination according to the four qualified teams
Third-placed teams
qualify from groups
1A
vs
1B
vs
1C
vs
1D
vs
A B C D 3C 3D 3A 3B
A B C E 3C 3A 3B 3E
A B C F 3C 3A 3B 3F
A B D E 3D 3A 3B 3E
A B D F 3D 3A 3B 3F
A B E F 3E 3A 3B 3F
A C D E 3C 3D 3A 3E
A C D F 3C 3D 3A 3F
A C E F 3C 3A 3F 3E
A D E F 3D 3A 3F 3E
B C D E 3C 3D 3B 3E
B C D F 3C 3D 3B 3F
B C E F 3E 3C 3B 3F
B D E F 3E 3D 3B 3F
C D E F 3C 3D 3F 3E

Qualified teams edit

The top two placed teams from each of the six groups, plus the four best-placed third teams, qualified for the knockout stage.

Group Winners Runners-up Third-placed teams
(Best four qualify)
A   Qatar   Tajikistan
B   Australia   Uzbekistan   Syria
C   Iran   United Arab Emirates   Palestine
D   Iraq   Japan   Indonesia
E   Bahrain   South Korea   Jordan
F   Saudi Arabia   Thailand

Indonesia, Palestine, Syria, and Tajikistan made their knockout stage debut in this tournament.

Bracket edit

 
Round of 16Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
              
 
28 January – Al Rayyan (ABAS)
 
 
  Tajikistan (p)1 (5)
 
2 February – Al Rayyan (ABAS)
 
  United Arab Emirates1 (3)
 
  Tajikistan0
 
29 January – Al Rayyan (KIS)
 
  Jordan1
 
  Iraq2
 
6 February – Al Rayyan (ABAS)
 
  Jordan3
 
  Jordan2
 
28 January – Al Rayyan (JBHS)
 
  South Korea0
 
  Australia4
 
2 February – Al Wakrah
 
  Indonesia0
 
  Australia1
 
30 January – Al Rayyan (ECS)
 
  South Korea (a.e.t.)2
 
  Saudi Arabia1 (2)
 
10 February – Lusail
 
  South Korea (p)1 (4)
 
  Jordan 1
 
31 January – Doha (ABKS)
 
  Qatar3
 
  Iran (p) 1 (5)
 
3 February – Al Rayyan (ECS)
 
  Syria1 (3)
 
  Iran2
 
31 January – Doha (ATS)
 
  Japan1
 
  Bahrain1
 
7 February – Doha (ATS)
 
  Japan3
 
  Iran2
 
29 January – Al Khor
 
  Qatar3
 
  Qatar2
 
3 February – Al Khor
 
  Palestine1
 
  Qatar (p)1 (3)
 
30 January – Al Wakrah
 
  Uzbekistan1 (2)
 
  Uzbekistan2
 
 
  Thailand1
 

All times are local, AST (UTC+3).

Round of 16 edit

Australia vs Indonesia edit

This was the first time Australia and Indonesia faced each other at the Asian Cup, having last met back in 2010 during the 2011 AFC Asian Cup qualification, in which Australia triumphed. This fixture was also the first time Australia faced a fellow AFF member in the Asian Cup since becoming AFF member in 2013. It was also the first time since 2007 (4–0 win against Thailand) that Australia faced a Southeast Asian opponent.

Indonesia quickly applied pressure in the first minutes trying to exploit Australia's organisation, but, although Indonesia pressed early, they were brutally punished in the 12th minute when Jackson Irvine produced a run that saw him overcome three Indonesian players before his shot caused Elkan Baggott to unintentionally deflect the ball into his own net to give Australia the lead. Australia scored once again when, from a counterattack, the ball was delivered high by Gethin Jones from Indonesia's left flank and Martin Boyle quickly headed home for the second. Although Australia reduced the tempo in the second half and allowed Indonesia more space, the Indonesians failed to score, and they were again punished in the 89th minute from another run on the left flank. Nathaniel Atkinson's cut piece was followed by Irvine's header; although Ernando Ari managed to save the initial shot, he could not prevent Craig Goodwin from scoring after the save deflected and allowed Goodwin's volley. Australia completed the game in style in the first minute of added time when Harry Souttar capitalised from a set-piece by Goodwin to head home.

Since joining the AFC in 2006, Australia had never lost against fellow AFF members, which was later extended following their win over Indonesia (10 wins, three draws). This result equalled Australia's second biggest win in their AFC Asian Cup history, all 4–0, which happened against Thailand in 2007, India in 2011 and Oman in 2015. This also secured Australia's ongoing streak of advancing to every quarter-finals of the Asian Cup since their debut in 2007.

Australia  4–0  Indonesia
Report
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Australia
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Indonesia
GK 1 Mathew Ryan (c)
RB 25 Gethin Jones   65'   69'
CB 19 Harry Souttar
CB 4 Kye Rowles
LB 16 Aziz Behich
CM 14 Riley McGree   61'
CM 17 Keanu Baccus   87'
CM 22 Jackson Irvine
RF 6 Martin Boyle
CF 9 Bruno Fornaroli   15'   61'
LF 5 Jordan Bos   87'
Substitutions:
MF 8 Connor Metcalfe   61'
FW 15 Mitchell Duke   61'
DF 3 Nathaniel Atkinson   69'
MF 13 Aiden O'Neill   87'
FW 23 Craig Goodwin   87'
Manager:
Graham Arnold
GK 21 Ernando Ari
CB 6 Sandy Walsh   68'
CB 4 Jordi Amat   90'
CB 3 Elkan Baggott
RM 14 Asnawi Mangkualam (c)   35'   58'
CM 24 Ivar Jenner
CM 25 Justin Hubner
LM 20 Shayne Pattynama
RF 2 Yakob Sayuri   75'
CF 11 Rafael Struick   90+4'
LF 7 Marselino Ferdinan
Substitutions:
MF 8 Witan Sulaeman   58'
DF 5 Rizky Ridho   75'
Manager:
  Shin Tae-yong

Man of the Match:
Martin Boyle (Australia)

Assistant referees:
Mohamed Al-Hammadi (United Arab Emirates)
Hasan Al-Mahri (United Arab Emirates)
Fourth official:
Abdullah Jamali (Kuwait)
Reserve assistant referee:
Ahmad Abbas (Kuwait)
Video assistant referee:
Omar Al-Ali (United Arab Emirates)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Adel Al-Naqbi (United Arab Emirates)

Tajikistan vs United Arab Emirates edit

This was the teams' first ever competitive meeting; having met just twice, both in friendlies, in which the United Arab Emirates won one and drew one.

