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45+5 Mins: Kerr again goes close! Foord finds herself in space on the right and drives a ball at chest high across the face of goal. Kerr, having sprinted into the box, throws a leg out at it but it slices wide of the post and goes out for a goal kick.
There’s chum in the water at Robina Stadium, and Kerr’s the Great White Shark.
45+4 Mins: Polar bear spotted in Arlington, Texas as Hunt finds herself in space outside the Iranian penalty area and laces an effort towards the bottom corner of the net. The Spurs defender, however, is denied by Yektaei getting down low to her right.
Kerr is picked out on the corner that results but her headed effort floats over the bar.
45 Mins: Between an injury delay and several long VAR checks, we’ve apparently done enough to require seven minutes of added time at the conclusion of this opening stanza.
44 Mins: Kerr has Australia’s fourth! Wait, no she doesn’t, it’s offside!
Kennedy lays the ball out to Foord on the right, who gets her head up and fires the ball into the near post searching for Kerr. On a tight angle and with a defender and the keeper to beat the Chelsea striker still has plenty of work to do but rises to the challenge, turning her effort around the corner and sneaking it inside the near post.
A VAR review, however, determines that Kerr was millimetres offside when Foord played the pass – denying her a second goal in as many games.

43 Mins: Now it’s the turn of Sayer to go close. Fowler directs a low cross in her direction form the right but she’s just unable to adjust in time to get behind it and prevent her effort from hooking just wide.
41 Mins: A change being made by the Iranians late in the first half, with Ramezanizadeh making way for Fatemeh Pasandideh. Not sure if that one was injury enforced or tactical – Ramezanizadeh didn’t look to be struggling as she came off.
40 Mins: How is it not 4-0? Van Egmond lays a pass off into the path of Carpenter, who in turn lays a ball across the face of goal looking for Kerr to tap home. It doesn’t reach the feet of her Chelsea teammate but does find Foord at the back-post, only for her close-range attempt, under some pressure from a defender, admittedly, to be lifted over the crossbar.
38 Mins: The Matildas continue to pile on the pressure, fashioning a series of chances.
Given the relative step-down in quality between the Philippines and Iran, more goals than last Sunday were always to be expected but at this stage it’s looking like the home side, if they can start to time their runs just a tad better and be a bit cleaner with their control in the wet conditions, could pick their score.
Goal! Australia 3-0 Iran (Kennedy 35')
The floodgates are starting to open and the Matildas are cruising.
A ball is swung in from the left and both Van Egmond and Kerr do their bit to keep the play alive before the latter lays the ball off for Kennedy, who has time and space to tee up half-volleyed blast that plants itself in the back of the net.

33 Mins: Play resumes and we almost have a third goal inside 20 seconds! Does an ‘I wasn’t ready’ rule exist? We might have found out had Carpenter’s furious run to the byline and cutback rolled to the feet of a Matildas teammate rather than empty space atop the Iranian six-yard-box.
32 Mins: Ok. More delays now as it appears the referees have had some kind of breakdown with their communication equipment.
Given how heavy the rain is, I hope somebody didn’t skimp out on the waterproof gear…
Goal! Australia 2-0 Iran (Fowler 27')
Fowler’s first start for the Matildas in 332 days has delivered a goal! And while it’s hardly the prettiest of strikes, very few, especially her, will care.
Foord finds space on the left and slices a ball into the penalty area, looking for the head of Kerr. It sails over the head of the Australian talisman and towards Yektaei but the Iranian keeper can’t control the ball, instead spilling it to her left.
Reacting quickly, Fowler lunges at it, getting her boot around marker Ramezanizadeh, and pokes it softly into the back of the net.
A lengthy VAR review subsequently confirms that the goal will stand, with play then further delayed as Yektaei receives treatment for a knock.

25 Mins: A cross in from the right spills out to Nevin in space but she gets her feet caught up underneath her as she attempts to shoot, leading to the danger quickly passing. The look of frustration on her face tells it all.
24 Mins: You can see that there’s a clear emphasis on the Matildas making triangles and utilising short, sharp passing to move the ball around the packed Iranian defence but, for now, the underdogs are holding strong when they need to.
22 Mins: Some more moments in possession for Iran but the Matildas eventually use the ball back and quickly move to transition up the field.
Well-organised defence by the side in white, however, blocks away Foord’s attempts to drive into the box and the Australians are forced to reset in possession.
20 Mins: For the first time, Iran uses their set piece to get the ball into the Matildas defensive third. It doesn’t amount to much, though, with Nevin leading the efforts to see off their attempted foray down the right.
18 Mins: Foord has the ball in the back of the net! That’s good. But the flag is also up. That’s bad. It’s going to a VAR review. That’s good. But the replay shows that the Arsenal attacker is indeed offside. That’s bad. Play resumes, sans potassium benzoate.
