Matildas fall to Canada 5-0 in first meeting between two sides since Women's World Cup
The Matildas have recorded their heaviest defeat in 17 months, with an inexperienced line-up thrashed 5-0 by Canada.
Nichelle Prince scored a first-half brace to send Canada on its way, with Cloé Lacasse, Simi Awujo and Adriana Leon completing the rout inside 62 minutes on Saturday AEDT.
It was the Matildas' biggest defeat and poorest performance since a similarly inexperienced line-up posted a 7-0 humiliation to Spain in 2022.
Coach Tony Gustavsson had promised an experimental squad and no players from the 4-0 Women's World Cup win over Canada were named in the starting line-up.
Sam Kerr and Mackenzie Arnold were out injured, while Caitlin Foord, Steph Catley, Mary Fowler and Kyra Cooney-Cross were among those benched amid heavy workloads at club level.
The starting line-up in Langford had a combined 429 caps, with 281 of those between Clare Polkinghorne and Tameka Yallop.
Charlize Rule and Sarah Hunter debuted at right-back and holding midfield and were among six players with fewer than 20 caps.
On a sodden artificial pitch at Starlight Stadium, the disjointed Matildas struggled to get to grips with the surface, or a brilliant Canada.
The Matildas were overrun in midfield and had no first-half shots to Canada's 13 and it took just 10 minutes for the hosts to take the lead.
A heavy back-pass from Rule sold Polkinghorne into trouble and, as the centre-back got the ball caught under her feet, Prince pounced.
The striker pinched the ball away and coolly finished into the bottom corner.
Teagan Micah made three brilliant saves, denying Leon in the 24th and 31st minutes and Vanessa Gilles in the 27th.
But in the 43rd minute, Ashley Lawrence burst down the right and cut back to Prince, whose first-time shot beat a disappointed Micah at the near post.
Four minutes into the second half, the defending Olympic champions all but sealed victory when Hunter dawdled on the ball and Lacasse pinched it off her, before bursting to score.
In the 55th minute, Rule's clearing header fell to Awujo, who had time to take a touch and fire home from distance.
Seven minutes later, Leon completed the rout when she drifted unmarked between a scattered defence to score.
Gustavsson turned to more experience in Fowler, Cooney-Cross, Katrina Gorry and Alanna Kennedy for the final half-hour.
The Matildas had their first shot through Fowler in the 74th minute, with Kailen Sheridan making a comfortable save.
In her second-last match, retiring Canada great Christine Sinclair entered the fray in the 62nd minute.
The second friendly is in Vancouver on Wednesday afternoon AEDT.
AAP
Look back at how the action unfolded in our blog.
Live updates
Update
Audience comment
Tough night for the Tillies tonight. They looked so much more structured at the end of the second half. I totally get why Tony is giving the younger/less experienced players a go, these are friendlies and it’s good exposure against what proved a very strong side. With more structure around them, like we saw at the end of the second half, who knows, the game could’ve been quite different. Still, we love these Tillies, and we’ll go again on Wednesday 💚💛
- Lucy
Update
Audience comment
Thanks for the blog Sam - the young players have experienced being engulphed by experience...
- Mike
Update
Audience comment
Could we possibly see Lydia Williams get a stint in goal on Wednesday, given the amount of experience she has and how the Matildas will want to end this international window on a high?
- Adam
Update
Audience comment
I'm happy it held at a 5 nil scoreline. But more importantly, no major injuries. Yes it was a rough match to watch, yes there will be people saying play the big guns, but it looks to me as the priority for this friendly series might be a little different to what we are expecting.
- Liz
Update
Audience comment
It’s disappointing to say the least..I realise it’s only a “friendly”, however it’s an International and should not be used for experimentation.
- Don Voegt
Update
Audience comment
I think it was completely unfair on the young players. I really feel for them.
- Natty
Update
Audience comment
Ah well, way to go Canada! You can stop the bleeding, but you can't raise the dead. It'll be interesting to see how full the 54,000-seater is come Wednesday week. Get out of the fridge, rest up, think it through.
- Big Ben
Final thoughts
By Samantha Lewis
Football is a cycle, and just as we saw the Matildas go through some growing pains in their early days under Tony Gustavsson, this was another moment in which we were reminded of what the next generation of players coming through the ranks looks like.
Commentator Andy Harper isn't as forgiving of this result, though, the biggest loss Australia have copped since that 7-0 drubbing at the hands of Spain last year.
But just like that game, this was an experimental team: Five players with 15 or fewer caps, and with a number of key senior players benched until the hour mark.
"When you make bulk changes, bulk experiments, with so many young debutants, it makes it really difficult for them to shine," Amy Chapman says on the broadcast.
