England 1, Australia 3: A scoreline Aussie fans will never forget

By Mike Tuckerman / Expert

Has there ever been a more ill-fated friendly than England’s decision to play the Socceroos at Upton Park in February 2003?

Australia might have been the biggest fish in the tiny pond that was Oceania, but having constantly failed in their qualification efforts since 1974, Soccer Australia no doubt couldn’t believe their luck when the English asked the Socceroos to play a friendly at the old Boleyn Ground two days before Valentine’s.

It was the opportunity Australian football fans had long been craving. And didn’t the Socceroos make the most of it?

“It was far away from a friendly match,” England’s suitably bemused Swedish-born coach Sven-Goran Eriksson admitted a couple of years later.

“They desperately wanted to beat us… and they did,” he lamented.

With the Football Association having neglected to inform Eriksson of the depth of animosity between the two nations, the English walked straight into a trap.

And they were punished by a Socceroos side that was, on paper, one of the best in recent history.

It’s sometimes forgotten by Australian football fans just how formative the experience of losing to Uruguay in 2001 was.

Paul Okon was the Socceroos skipper for that playoff, and he captained his country against England at Upton Park as well.

He wasn’t the captain for much longer – playing just two more games for the Socceroos – as a golden generation shorn of both Okon and the equally enigmatic Ned Zelic ultimately went on to qualify for Germany in 2006.

But first came that glorious friendly. And a quick look at the team sheet does much to explain why the English found Australia so difficult to handle.

Schwarzer; Neill, Moore, Popovic, Lazaridis; Emerton, Okon, Skoko, Chipperfield; Viduka, Kewell.

Not a bad starting eleven. And Tony Vidmar, Muscat, Bresciano, Grella, Sterjovski and John Aloisi came off the bench, as both nations made wholesale changes.

And it was Leeds United star Harry Kewell who inflicted most of the damage.

It’s not like the English should have been unfamiliar with the Australian players.

Of the Socceroos goal scorers that day – Kewell, Tony Popovic and Brett Emerton – all three either played in England or were on the verge of joining an English club at the time.

And when Popovic opened the scoring with a towering header from Stan Lazaridis’ swirling free-kick, it was clear there was only ever going to be one winner.

That’s because Kewell – who was on the verge of a big-money move to Liverpool – simply ripped the English defence to shreds.

He mugged former Leeds team-mate Rio Ferdinand to slalom through on goal shortly before half-time, before coolly rounding David James to slot home into an empty net.

It was, without a doubt, one of the most aesthetically pleasing Socceroos goals ever scored. Even if a sheepish Ferdinand reckoned he had been fouled.

The second half was notable for Eriksson changing his entire eleven – a smokescreen, if ever there was one, for the fact his team was about to lose in humiliating fashion.

There was at least some Australian interest in the English goal as a fresh-faced Francis Jeffers – yes, he of the late-career Newcastle Jets fame – started and ended his England career with a goal from his only appearance.

But although the game would become better known for a 17-year-old Wayne Rooney making his debut, there was no way back for the hosts.

Brett Emerton scored Australia’s third and England’s humbling was complete.

And football fans back home in Australia watched the whole thing on the ABC, complete with commentary from Englishman Gary Bloom – who these days is a specialist psychotherapist, I’ll thank you to know – in the middle of the night.

It wouldn’t have been a quintessentially Australian football experience without getting up before the crack of dawn to watch the memorable match on TV.

There was even a DVD released to mark the occasion!

And why wouldn’t there have been? It was one of the best moments in Socceroos history.

England 1 – Australia 3. A scoreline we’ll never forget.

As we count down the greatest moments in Socceroos history, we want you to tell us what your favourites are. Have your say in the picker below!

Check out the rest of the countdown:
10. Australia’s performances – and Tim Cahill’s goal – in 2014
9. When we almost qualified for USA 94
8. Charlie Yankos’ stunning free-kick against Argentina
7. Beating France and Brazil in 2001
6. England 3, Australia 1: Beating the Poms in their own backyard
5. Knocking Croatia out of Germany in the craziest game in Australian history
4. Australia’s historic 3-1 win over Japan in Kaiserslautern
3. Making our debut on the world stage in 1974
2. Winning the Asian Cup in Australia
1. John Aloisi’s penalty

The Australian men’s football team is sure to produce some more memorable moments in Russia this year. Catch all the action in the best way possible by coming together with your friends and family and watching it on an epic big screen Samsung QLED TV. Explore the big-screen range.

Haven’t seen your friends lately? Send them a personal message from Tim Cahill with TIMVITE and get ready to watch the big games.