So close to a second goal of the night for @TheMatildas 🤏
Caitlin Foord with a brilliant strike to find the back of the net, but Australia's number nine is ruled to have been marginally offside ❌
Watch #IRNvAUS live on Paramount+ 📺 pic.twitter.com/7kFnR0ztqs
17 Mins: The Matildas are queuing up here; Chloe Lincoln is the only player inside their side of the pitch and most of the other 21 are inside the defensive third of the Iranians.
16 Mins: The Matildas get forward again and Foord lays the ball off for Sayer, who whips in a ball that takes a deflection off Imani as she attempts to clear and goes just wide of the post. The resulting corner is put onto the roof of the net by Van Egmond.
15 Mins: Play resumes and Kerr has another opportunity soon after, Fowler picking her out in space in the penalty area only for Imani to block her shot out for a corner.
The Iranians subsequently clear away the set piece.
12 Mins: A pause in play is required after Behesht goes down and requires some treatment to her left ankle. She limps off under her own power and while it looks as if she’ll be right to continue, we’ll await official confirmation.
11 Mins: It’s almost two! Van Egmond slides a surgical through ball for Kerr to run onto but her resulting shot, Yektaei charging her down, is lofted just wide over the bar.
Goal! Australia 1-0 Iran (Sayer 8')
A much-needed early breakthrough arrives and while I’m not quite sure how much she meant it, it’s come off the boot of Sayer! Carpenter goes on a barnstorming run up the right before flicking it across to Sayer near the touchline.
She cuts inside to create some space and whips a cross-cum-shot into the box that soars, like a candy wrapper caught in an updraft, over the head of Yektaei and nestles itself inside the far postQ
7 Mins: Some nice interplay between Nevin and Foord on the left springs the former into a yard of space to cut the ball back into a dangerous area but there’s nobody wearing black – Australia are in their away kits tonight – to meet it or ricochet off the Iranian’s first attempt to clear.
6 Mins: More possessional dominance from the Matildas but no further forays into dangerous areas; the Iranian defence, as expected, moving as a unit and clogging up the middle of the park.
3 Mins: Van Egmond steps up to take the free kick and tires to skid a low effort into the bottom corner but Yektaei gets down low to her left and smothers it before it can cross the line.
2 Mins: Good early signs of intent from Foord, who picks up the ball in the middle of the park, plays a one-two with Van Egmond, and wins a free kick in a dangerous area on the edge of the penalty area.
1 Mins: As expected, the Matildas take early control of possession and start knocking the ball around as Iran assume a their defensive shape.
Kick-Off
We are underway on the Gold Coast!
The Australian national anthem has been completed now, too. Kick-off is imminent.
So, after their lack of singing ahead of the first game made international headlines, the abrupt change of direction from these Iranian players for this fixture – and what was behind the change in thinking – has provided a talking point before a ball has even been kicked.
The Iranian national anthem plays first.
After being silent during the opening game against South Koreans, the players have instead greeted this evening’s rendition with salutes directed towards the flag of the Islamic Republic that has been brought out onto the pitch and, while I don’t speak Farsi, do appear to be singing the lyrics.
The Australian and Iranian players are making their way out onto the playing surface, kick-off is imminent on the Gold Coast.
It’s just a bit wet on the Gold Coast…
In a nice little bit of cross-promotion, Australian Formula One driver Oscar Piastri has appeared on the broadcast wishing the Matildas luck in the Women’s Asian Cup.
He’ll, of course, take to the Albert Park track this weekend for the first round of the new F1 campaign in Melbourne – the Guardian to bring you live coverage of both qualification and the race itself.
At least one international sporting event is happening in Melbourne this weekend…
85% - #Matildas had 85% possession v Philippines in their opening game at #WAC2026 - their best rate in a game since Opta began collecting the data in 2016 & 5 percentage points more than their previous best (80%, 7 Feb 2020 v Chinese Taipei). Control.#IRNvAUS pic.twitter.com/PN8oN0cXrV
— OptaJason (@OptaJason) March 5, 2026Matildas coach Joe Montemurro is facing some questions on the broadcasts and points to the blessing of squad depth and the rapid turnaround to the South Korean game when quizzed on the five chances to his side.
Fowler, meanwhile, is being brought in to provide an extra layer of creativity in the side, citing the compact defences that have been demonstrated by lesser heralded sides across the tournament.
James Paraskevas on the emails. A bit harsher in his assessment of the last game than mine.