She reckons a better balance needed to be struck by drip-feeding young players into the senior starting side, citing Kyra Cooney-Cross's partnership with Katrina Gorry on the field as a big reason why she's come such a long way so quickly. Maybe we'll see that in the next game on Tuesday.
That's not to say Canada weren't excellent. They were a team who have clearly played a lot of football together, and who will be thrilled to put five past the team that defeated them at the World Cup six months ago.
The field itself was tough; a slick artificial surface in the frosty rain made it really difficult for both sides, and you could see the Matildas' confidence wane as the game wore on.
They registered just two shots all game — both coming through Mary Fowler when she came on — which, you'd hope, will be a focus for the side in their final match of the year next week.
All in all, given the gulf in experience and quality between the two sides, it's perhaps no surprise that it ended the way it did.
How they bounce back and what changes they make before the rematch on Tuesday will determine whether the Matildas can finish their remarkable 2023 with a bang or a whimper.
Until then, thanks for joining me. Enjoy the rest of your weekend.
Update
Audience comment
Well...That stings more than sliding on Astro
- Natty
Full-time: Canada 5 - 0 Australia
By Samantha Lewis
What's next?
By Samantha Lewis
Is there much to be gained by serving up another experimental line up on Wednesday Sam? Surely we field our strongest line up to see if we can spoil the Christine Sinclair farewell party. A big crowd deserves a competitive game.
- stumcin
It's a good question. I think it depends on a few things: 1) how the younger players pull up after this game, 2) how the more experienced players are feeling, and 3) what Tony Gustavsson wants to work on.
I can see a situation where there's a combination of the "two" teams we saw tonight. Where, say, a Sarah Hunter plays alongside a Katrina Gorry, or a Remy Siemsen starts up front alongside a Hayley Raso or Mary Fowler.
Seeing how some of the individuals slot into the regular starting team would be the way I approach it, personally. But I'm not Tony. So we'll have to wait and see.
90' 2 minutes of added time
By Samantha Lewis
89' The game is winding down now
By Samantha Lewis
Both teams have mostly cancelled each other out in the last 15 minutes. In terms of the scoreline, it's well out of sight, and you feel that the substitutions Gustavsson made were partly made to save the confidence of the younger players. Those on the field now didn't really need minutes, and they're not playing with the kind of hunger that they may have had the scores been a little closer. That's OK though. So long as nobody gets injured, that's what matters.
84' Canada try the counterattack
By Samantha Lewis
Christine Sinclair picks up the ball in midfield and turns before charging forward after Australia's midfielders over-committed.
Young winger Bianca St. George is tearing down the right wing, and is spotted by Sinc, who delivers a delightful outside-of-the-foot through-ball into her teammate's path.
She tears into the box, but Alanna Kennedy is in lockstep with her. The towering centre-back throws herself across the grass as she anticipates the cross, but St. Georges loses control of the ball and it trickles out for a goal kick.
80' Canada 5 - 0 Australia
By Samantha Lewis
The Matildas have looked much more composed since those substitutions were made just after the hour, but Canada aren't letting them back into the game.
While they're not charging forward with quite the same energy or savagery as they did early on, they still don't look super fazed by Australia's fresh bodies, passing the ball calmly around the back and out onto the wings before recycling it back again.
The Matildas aren't giving up - Mary Fowler had another penalty-box entry about a minute ago - but this seems to mostly be about damage control now.
Update
Audience comment
The Matildas will be absolutely ruing the loss of Sam Kerr and Mackenzie Arnold to injury today, they've been lacking much needed firepower with only the one shot on target and Canada are showing much more dominance both in terms of stats and on the scoresheet.
- Adam
77' Tekkers Buchanan
By Samantha Lewis
The Chelsea centre-back looks to be at sea, on the ball with her back to goal as Amy Sayer pressures her from behind, but the veteran does a couple of lovely step-overs and wiggles away from the young Matilda, taking on three other Aussies and jinking a lovely pass through them all.
They're just toying with us now ...
76' Substitution Australia
By Samantha Lewis
Hayley Raso comes on in place of Tameka Yallop.
73' And just as I say that!
By Samantha Lewis
Mary Fowler receives an incisive pass from the right wing, turning into the D at the top of the box and rocketing her foot through the rubber.
It's almost too straight a shot, though, and it slams right into the chest of goalkeeper Kailen Sheridan for her first save of the night.
That's something, I guess...
71' Canada 5 - 0 Australia
By Samantha Lewis
With 20 minutes left, the Matildas have a mountain to climb.
They're not going to get back into this game, you'd think, but a start would be actually having some shots at goal.
I don't remember the last time Australia went for so long in a game without registering a single shot.
Their possession has improved since the substitutions were made, but with Mary Fowler the only recognised senior attacker on the field - with Emily Van Egmond and Tameka Yallop supporting her - you wonder whether they'll get close enough to register even one.