Despite the Emiratis controlling the match in the first minutes, it was Tajikistan who scored first after Vahdat Hanonov, assisted by Zoir Dzhuraboyev, headed into the net over two Emirati players. The Tajiks then put up an effective defence to neutralise Emirati attacks for the majority of the game, until the fifth minute of second half's added time when, from a set-piece by Ali Saleh, Khalifa Al Hammadi produced a header to equalise for the United Arab Emirates at. Both teams played conservatively through extra time, forcing a penalty shootout. Tajikistan successfully converted all five of their penalties, as Caio Canedo's second shot for the United Arab Emirates was denied by Rustam Yatimov and Tajikistan sealed a historic win.

Tajikistan became the first Asian Cup knockout stage debutant to win a knockout stage game since Japan in 1992. The loss resulted in the worst performance for the United Arab Emirates in the Asian Cup since 2011, when they were eliminated in the group stage.

Tajikistan  1–1 (a.e.t.)  United Arab Emirates
Report
Penalties
5–3
Attendance: 33,584
Referee: Yusuke Araki (Japan)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Tajikistan
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
United Arab Emirates
GK 1 Rustam Yatimov
RB 5 Manuchekhr Safarov
CB 6 Vahdat Hanonov
CB 2 Zoir Dzhuraboyev
LB 19 Akhtam Nazarov (c)
CM 14 Alisher Shukurov
CM 7 Parvizdzhon Umarbayev   85'
RW 15 Shervoni Mabatshoev   85'
LW 17 Ehson Panjshanbe
CF 10 Alisher Dzhalilov   72'
CF 22 Shahrom Samiev   72'
Substitutions:
FW 9 Rustam Soirov   72'
FW 25 Nuriddin Khamrokulov   116'   72'
DF 3 Tabrezi Islomov   85'
MF 11 Mukhammadzhon Rakhimov   85'
Manager:
  Petar Šegrt
GK 17 Khalid Eisa (c)
RB 3 Zayed Sultan   61'
CB 12 Khalifa Al Hammadi
CB 4 Khalid Al-Hashemi   46'
LB 26 Bader Nasser
CM 15 Yahia Nader   73'
CM 18 Abdullah Ramadan   16'
RW 10 Fábio Lima
AM 8 Tahnoon Al-Zaabi   84'   90'
LW 20 Yahya Al-Ghassani   69'
CF 11 Caio Canedo
Substitutions:
MF 14 Abdulla Hamad   16'  61'
DF 2 Abdulla Idrees   46'
FW 9 Ali Saleh   61'
DF 19 Khaled Ibrahim   61'
MF 6 Majid Rashid   73'
MF 5 Ali Salmeen   90'
Manager:
  Paulo Bento

Man of the Match:
Shahrom Samiev (Tajikistan)

Assistant referees:
Jun Mihara (Japan)
Takumi Takagi (Japan)
Fourth official:
Mohammed Al Hoish (Saudi Arabia)
Reserve assistant referee:
Yasir Al-Sultan (Saudi Arabia)
Video assistant referee:
Jumpei Iida (Japan)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Sivakorn Pu-udom (Thailand)

Iraq vs Jordan edit

This match was the two neighbouring rivals' second Asian Cup meeting in history, with their only encounter dating back to 2015, also their most recent competitive encounter, which Iraq triumphed in a hard-fought match.

Iraq made a bright start, but after just the first ten minutes, Jordan reclaimed control. The Jordanians scored first when, from a misjudged pass by Amir Al-Ammari, Yazan Al-Naimat intercepted the ball in the midfield and sprinted to face Jalal Hassan before bouncing the ball up into the net in the first minute of added time of the first half. Saad Natiq equalised for Iraq from a corner kick in the 68th minute with a header too hard for Yazid Abu Layla to deny. Iraq took the lead in the 76th minute when, from a left flank cross by Merchas Doski, combined with a misjudged header by Yazan Al-Arab, Aymen Hussein delivered a low shot to the right bottom corner of the net. However, Hussein's celebration resulted in his controversial dismissal right after scoring. Jordan equallised in the fifth minute of added time: when a chaotic ball fight in the Iraqi penalty area followed a Jordanian corner kick; Musa Al-Taamari curled the ball towards the net and was denied initially by Jalal Hassan, but Al-Arab soon quickly rebounded the ball home. As the match was heading towards extra time, a Jordanian siege followed and the ball was passed to Nizar Al-Rashdan from Al-Taamari, who then hit a long-range effort that proved to be the final goal of the game as Jordan sealed a historic victory.

This result meant Iraq had failed to advance past the round of 16 for the second time in a row, whilst this also extended Iraq's winless record in the knockout stage of the Asian Cup since crowning champions in 2007 (1D, 5L); with the win over Iran back in the 2015 edition done after a penalty shootout (3–3 on regulation time, 7–6 on penalties).[3] Meanwhile, this was the first time ever Jordan came out victorious in a knockout stage match in Asian Cup history. Iraq's loss to Jordan was also a shock in the competition, given Iraq's dominant performance in Group D, including a famous 2–1 win over powerhouse and four-time champions Japan.

Iraq  2–3  Jordan
Report
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Iraq
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Jordan
GK 12 Jalal Hassan (c)
RB 3 Hussein Ali
CB 4 Saad Natiq   72'
CB 2 Rebin Sulaka
LB 25 Ahmed Yahya   54'
CM 20 Osama Rashid   63'
CM 16 Amir Al-Ammari
RW 8 Ibrahim Bayesh
AM 17 Ali Jasim
LW 7 Youssef Amyn   54'
CF 18 Aymen Hussein   45+3'   77'
Substitutions:
DF 23 Merchas Doski   54'
MF 11 Zidane Iqbal   54'
FW 10 Mohanad Ali   63'
DF 6 Ali Adnan   72'
Manager:
  Jesús Casas
GK 1 Yazid Abu Layla
CB 3 Abdallah Nasib   14'
CB 5 Yazan Al-Arab
CB 17 Salem Al-Ajalin
RM 23 Ihsan Haddad (c)
CM 21 Nizar Al-Rashdan   90+8'
CM 14 Rajaei Ayed   90'
LM 13 Mahmoud Al-Mardi
AM 10 Musa Al-Taamari
AM 9 Ali Olwan
CF 11 Yazan Al-Naimat   80'
Substitutions:
MF 18 Saleh Rateb   90'
Other disciplinary actions:
FW 20 Hamza Al-Dardour[note 1]   90+6'
Manager:
  Hussein Ammouta

Man of the Match:
Nizar Al-Rashdan (Jordan)

Assistant referees:
Anton Shchetinin (Australia)
Ashley Beecham (Australia)
Fourth official:
Abdulrahman Al-Jassim (Qatar)
Reserve assistant referee:
Saoud Al-Maqaleh (Qatar)
Video assistant referee:
Khamis Al-Marri (Qatar)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Salman Ahmad Falahi (Qatar)

Qatar vs Palestine edit

This match was the first time the two teams had faced each other in an Asian Cup, with their most recent competitive fixtures happening during the 2004 AFC Asian Cup qualification, with Qatar winning one and one draw.

Although Qatar were the stronger team on paper, Palestine forced Qatar to work hard at the first minutes. Palestine scored first in the 37th minute when a pass by Bassam Al-Rawi from midfield was intercepted by Oday Dabbagh, who then overcame two remaining Qatari defenders and shot low beyond Meshaal Barsham. Qatar levelled just before the end of the first half with a corner kick by Akram Afif to Hassan Al-Haydos, who then took a deflected shot to hit home in the sixth minute of added time. Palestine conceded a penalty early in the second half, as Mohammed Saleh foulled Almoez Ali in the box in the 47th minute, before Afif converted from the spot to secure Qatar's win.

Qatar  2–1  Palestine
Report
Attendance: 63,753
Referee: Ma Ning (China)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Qatar
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Palestine
GK 22 Meshaal Barsham
CB 15 Bassam Al-Rawi   46'
CB 16 Boualem Khoukhi   46'
CB 12 Lucas Mendes
RM 2 Pedro Miguel
CM 10 Hassan Al-Haydos (c)   59'
CM 20 Ahmed Fatehi
CM 24 Jassem Gaber   89'
LM 4 Mohammed Waad
CF 19 Almoez Ali
CF 11 Akram Afif
Substitutions:
DF 5 Tarek Salman   46'
FW 25 Ahmed Al Ganehi   46'
MF 6 Abdulaziz Hatem   59'
DF 3 Al-Mahdi Ali Mukhtar   89'
Manager:
  Tintín Márquez
GK 22 Rami Hamadeh
RB 7 Musab Al-Battat (c)
CB 15 Michel Termanini
CB 5 Mohammed Saleh   48'
LB 12 Camilo Saldaña
RM 9 Tamer Seyam   15'   58'
CM 6 Oday Kharoub   75'
CM 18 Amid Mahajna   85'
LM 10 Mahmoud Abu Warda
CF 20 Zaid Qunbar   83'
CF 11 Oday Dabbagh
Substitutions:
MF 21 Islam Batran   58'
MF 3 Mohammed Rashid   75'
FW 13 Shehab Qunbar   83'
Manager:
  Makram Daboub

Man of the Match:
Akram Afif (Qatar)

Assistant referees:
Zhou Fei (China)
Zhang Cheng (China)
Fourth official:
Ahmad Al-Ali (Kuwait)
Reserve assistant referee:
Abdulhadi Al-Anezi (Kuwait)
Video assistant referee:
Fu Ming (China)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Muhammad Taqi (Singapore)

Uzbekistan vs Thailand edit

This match was the first ever meeting in an Asian Cup between Uzbekistan and Thailand. In their most recent competitive meeting, which happened in the earlier tournament's qualification, Uzbekistan claimed the win.

Uzbekistan started strongly and scored first in the 37th minute, when from a delivery from Diyor Kholmatov, Azizbek Turgunboev volleyed home to give the Uzbeks the lead. Thailand responded in a rare attacking opportunity as the Uzbeks lowered the tempo in the second half, when Theerathon Bunmathan intercepted a throw-in by the Uzbeks and passed to Supachok Sarachat, who then dribbled past several of Uzbek players before passing to Supachai Chaided, who curled the ball into the net to equalise in the 58th minute. Just seven minutes after Thailand equalised, Uzbekistan retook the lead from an attack on Thailand's right flank; the ball was given to Jaloliddin Masharipov, whose cut-piece to Abbosbek Fayzullaev allowed him to take a difficult shot into the right corner, giving Thai goalkeeper Patiwat Khammai no chance to respond.

With this result, Uzbekistan won their first Asian Cup knockout stage game since 2011, which was also hosted by Qatar, while Thailand remained winless in their Asian Cup knockout stage fixtures. In personal record, this match was the first time Srečko Katanec managed to win a knockout stage game in any competitive tournament, having failed to do so as coach of Slovenia, the United Arab Emirates, and Iraq.

Uzbekistan  2–1  Thailand
Report
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Uzbekistan
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Thailand
GK 1 Utkir Yusupov
CB 25 Abdukodir Khusanov   87'
CB 15 Umar Eshmurodov
CB 5 Rustam Ashurmatov
RM 11 Oston Urunov   67'
CM 9 Odiljon Hamrobekov
CM 6 Diyor Kholmatov
LM 4 Farrukh Sayfiev
RF 22 Abbosbek Fayzullaev   90+1'
CF 19 Azizbek Turgunboev   81'
LF 10 Jaloliddin Masharipov (c)   82'
Substitutions:
MF 20 Khojimat Erkinov   67'
DF 26 Zafarmurod Abdurakhmatov   81'
MF 8 Jamshid Iskanderov   82'
MF 14 Jamshid Boltaboev   90+1'
Manager:
  Srečko Katanec
GK 23 Patiwat Khammai
RB 12 Nicholas Mickelson
CB 4 Elias Dolah
CB 17 Pansa Hemviboon
LB 3 Theerathon Bunmathan (c)
CM 6 Sarach Yooyen   82'
CM 18 Weerathep Pomphan   82'
RW 14 Rungrath Poomchantuek   73'
AM 24 Worachit Kanitsribampen   46'
LW 19 Pathompol Charoenrattanapirom   46'
CF 9 Supachai Chaided
Substitutions:
FW 10 Suphanat Mueanta   46'
MF 7 Supachok Sarachat   46'
MF 22 Channarong Promsrikaew   73'
MF 25 Peeradon Chamratsamee   82'
MF 8 Picha Autra   82'
Manager:
  Masatada Ishii

Man of the Match:
Jaloliddin Masharipov (Uzbekistan)

Assistant referees:
Mohamad Zairul Bin Khalil Tan (Malaysia)
Mohd Arif Shamil Bin Abd Rasid (Malaysia)
Fourth official:
Ahmed Al-Kaf (Oman)
Reserve assistant referee:
Abu Bakar Al-Amri (Oman)
Video assistant referee:
Omar Al-Ali (United Arab Emirates)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Khalid Al-Turais (Saudi Arabia)

Saudi Arabia vs South Korea edit

The two teams faced off in their first match together at the Asian Cup since 2007, when both teams were held to a 1–1 draw; while their most recent competitive meetings dated back to the 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification, where South Korea won 2–0 on aggregate. In personal records, this marked the first time Roberto Mancini and Jürgen Klinsmann faced each other as coaches in a competitive tournament, having met as players in the opening game of the UEFA Euro 1988 between West Germany and Italy, which also ended in a 1–1 draw, in which Mancini scored the opening goal of the match for Italy.

After a goalless first half, Saudi Arabia scored first when Salem Al-Dawsari's pass allowed Abdullah Radif to make a deep run through the South Korean defence before hitting home at the left of the net to give Saudi Arabia the lead in the first minute of second half. The South Koreans scored a late goal to equalise when from Son Heung-min's long pass, Kim Tae-hwan passed to Seol Young-woo, whose header was received by Cho Gue-sung. Cho scored for South Korea in the ninth minute of injury time. Neither Saudi Arabia or South Korea were able to score again in added time, forcing the game to go to penalties. South Korean goalkeeper Jo Hyeon-woo turned hero for his team with two saves against Sami Al-Najei and Abdulrahman Ghareeb, while his South Korean teammates converted all of their penalties to secure South Korea's progression to the quarter-finals.

This marked South Korea's first triumph over Saudi Arabia in the Asian Cup. Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia failed to win a knockout stage game since 2007, the last time they reached the final.

Saudi Arabia  1–1 (a.e.t.)  South Korea
Report
Penalties
2–4
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Saudi Arabia
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
South Korea
GK 22 Ahmed Al-Kassar   90+5'
CB 17 Hassan Al-Tambakti   108'
CB 4 Ali Lajami
CB 5 Ali Al-Bulaihi
RM 12 Saud Abdulhamid
CM 15 Abdullah Al-Khaibari   105'
CM 23 Mohamed Kanno
LM 24 Nasser Al-Dawsari   72'
RF 25 Mohammed Al-Breik   120+1'[note 2]   89'
CF 11 Saleh Al-Shehri   46'
LF 10 Salem Al-Dawsari (c)   84'
Substitutions:
FW 20 Abdullah Radif   46'
MF 6 Eid Al-Muwallad   113'   72'
MF 18 Abdulrahman Ghareeb   84'
DF 13 Hassan Kadesh   89'
DF 3 Awn Al-Saluli   105'
MF 16 Sami Al-Najei   108'
Manager:
  Roberto Mancini
GK 21 Jo Hyeon-woo
CB 15 Jung Seung-hyun   64'
CB 4 Kim Min-jae   117'
CB 19 Kim Young-gwon   49'
RM 23 Kim Tae-hwan
CM 10 Lee Jae-sung   64'
CM 6 Hwang In-beom   104'
CM 18 Lee Kang-in   114'
LM 22 Seol Young-woo
CF 17 Jeong Woo-yeong   54'
CF 7 Son Heung-min (c)
Substitutions:
FW 11 Hwang Hee-chan   54'
FW 9 Cho Gue-sung   64'
MF 5 Park Yong-woo   64'
MF 8 Hong Hyun-seok   104'
MF 16 Park Jin-seop   117'
Manager:
  Jürgen Klinsmann


Man of the Match:
Jo Hyeon-woo (South Korea)

Assistant referees:
Andrey Tsapenko (Uzbekistan)
Timur Gaynullin (Uzbekistan)
Fourth official:
Adham Makhadmeh (Jordan)
Reserve assistant referee:
Ahmad Abbas (Kuwait)
Video assistant referee:
Ahmad Al-Ali (Kuwait)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Adel Al-Naqbi (United Arab Emirates)

Bahrain vs Japan edit

The two teams met each other for the first time in the AFC Asian Cup since the 2004 semi-final, when Japan won in a thrilling encounter. In terms of other competitive fixtures, this was the first time since the 2011 AFC Asian Cup qualification that they met each other, with each claiming one win.

Although Bahrain attempted to pressure Japan at the first minutes, Bahrain failed to capitalise on their opportunities before being punished in the 31st minute when, from a long-range shot by Seiya Maikuma that hit the right post, Ritsu Dōan was able to score from the deflected ball despite frantic attempts by Bahraini players. The situation turned increasingly favourable for Japan when,four minutes into the second half, Hazza Ali misjudged the movement of Dōan before delivering the ball to Takefusa Kubo, breaking the Bahraini offside trap and allowing Kubo to score Japan's second goal after VAR confirmation. Bahrain scored in the 64th minute when from a corner kick by Kamil Al-Aswad, Sayed Baqer's header forced Zion Suzuki to save, but when the ball went high, miscommunication between Suzuki and Ayase Ueda resulted in an own goal credited to Ueda. Ueda redeemed himself in the 72nd minute when from a set-piece, the ball was given to Maikuma before he passed to Ueda; Ueda made a smart move to break through the Bahraini defenders surrounding him at the left flank, before taking a shot over Ebrahim Lutfalla to secure Japan's win.

This win meant Japan had managed to reach the quarter-finals of every AFC Asian Cup since 1996, the year where the quarter-finals was first introduced. On the other hand, Bahrain had failed to find a win in a knockout stage match since 2004 (2–2 against Uzbekistan before winning 4–3 on penalties).

Bahrain  1–3  Japan
Report
Attendance: 31,832
Referee: Ahmad Al-Ali (Kuwait)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Bahrain
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Japan
GK 22 Ebrahim Lutfalla
RB 18 Mohamed Adel
CB 4 Sayed Baqer
CB 3 Waleed Al Hayam (c)   79'
LB 19 Hazza Ali   90+2'
CM 10 Kamil Al-Aswad   77'
CM 6 Mohamed Al-Hardan   77'
CM 15 Jasim Al-Shaikh   90+2'
AM 7 Ali Madan
AM 8 Mohamed Marhoon   64'
CF 9 Abdulla Yusuf Helal   52'
Substitutions:
FW 20 Mahdi Al-Humaidan   64'
MF 13 Moses Atede   77'
FW 14 Abdullah Al-Hashash   77'
DF 23 Abdullah Al-Khalasi   90+2'
MF 24 Jasim Khelaif   90+2'
Manager:
  Juan Antonio Pizzi
GK 23 Zion Suzuki
RB 16 Seiya Maikuma   57'
CB 4 Ko Itakura
CB 22 Takehiro Tomiyasu
LB 19 Yūta Nakayama
CM 20 Takefusa Kubo   68'
CM 6 Wataru Endō (c)
CM 17 Reo Hatate   35'
AM 10 Ritsu Dōan   80'
AM 13 Keito Nakamura   68'
CF 9 Ayase Ueda   80'
Substitutions:
MF 5 Hidemasa Morita   35'
MF 8 Takumi Minamino   68'
MF 7 Kaoru Mitoma   68'
FW 18 Takuma Asano   80'
DF 15 Kōki Machida   80'
Manager:
Hajime Moriyasu

Man of the Match:
Wataru Endō (Japan)

Assistant referees:
Abdulhadi Al-Anezi (Kuwait)
Ahmad Abbas (Kuwait)
Fourth official:
Mohanad Qasim Sarray (Iraq)
Reserve assistant referee:
Ahmed Al-Baghdadi (Iraq)
Video assistant referee:
Mohammed Abdulla Hassan Mohamed (United Arab Emirates)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Adel Al-Naqbi (United Arab Emirates)

Iran vs Syria edit

This match was the two teams' first ever Asian Cup encounter in 44 years, with Iran held to a goalless draw in Syria's debut at the 1980 Asian Cup. However, they had met in the recent fixture during the 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification, which Iran won 4–0 on aggregate.

Iran began the match brightly, but struggled to break down the Syrian defence until the 32nd minute when, from a high lob by Alireza Jahanbakhsh, Mehdi Taremi received the ball in the box. Syrian defender Aiham Ousou pulled Taremi on the ground, granting Iran a penalty kick. Taremi scored the spot kick to give Iran the lead. Syria would then gain a similar penalty in the second half when, from another lob by Omar Khribin combined with a misjudged header from Shojae Khalilzadeh, Pablo Sabbag made a deep run before being fouled by Alireza Beiranvand. A lengthy VAR check confirmed a penalty which Khribin converted in the 64th minute. Momentum moved in the direction of Syria when Taremi received a second yellow card due to a foul against Alaa Al Dali. Despite this numerical advantage however, Syria could not capitalise and this proved to be costly for the Syrians when the game headed to the sudden death, as ten-men Iran managed to convert all five penalty kicks, while Fahd Youssef missed the second penalty for Syria to end his team's run.

Iran  1–1 (a.e.t.)  Syria
Report
Penalties
5–3
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Iran
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Syria
GK 1 Alireza Beiranvand   62'
RB 23 Ramin Rezaeian
CB 15 Rouzbeh Cheshmi
CB 4 Shojae Khalilzadeh   16'
LB 3 Ehsan Hajsafi (c)
CM 6 Saeid Ezatolahi   71'
CM 14 Saman Ghoddos   63'
RW 7 Alireza Jahanbakhsh   74'
AM 9 Mehdi Taremi   81'   90+1'
LW 18 Mehdi Ghayedi   63'
CF 20 Sardar Azmoun   90+8'
Substitutions:
MF 21 Mohammad Mohebi   72'   63'
MF 8 Omid Ebrahimi   63'
MF 17 Ali Gholizadeh   74'   119'
FW 10 Karim Ansarifard   90+8'
MF 16 Mehdi Torabi   119'
Manager:
Amir Ghalenoei
GK 22 Ahmad Madania
RB 24 Abdul Rahman Weiss
CB 2 Aiham Ousou
CB 13 Thaer Krouma
LB 3 Moayad Ajan
RM 25 Mahmoud Al Aswad   24'   58'
CM 18 Jalil Elías
CM 4 Ezequiel Ham
LM 12 Ammar Ramadan   87'
CF 7 Omar Khribin (c)   87'
CF 21 Ibrahim Hesar   90+8'
Substitutions:
FW 11 Pablo Sabbag   58'
MF 17 Fahd Youssef   87'
FW 9 Alaa Al Dali   87'
Manager:
  Héctor Cúper

Man of the Match:
Ahmad Madania (Syria)

Assistant referees:
Yoon Jae-yeol (South Korea)
Park Sang-jun (South Korea)
Fourth official:
Abdulrahman Al-Jassim (Qatar)
Reserve assistant referee:
Taleb Al-Marri (Qatar)
Video assistant referee:
Kim Hee-gon (South Korea)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Khamis Al-Marri (Qatar)

Quarter-finals edit

Tajikistan vs Jordan edit

This was the first ever Asian Cup meeting between the two, with their most recent competitive fixture occurring at the 2026 FIFA World Cup qualification, in which they were held to a 1–1 draw. As none of these teams had ever reached the semi-finals, the winners of this fixture would create history.

Jordan proved more dominant than Tajikistan at the first half, but failed to convert any of their chances into goal while Tajikistan also proved dangerous, although Tajikistan could not capitalise on it either. After a goalless first half, the Jordanians finally broke through, albeit aided by luck when, from a corner kick at the 66th minute by Mahmoud Al-Mardi, Abdallah Nasib triumphantly headed, but it hit the back of Vahdat Hanonov before going home to give Jordan the first and, turn out, the only goal of the match as Jordan secured the hard-fought 1–0 win.

This result put an end to Tajikistan's dream run in their debut. Meanwhile, this was historic for Jordan as they managed to advance to the Asian Cup semi-finals for the first time ever.

Tajikistan  0–1  Jordan
Report
Attendance: 35,530
Referee: Fu Ming (China)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Tajikistan
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Jordan
GK 1 Rustam Yatimov
RB 5 Manuchekhr Safarov
CB 6 Vakhdat Khanonov
CB 2 Zoir Dzhuraboyev
LB 19 Akhtam Nazarov (c)
CM 14 Alisher Shukurov   79'
CM 7 Parvizdzhon Umarbayev
RW 15 Shervoni Mabatshoev
LW 17 Ehson Panjshanbe
CF 22 Shahrom Samiev   29'
CF 10 Alisher Dzhalilov   77'
Substitutions:
FW 9 Rustam Soirov   29'  82'
FW 25 Nuriddin Khamrokulov   77'
MF 20 Alidzhoni Ayni   82'
Manager:
  Petar Šegrt
GK 1 Yazid Abu Layla
CB 3 Abdallah Nasib
CB 5 Yazan Al-Arab
CB 17 Salem Al-Ajalin   68'
RM 23 Ihsan Haddad (c)
CM 14 Rajaei Ayed   72'   89'
CM 8 Noor Al-Rawabdeh   79'
LM 13 Mahmoud Al-Mardi   80'
RF 10 Musa Al-Taamari   90+6'
CF 11 Yazan Al-Naimat   89'
LF 9 Ali Olwan   83'
Substitutions:
MF 15 Ibrahim Sadeh   79'
DF 2 Mohammad Abu Hashish   80'
MF 25 Anas Al-Awadat   89'
MF 26 Fadi Awad   89'
MF 24 Yousef Abu Jalboush   90+6'
Manager:
  Hussein Ammouta

Man of the Match:
Mahmoud Al-Mardi (Jordan)

Assistant referees:
Zhou Fei (China)
Zhang Cheng (China)
Fourth official:
Yusuke Araki (Japan)
Reserve assistant referee:
Zaid Al-Shammari (Saudi Arabia)
Video assistant referee:
Jumpei Iida (Japan)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Sivakorn Pu-udom (Thailand)

Australia vs South Korea edit

This was their fourth meeting in the AFC Asian Cup, and the first one since 2015, during which Australia lost to South Korea at the group stage, only to triumph at the final to win Australia's only Asian Cup title to date.

Despite South Korea dominating possession, it was the Australians who grabbed more dangerous chances to score at the first place, and Australia got the reward at the 42nd minute when, from a failed clearance by Hwang In-beom, Craig Goodwin intercepted before a number of inside the box pass by Mitchell Duke, Connor Metcalfe and Nathaniel Atkinson saw Atkinson's fickled to Goodwin for a volley to open the scoring. Australia then put up a fierce resistance to neutralise the South Koreans but, as the game was thought to be over, a foul by Lewis Miller on Son Heung-min as the South Korean talisman was dribbling into the box right at the fourth minute of added time granted a penalty, which Hwang Hee-chan did not waste it to push the game to extra time. Son then overturned the game in South Korea's favour when from yet another Miller's foul on Hwang Hee-chan, he took a brilliant free kick home at the 104th minute. Following a dangerous foul by Aiden O'Neill on Hwang Hee-chan at the added minutes of the extra time's first half, O'Neill was sent off, killing any hope for an Australian comeback.

It was the first time that South Korea managed to defeat Australia in a decisive knockout stage match of a competitive tournament, having only won just two competitive fixtures at the group stage. In personal record, Graham Arnold had lost all three quarter-finals fixtures at the Asian Cup as coach of Australia (lost 4–3 on penalties to Japan in 2007 and lost 1–0 to the United Arab Emirates in 2019).

Australia  1–2 (a.e.t.)  South Korea
Report
Attendance: 39,632
Referee: Ahmed Al-Kaf (Oman)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Australia
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
South Korea
GK 1 Mathew Ryan (c)
RB 3 Nathaniel Atkinson   73'
CB 19 Harry Souttar   45+1'
CB 4 Kye Rowles
LB 16 Aziz Behich
DM 17 Keanu Baccus   70'
CM 8 Connor Metcalfe   70'
CM 22 Jackson Irvine
RW 6 Martin Boyle   87'
LW 23 Craig Goodwin   73'
CF 15 Mitchell Duke   92'
Substitutions:
MF 14 Riley McGree   70'
MF 13 Aiden O'Neill   105+4'   70'
DF 5 Jordan Bos   73'
DF 20 Lewis Miller   73'
DF 21 Cameron Burgess   87'
FW 9 Bruno Fornaroli   92'
Manager:
Graham Arnold
GK 21 Jo Hyeon-woo
RB 23 Kim Tae-hwan   85'
CB 4 Kim Min-jae   90+1'
CB 19 Kim Young-gwon
LB 22 Seol Young-woo
CM 5 Park Yong-woo   105'
CM 6 Hwang In-beom   77'
RW 18 Lee Kang-in   120+1'
AM 7 Son Heung-min (c)
LW 11 Hwang Hee-chan   105'
CF 9 Cho Gue-sung   69'
Substitutions:
MF 10 Lee Jae-sung   69'
MF 8 Hong Hyun-seok   77'
MF 26 Yang Hyun-jun   85'
MF 16 Park Jin-seop   105'
FW 20 Oh Hyeon-gyu   105'
MF 17 Jung Seung-hyun   120+1'
Manager:
  Jürgen Klinsmann

Man of the Match:
Son Heung-min (South Korea)

Assistant referees:
Abu Bakar Al-Amri (Oman)
Rashid Al-Ghaithi (Oman)
Fourth official:
Adel Al-Naqbi (United Arab Emirates)
Reserve assistant referee:
Hasan Al-Mahri (United Arab Emirates)
Video assistant referee:
Mohammed Abdulla Hassan Mohamed (United Arab Emirates)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Omar Al-Ali (United Arab Emirates)

Iran vs Japan edit

This was the fifth Asian Cup meeting between Iran and Japan, two Asian football powerhouses, with their most recent Asian Cup meeting occurring in the previous edition's semi-final, where Japan won 3–0. Iran had never managed to defeat nor even score a goal against Japan in all of four Asian Cup meetings (two draws, two losses).

The match started on the bright note for Japan as the Japanese applied immense pressure against Iran and forced Iran on the defence. Ultimately, from a howling defence by the Iranians at the 28th minute, an unmarked Hidemasa Morita soloed over four Iranian players before produced a shot, which hit the foot of Alireza Beiranvand before going into the net to secure Japan's lead at the first half. However, Iran put up a strong fight back on the second half and it was Iran who applied pressure on Japan in the surprise. Ultimately, Iran got the reward at the 55th minute when Mohammad Mohebi capitalised from Sardar Azmoun's pass to neutralise Japan's offside trap before thunderously scored to put the game to a draw. Iran did not reduce the pressure later on, and as the match was heading to extra time, miscommunication between Kō Itakura and Takehiro Tomiyasu at the third minute of injury time allowed Hossein Kanaanizadegan to sneak in, forced Itakura to commit a foul and thus Iran got the penalty. Alireza Jahanbakhsh successfully converted later on as Iran secured a historic win over the 2019 finalists.

This result was the first time in the Asian Cup that Iran managed to score and won against Japan. Meanwhile, this result marked Japan's worst performance in the Asian Cup since making their debut in 1988, with three wins and two losses. Worse, it was the first time ever that Japan failed to keep a shutout in an Asian Cup tournament.

Iran  2–1  Japan
Report
Attendance: 35,640
Referee: Ma Ning (China)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Iran
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Japan
GK 1 Alireza Beiranvand
RB 23 Ramin Rezaeian
CB 13 Hossein Kanaanizadegan
CB 4 Shojae Khalilzadeh
LB 5 Milad Mohammadi
CM 14 Saman Ghoddos   90+8'
CM 6 Saeid Ezatolahi
RW 7 Alireza Jahanbakhsh (c)
AM 8 Omid Ebrahimi
LW 21 Mohammad Mohebi   90+8'
CF 20 Sardar Azmoun   90+9'
Substitutions:
MF 15 Rouzbeh Cheshmi   90+8'
MF 16 Mehdi Torabi   90+8'
FW 10 Karim Ansarifard   90+9'
Manager:
Amir Ghalenoei
GK 23 Zion Suzuki
RB 16 Seiya Maikuma
CB 4 Kō Itakura   24'
CB 22 Takehiro Tomiyasu
LB 21 Hiroki Itō
DM 6 Wataru Endō (c)
CM 20 Takefusa Kubo   67'
CM 5 Hidemasa Morita   90+9'
RW 10 Ritsu Dōan   90+8'
LW 25 Daizen Maeda   67'
CF 9 Ayase Ueda   48'
Substitutions:
MF 7 Kaoru Mitoma   67'
MF 8 Takumi Minamino   67'
FW 18 Takuma Asano   90+8'
FW 11 Mao Hosoya   90+9'
Manager:
Hajime Moriyasu

Man of the Match:
Alireza Jahanbakhsh (Iran)

Assistant referees:
Anton Shchetinin (Australia)
Ashley Beecham (Australia)
Fourth official:
Nazmi Nasaruddin (Malaysia)
Reserve assistant referee:
Mohamad Zairul bin Khalil Tan (Malaysia)
Video assistant referee:
Sivakorn Pu-udom (Thailand)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Muhammad Taqi (Singapore)

Qatar vs Uzbekistan edit

This was their first meeting at the Asian Cup since 2011, which was also hosted by Qatar; in the 2011 opening fixture, Qatar lost 2–0 to Uzbekistan. The most recent competitive fixtures between them occurred during the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification, which also ended with Uzbekistan claiming two 1–0 victories.

The match started in an unexpected note that favoured Qatar when at the 27th minute, from a throw-in in Uzbekistan's left flank, Almoez Ali's backheel for Hassan Al-Haydos saw Qatar's captain sprung before took a shot; Utkir Yusupov's attempt to punch it away instead deflected to the net to give the hosts the lead. However, Uzbekistan would reduce the deficit at the 59th minute when, from a direct counterattack, connected headers by the Uzbeks combined with Qatari defenders' misjudgements of Uzbekistani players' movement allowed Odiljon Hamrobekov to sprint over the Qatari defenders before he took a lethal shot that gave no chance for Meshaal Barsham to deny. After this goal, Qatar and Uzbekistan were unwilling to commit further for frontal attacks, which extended to even the extra time, pushing the game into the sudden death. On the spot, Meshaal Barsham proved to be the better one with his movement predictions better than the Uzbekistani counterpart, as Qatar went on to win the game 3–2 on penalties to reach the semi-finals.

Qatar  1–1 (a.e.t.)  Uzbekistan
Report
Penalties
3–2
Attendance: 58,791
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Qatar
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Uzbekistan
GK 22 Meshaal Barsham   46'
CB 5 Tarek Salman   90'
CB 3 Al-Mahdi Ali Mukhtar
CB 12 Lucas Mendes
RWB 2 Pedro Miguel   105'
LWB 4 Mohammed Waad   108'
CM 24 Jassem Gaber   81'
CM 20 Ahmed Fatehi   104'
CM 10 Hassan Al-Haydos (c)   54'
CF 19 Almoez Ali   90+1'
CF 11 Akram Afif
Substitutions:
FW 13 Khalid Muneer   89'   54'
MF 6 Abdulaziz Hatem   81'
FW 17 Ismaeel Mohammad   90'
MF 23 Mostafa Meshaal   104'
DF 18 Sultan Al-Brake   108'
Manager:
  Tintín Márquez
GK 1 Utkir Yusupov
CB 18 Abdulla Abdullaev
CB 15 Umar Eshmurodov
CB 5 Rustam Ashurmatov   90'
RM 19 Azizbek Turgunboev   105'
CM 9 Odiljon Hamrobekov
CM 7 Otabek Shukurov   69'
LM 4 Farrukh Sayfiev   99'
AM 11 Oston Urunov   74'
AM 22 Abbosbek Fayzullaev   114'
CF 10 Jaloliddin Masharipov (c)
Substitutions:
MF 23 Shokhboz Umarov   74'
DF 26 Zafarmurod Abdurakhmatov   99'
DF 2 Mukhammadkodir Khamraliev   105'
MF 20 Khojimat Erkinov   114'
Manager:
  Srečko Katanec   80'

Man of the Match:
Meshaal Barsham (Qatar)

Assistant referees:
Yoon Jae-yeol (South Korea)
Park Sang-jun (South Korea)
Fourth official:
Abdullah Jamali (Kuwait)
Reserve assistant referee:
Abdulhadi Al-Anezi (Kuwait)
Video assistant referee:
Kim Jong-hyeok (South Korea)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Ahmad Al-Ali (Kuwait)

Semi-finals edit

Jordan vs South Korea edit

It was the third meeting between the two teams in the Asian Cup and the second in this tournament, as they previously met in the second match of group E which ended in a 2–2 draw.

Despite being the stronger team on paper, South Korea's leaky defence saw them constantly under pressure by the energetic Jordanians, as South Korea failed to produce any meaningful attack at the first half. Meanwhile, South Korea's leaky defence, while survivíng at the first half, ultimately collapsed at the second half when at the 53rd minute, Park Yong-woo's misjudged pass was capitalised by Musa Al-Taamari, who then produced a run before sending to Yazan Al-Naimat as Al-Naimat lobbed over Jo Hyeon-woo to open the score. Al-Taamari then brilliantly finished the game at the 66th minute following a solo by himself before his thunderous shot to the right bottom corner gave no chance for Jo Hyeon-woo to deny.

This win meant Jordan achieved two historic firsts, by beating South Korea for the first time and reaching their first Asian Cup final. Meanwhile, South Korea's Asian Cup title drought that began with their most recent title in 1960 have been extended to at least 67 years.

Jordan  2–0  South Korea
Report
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Jordan
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
South Korea
GK 1 Yazid Abu Layla
CB 3 Abdallah Nasib
CB 5 Yazan Al-Arab
CB 4 Bara' Marei
RM 23 Ihsan Haddad (c)   45+2'
CM 21 Nizar Al-Rashdan   90+2'
CM 8 Noor Al-Rawabdeh
LM 2 Mohammad Abu Hashish   64'
AM 10 Musa Al-Taamari
AM 13 Mahmoud Al-Mardi   90+2'
CF 11 Yazan Al-Naimat   85'
Substitutions:
MF 25 Anas Al-Awadat   85'
MF 15 Ibrahim Sadeh   90+2'
MF 14 Rajaei Ayed   90+2'
Manager:
  Hussein Ammouta
GK 21 Jo Hyeon-woo
RB 23 Kim Tae-hwan
CB 15 Jung Seung-hyun   84'
CB 19 Kim Young-gwon
LB 22 Seol Young-woo
DM 5 Park Yong-woo   56'
CM 6 Hwang In-beom   15'
CM 10 Lee Jae-sung   81'
RW 18 Lee Kang-in
LW 7 Son Heung-min (c)
CF 11 Hwang Hee-chan   81'
Substitutions:
FW 9 Cho Gue-sung   89'   56'
MF 17 Jeong Woo-yeong   81'
MF 26 Yang Hyun-jun   81'
Manager:
  Jürgen Klinsmann

Man of the Match:
Musa Al-Taamari (Jordan)

Assistant referees:
Mohamed Al-Hammadi (United Arab Emirates)
Hasan Al-Mahri (United Arab Emirates)
Fourth official:
Ma Ning (China)
Reserve assistant referee:
Zhou Fei (China)
Video assistant referee:
Omar Al-Ali (United Arab Emirates)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Jumpei Iida (Japan)

Iran vs Qatar edit

This was the first AFC Asian Cup meeting between the two nations since 2015, where Iran defeated Qatar 1–0 to eliminate Qatar from the tournament. The two's most recent meeting in other competitive fixtures occurred during the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification, which also ended with Iran winning 2–0 and 1–0. Ahead of the semi-final clash, the Iranian federation complained of only four percent of the seats having been allocated to Iranian supporters, even though AFC regulations state eight percent need to be allocated.[4]

The match started on a bright note for the Iranians when Sardar Azmoun, capitalising from Alireza Jahanbakhsh's throw-in that resulted in a chaotic ball fight in Qatar's box and poor attempt by Pedro Miguel, delivered a brilliant bicycle kick at the fourth minute to give Iran the lead. This, however, triggered the Qatari fightback and Jassem Gaber soon found an equaliser for the hosts at the 17th minute, when from a smart pass by Akram Afif, Gaber took a shot that deflected to the feet of Saeid Ezatolahi high to make it impossible for Alireza Beiranvand to deny. Empowered by the goal, Afif would soon produced a solo in Iran's right flank at the 43rd minute thanked to an effort by teammate Ahmed Fatehi before taking a curl home to give Qatar the lead. When the match restarted, Fatehi committed a handball right at the first minute of the second half, resulted in a penalty that saw Jahanbakhsh equalised for Iran. However, Qatar dealt the final blow at the 82nd minute when, from an Afif's crossing again on Iran's right flank, Shojae Khalilzadeh wrongfully headed to Abdulaziz Hatem, allowing Hatem to provide ball for Almoez Ali as Qatar's main talisman didn't miss out to struck the third. Iran's hope for a comeback was eventually killed at the first minute of added time when Khalilzadeh himself was forced to foul Afif to prevent Afif's sprint, resulted in Khalilzadeh dismissal.

With this result, Qatar successfully defeated Iran for the first time in a competitive fixture since the 1998 FIFA World Cup qualification (a 2–0 win), and also for the first time Qatar defeated Iran in an AFC Asian Cup match. Meanwhile, this loss meant Iran's Asian Cup drought has been extended to at least 51 years since they last won the tournament in 1976, which was also the last time Iran managed to reach the final. In personal record, this defeat meant Amir Ghalenoei suffered his first loss as coach of the Iranian side on his second stint.

Iran  2–3  Qatar
Report
Attendance: 40,342
Referee: Ahmad Al-Ali (Kuwait)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Iran
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Qatar
GK 1 Alireza Beiranvand
RB 23 Ramin Rezaeian   87'
CB 13 Hossein Kanaanizadegan
CB 4 Shojae Khalilzadeh   90+3'
LB 3 Ehsan Hajsafi (c)   21'   46'
CM 8 Omid Ebrahimi   46'
CM 6 Saeid Ezatolahi
RW 7 Alireza Jahanbakhsh
AM 9 Mehdi Taremi   90+8'
LW 14 Saman Ghoddos
CF 20 Sardar Azmoun
Substitutions:
DF 5 Milad Mohammadi   46'
MF 21 Mohammad Mohebi   46'
FW 26 Shahriyar Moghanlou   87'
FW 11 Reza Asadi   90+8'
Manager:
Amir Ghalenoei
GK 22 Meshaal Barsham
CB 2 Pedro Miguel   64'
CB 3 Al-Mahdi Ali Mukhtar (c)   40'   68'
CB 12 Lucas Mendes
RM 9 Yusuf Abdurisag   63'
CM 24 Jassem Gaber   81'
CM 20 Ahmed Fatehi   50'
CM 4 Mohammed Waad
LM 14 Homam Ahmed   46'
CF 19 Almoez Ali
CF 11 Akram Afif
Substitutions:
FW 17 Ismaeel Mohammad   46'
MF 10 Hassan Al-Haydos   63'
DF 5 Tarek Salman   64'
DF 16 Boualem Khoukhi   68'
MF 6 Abdulaziz Hatem   81'
Manager:
  Tintín Márquez

Man of the Match:
Akram Afif (Qatar)

Assistant referees:
Abdulhadi Al-Anezi (Kuwait)
Mohamad Zairul Bin Khalil Tan (Malaysia)
Fourth official:
Jumpei Iida (Japan)
Reserve assistant referee:
Zhang Cheng (China)
Video assistant referee:
Sivakorn Pu-udom (Thailand)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Fu Ming (China)

Final edit

The match was originally scheduled to take place at Al Bayt Stadium, Al Khor. However, the AFC confirmed on 21 August 2023 that the match would be moved to Lusail Stadium, Lusail, due to significant interest for fans.[5]

Jordan previously twice played Qatar in the Asian Cup qualifiers, for the 1984 edition where Jordan lost 2–0 and for the 2000 edition where they drew 2–2.

Jordan  1–3  Qatar
Report
Attendance: 86,492
Referee: Ma Ning (China)[6]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Jordan
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Qatar
GK 1 Yazeed Abulaila   90+4'
CB 3 Abdallah Nasib
CB 5 Yazan Al-Arab
CB 17 Salem Al-Ajalin   45+7'
RM 23 Ihsan Haddad (c)
CM 21 Nizar Al-Rashdan
CM 8 Noor Al-Rawabdeh
LM 13 Mahmoud Al-Mardi   80'
RF 10 Musa Al-Taamari
CF 11 Yazan Al-Naimat   86'
LF 9 Ali Olwan   18'   90+5'
Substitutions:
MF 18 Saleh Rateb   80'
MF 25 Anas Al-Awadat   90+5'
Manager:
  Hussein Ammouta
GK 22 Meshaal Barsham   90+16'
CB 5 Tarek Salman
CB 3 Al-Mahdi Ali Mukhtar   81'
CB 12 Lucas Mendes
RM 9 Yusuf Abdurisag   63'
CM 24 Jassem Gaber   53'
CM 20 Ahmed Fatehi
CM 10 Hassan Al-Haydos (c)   53'
LM 4 Mohammed Waad
CF 19 Almoez Ali
CF 11 Akram Afif
Substitutions:
MF 8 Ali Assadalla   90+9'   53'
MF 6 Abdulaziz Hatem   53'
FW 17 Ismaeel Mohammad   63'
DF 16 Boualem Khoukhi   81'
Manager:
  Tintín Márquez


See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Al-Dardour, who did not play in the match, received a red card due to his unsportsmanlike conduct on the bench.
  2. ^ Al-Breik, who was substituted at the 89th minute, received a yellow card due to his misbehaviour on the bench.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "AFC Asian Cup Qatar 2023 Competition Regulations" (PDF). the-AFC.com. Asian Football Confederation.
  2. ^ "Match Schedule" (PDF). the-AFC.com. Asian Football Confederation. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  3. ^ https://www.espn.com/soccer/report/_/gameId/413557
  4. ^ "Iran riled up over 'small share' of tickets at AFC semifinal with Qatar". Iran Front Page. 6 February 2024.
  5. ^ "#AsianCup2023 adds world-class Lusail Stadium to elevate fan experience". the-AFC.com. Asian Football Confederation. 21 August 2023. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
  6. ^ "AFC Asian Cup Qatar 2023 Match Officials - Final 10 February" (PDF). Asian Football Confederation. Retrieved 8 February 2024.