SYDNEY, June 13 - Bleary-eyed but jubilant Australians straggled into work on
Tuesday after staying up late to watch Australia score their first ever World
Cup finals win.
Thousands of fans braved the winter cold to gather at pubs, clubs and
open-air venues in Sydney and Melbourne, Australia's two biggest cities, while
millions more watched on television at home as their team staged a dramatic
comeback to beat Japan 3-1.
The match kicked off at 11 p.m. in Sydney and Melbourne (1300 GMT), with some
fans carrying sleeping bags as they prepared for a long winter's night.
As offices opened for business, many fans were still heading home after
celebrating Australia's first World Cup finals victory. They lost two games and
drew one in the 1974 tournament.
"We haven't been here in 32 years. We're going to win the World Cup," an
unidentified man said as he walked with dozens of jubilant friends down the
centre of Sydney's main street amid honking car horns and flares.
"Everyone was just going mental, with flares everywhere and everyone just
going really berserk," another fan told Reuters Television as celebrating fans
blocked traffic.
Australia's joy contrasted with gloom in Japan, where many believed the match
was theirs after Shunsuke Nakamura's controversial early strike.
"Don't ask me anything about the market today," one downcast Japanese oil
trader said. "I won't be watching. I don't feel like doing anything."
Australia had failed to score a single goal in 1974 but hammered three in
eight minutes past a tiring Japan in their opening Group F match in
Kaiserslautern.
"Raining goals after 32 years," The Sydney Morning Herald said on its front
page.
Soccer has long lagged behind more popular sports like rugby union and
Australian Rules football but media and politicians have quickly jumped on the
World Cup bandwagon.
"Miracle!" the tabloid Daily Telegraph said. "Socceroos make history to stun
Japan."
Special praise was reserved for Australia's Dutch coach Guus Hiddink,
nicknamed "Aussie Guus", after his tactical gamble in bringing on goalscorers
Tim Cahill and John Aloisi as late substitutes was rewarded.
"I think Guus is indeed a hero, the greatest Dutchman ever created," Labor
opposition MP Anthony Albanese told reporters.