The Crowd Says:

2018-06-02T22:44:10+00:00

Antman

Guest


I was working at Fortnum and Masons in London, who comes walking in, Sir Harry Kewell. I had a great chat to the man and he was so down to earth! I told him I was a Sydney boy and he asked where I was from and I said the Northern beaches, he said “I’m a westy myself!”. I said kill the poms in the friendly and score a goal or 2. The rest is history.

2018-06-01T23:20:45+00:00

Terateg

Guest


I can assure you that there is zero animosity towards Australia by English fans, I don’t know why an earth you would think that, maybe you are mixing it up with cricket or just plain ignorant.

2018-05-31T00:54:38+00:00

reuster75

Guest


The Holland away win was in Eindhoven in 2008, second of three matches against Holland in 4 years (draws in Rotterdam in 2006 leading up to world cup and a game in Sydney in 2009 that ended 0-0).

2018-05-31T00:40:32+00:00

MQ

Guest


Just looking at that team again which took on England back in 2003, it's a pretty good team. Little wonder we hold such pessimism around our current squad.

2018-05-30T23:52:56+00:00

The Phantom Commissioner

Roar Rookie


It was, so technically we beat two English teams in one night...result!

2018-05-30T21:56:04+00:00

MQ

Guest


Testing my memory here, but I think when the team was swapped at half time, Rooney actually made his debut for England.

2018-05-30T12:56:57+00:00

VictoryPool

Guest


I'm nitpicking here but while the dvd was released by ABC with commentary from Gary Bloom we all actually watched the game live on SBS with commentary from Martin Tyler!

2018-05-30T09:27:01+00:00

Gurudoright

Guest


I actually remember the headline “Shockeroo”

2018-05-30T07:15:20+00:00

marron

Guest


A couple of years ago England beat Aus 2-1 in..... Sunderland? I think.... from memory Rooney was on the scoresheet but it was a pretty young England side.

2018-05-30T06:51:06+00:00

Leonard

Guest


"I remember this game like it was yesterday" - echoing the opening line of 'Treasure Island', but without the subjunctive "were"! The Poms weren't all half-pissed, were they? Or was that a post-game and very lame excuse?

2018-05-30T06:20:28+00:00

LuckyEddie

Guest


Scotland a 'minnow' now, Australia is a bigger 'minnow'.

2018-05-30T04:36:15+00:00

Steven Malone

Guest


I don't really follow Soccer as there are only so many sports one person can follow, but I remember getting up to watch that game and still bring it up to UK mates now. Have Australia played England since that game?

2018-05-30T04:29:09+00:00

Ironmonger

Guest


I remember a sign held up by an Aussie in the crowd "if we beat you at this, then you are s*** at everything"....

2018-05-30T04:17:45+00:00

Fadida

Guest


England generally see their rivals as the bigger countries, Argentina, Germany etc, which is why they get knocked out by Costa Rica, Iceland etc on a regular basis :)

2018-05-30T04:01:21+00:00

The Phantom Commissioner

Roar Rookie


I'd say it was the best squad. People will always say 06 was the golden generation but really alot of the players where maybe a touch past their prime with a few exceptions. I mean you would never put Culina in Skoko or Okons class. Lazaridis was an excellent LB as well. Missing out on the 98 and 02 world cups was a big missed opportunity with the players we had and the level they were playing at.

2018-05-30T02:23:48+00:00

The Phantom Commissioner

Roar Rookie


Kewell was running riot in that game England couldn't handle him. I also remember Leeds played an FA Cup later that same week with Kewell getting the ball with his back to goal on the half way line turning his marker before dribbling past another two defenders and smashing into the top corner from just outside the box. He truly was world class at that time.

2018-05-30T02:09:30+00:00

Huddo

Guest


yeah so insignificant you wrote a response, and remembered the last time we played

2018-05-30T01:38:14+00:00

Griffo

Roar Guru


Agreed. Hard to think this was the first game for around 18 months and the first in the build up for qualifying for 2006 World Cup. Kewell in particular would go on to have a horror injury run, perhaps highlighted by being ruled out of the Italy game in the Round of 16... Okon was out, T. Vidmar was out medically, a number of players of that era were on the verge of retiring...

2018-05-30T01:31:12+00:00

AGO74

Guest


Having a look at that squad - wow, you could argue that squad was our strongest ever. Not just with the addition of Paul Okon but this was when both harry kewell and mark viduka were both at the peak of their powers (it is arguable as to whether they were playing at same level in 05/06). In 2001-03 kewell and viduka were genuine world class players.

2018-05-30T01:15:50+00:00

Jason Cave

Guest


That was the beginning of the end of Sven Goran-Eriksson's time as coach of England. In retrospect, the English FA should've appointed former Socceroos coach Terry Venables to be in charge of the 3 Lions in that game.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar