The anniversary of our first World Cup triumph
By Benjamin Conkey, 12 Jun 2009 Benjamin Conkey is a Roar Pro
- Tagged:
- football, Lucas Neil, Socceroos, Tim Cahill, World Cup football

The Australian Socceroos' Mark Viduka kicks the ball in the Australia v Japan opening Group F match at the Soccer World Cup in Kaiserslautern, Germany, Monday, June 12, 2006. This is Australia's first World Cup finals appearance in 32 years. AAP Image/Dave Hunt
Has it really been three years? June 12, the anniversary of our first goal in a World Cup, the anniversary of our first win in a World Cup, and the anniversary of football officially arriving in Australia (I call November 2005 unofficial).
Last year, a friend who owns every sports DVD imaginable, came up with the great idea of reliving the Socceroos journey in Germany 06. He brought out the DVD of the Socceroos matches and we watched each fixture on the date and the exact time they started.
So on June 12 last year, at exactly 11:00pm our time (3pm Kaiserslautern time), he hit the play button.
I guess it’s the kind of thing you can do when you’re at university and have a bit of spare time on your hands!
Our housemates of the female variety were quite perplexed that we would go to such lengths to recapture nostalgia. Of course, we could never create the exact feeling of watching that first match live against Japan.
I remember that night like it was yesterday.
Sitting in a dining hall kitchen at university, surrounded by a bunch of rugby boys who pretended they didn’t care about the match. Every player that went down in a tackle was heckled with “Get up you soft cock!”
They were pretending they didn’t care because they didn’t want to admit that this was the most nervous they’d been in any sports-watching experience.
Japan’s first goal was controversial. Everyone went silent.
When the score was still 1-0 to Japan after 80 minutes, the disdain was evident by the rugby boys; the frustration immense. “Hurry up and score already,” was the cry. “Bloody hopeless. What a joke of a team.”
And then, a seemingly innocuous throw-in by Lucas Neil in the 84th minute, fell fortuitously to Tim Cahill’s right boot.
If the Melbourne Cup stops the nation, that goal by Tim Cahill kickstarted a nation into frenzy. Those same rugby boys who had bemoaned the Socceroos for 83 minutes were now their biggest fans.
The first was lucky by Cahill, but his second was pure class.
Then Aloisi decided to take on the last defender, and won.
3-goals to 1. The greatest 10 minutes of Australian football.
Celebrations all round.
“When’s the next game?” Asked one rugby boy. “So we have to wait almost a week for the next match!”
“I reckon we can beat Brazil,” said another, who had amazingly become a football expert.
Ah yes, June 12 was a fun night.
While it was extremely frustrating sitting next to ignorant fools for 90 minutes, it was also refreshing to see a transformation. In seven minutes, I saw non-believers turn into football fanatics.
All I could think of was the famous message from the late Johnny Warren: “I told you so.”
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The Crowd Says (6) | Page 1 of Comments
Have Your Say
- Explore:
- football, Lucas Neil, Socceroos, Tim Cahill, World Cup football

Captain Random said | June 12th 2009 @ 2:46am | Report comment
Fantastic memories. Three years ago, Tim Cahill catapulted himself into super-stardom (in Australian terms, anyway). Of course, much credit should go to Yoshikatsu Kawaguchi, whose baffling moment of goalkeeping ineptitude kick-started our glorious comeback. And Guus certainly didn’t die wondering, with Emerton and Chipperfield both finding themselves playing at centre-back as we chased the game.
Brett McKay said | June 12th 2009 @ 9:28am | Report comment
Great read Conks, happy times indeed!!
WA said | June 12th 2009 @ 12:30pm | Report comment
I must admit, that night was the first time I actually ‘got’ soccer. The amazing feeling when your team actually scores is unforgettable. But the endless discussion on this website about the intricacies of the world game are very tiring. I do look forward to the rugby and cricket action over the coming weeks. And when the World Cup does finally start, I will be very interested in The Roar’s no doubt highly-comprehensive coverage. Good article.
Savvas Tzionis said | June 12th 2009 @ 3:45pm | Report comment
It was the worst World Cup since 1990. Only Australia offered 4 games of entertainig football.
It was ironic at that time seeing Australia was and still is a minnow,
Its even MORE ironic now, what with the effective but boring football being played by Australia now.
I think the future of Australia’s approach to the game will largely be on how we perform in South Africa.
I hope we don’t advance with a seris of 1-0 and 0-0 games. But without Guus at the helm, I fear the worst.
Vicentin said | June 12th 2009 @ 5:44pm | Report comment
Thanks for the article Benjamin. June 12 is my son’s birthday – he turned eight back in 2006. A mate of his had come over to watch the game and have a sleepover and had seen Japan’s goal but then fell asleep, not so my son. I could barely watch the final minutes of the game and had slunk around the doorframe to the dining room where I was adopting a fatalistic state of mind – the only true believer left in the house was my son … “they’ll do it dad” …and they did! Fantastic memories for me (and his mum) – and for him too as he seems to remember it like it was yesterday.
Savvas – glass half empty huh?
Captain Random said | June 13th 2009 @ 12:02am | Report comment
Savvas -
Are we meant to interpret that as “I’d rather see us lose with style than win without it?” Curious.