A very disappointing performance from the Matildas in the last game but they get a pass because it was only the first game of the tournament (and they won - just). Australians are happy with that! Unfortunately Iran will not probably not provide much of a test, so this is just another “hit out” for Australia in an over-expanded tournament. A better test will be against Korea in the last game, and of course from the first game of the knockouts onwards. Anyways enough said…Australia 6-0 (Sam Kerr hat-trick minimum). We will celebrate wildly until more genuine tests…
Not sure I’m in 100% agreement on the need for a heavy scoreline, that 8-0 hammering of the Philippines a few years ago didn’t auger a successful Olympics campaign, after all.
Given we’re still relatively fresh into the Montemurro and with bigger tests to come, I’m more after another step up in the side’s patterns of play and ability to fashion clear looks on goal against a low block.
Of course, that and a 6-0 win would be great…
So, plenty of rotation for the Matildas tonight.
Fowler’s return to the XI is the obvious standout, with her close control and movement across the final third something of a contrast to Raso’s more direct approach.
How she combines with Foord, Kerr and Van Egmond, who will assumedly be operating as the ten, will be very interesting to watch given that, of all the changes, her addition to the starters feels the one most likely to stick in the latter stages of the tournament.
Presumably coming into the midfield in place of Gorry, how Sayer shoulders the load of serving as the primary ball progressor in the midfield will also play a big role in how the Australians go in breaking down the Iranians.
There's a very fine mist coming down at Gold Coast Stadium right now, should make for some interesting conditions tonight #WAC2026
— burke (@ejburke_) March 5, 2026It’s obviously going to case a shadow over tonight’s match so, as a reminder, The Guardian is bringing you live updates on the crisis in the Middle East.
“These women are prisoners,” says Cyrus Jones, a human rights activist who will be attending the match. “Iranian security is up on their floor [of the hotel] at night. They can’t leave their rooms. They can’t use the public bathrooms. They’re monitored when they go for breakfast, when they get on the bus. They’re monitored in a way no other players from other teams are.
Samantha Lewis has been following the journey of Iran’s women this tournament, and has penned this piece ahead of tonight’s game.
Sam has also been on the story of the AFC confiscating the credentials of Iranian-Australian journalist after asking questions on death of Ayatollah Khamenei at an official press conference – the only time Iran’s players have been available to speak to media – only for it to be subsequently reinstated.
Joe Montemurro said he wants the focus before his Australia women’s team’s Asian Cup match against Iran on Thursday to be on football, as the continental sporting showpiece wrestles with the escalating Middle East conflict.
Jack Snape was in Perth for the Matildas’ opening game win over the Philippines and got word from their coach about tonight’s game.
Iran XI
Three changes to the Iranian XI that were defeated by South Korea in their opening game.
Atefeh Ramezanizadeh, Mona Hamoudi, and Mohaddesh Zolfi come into the starters, replacing Afsaneh Chatrenoor, Zahra Sarbali, and Shahnaz Jafarizadeh.
Matildas XI
And here we go, the Matildas line-up is in, with five changes made to the side that defeated the Philippines.
Courtney Nevin and Charlie Rule come into the backline for Steph Catley and Wini Heatley, partnering Ellie Carpenter and Clare Hunt.
Amy Sayer and Alanna Kennedy come into the midfield for Clare Wheeler and Katrina Gorry, with Emily van Egmond retaining her position.
Mary Fowler will start from the opening kickoff, replacing Hayley Raso up to alongside Caitlin Foord and Sam Kerr.
The Australia Associated Press’ George Clarke is on the Gold Coast tonight and has captured footage of a group of Iranian protestors singing pro-United States and pro-Israel chants ahead of tonight’s game.
Iranian protestors at Gold Coast Stadium chanting “thank you Trump, thank you Bibi” ahead of their country’s Women’s Asian Cup clash with Australia pic.twitter.com/OObbglCaFk
— George Clarke (@GLR_Clarke) March 5, 2026Perhaps the biggest pre-game question facing the Matildas is who, exactly, is going to be part of the starting XI?
After the injury-enforced withdrawals of goalkeepers Teagan Micah and Jada Whyman on the eve of the tournament, presumptive number one Mackenzie Arnold was absent from the win over the Matildas, handing a major-tournament debut to the only just drafted-in Chloe Lincoln.
Word from on the ground on the Gold Coast that Arnold is likely to play in this game, which is probably for the best given that, being out-of-season with NWSL side Portland Thorns, she could use some live-action before facing off with South Korea.
Further up the pitch, Kyra Cooney-Cross is another absentee from the Philippines win that is shaping as getting her first minutes of the tournament, albeit one images that may come off the bench. Official broadcaster Network Ten, meanwhile, who tend to get the advanced word on these kinds of things, are reporting that Mary Fowler is set to start for Australia for the first time in 332 days and that we’re set for a shake-up in the backline.
Preamble
Joey Lynch
Howdy all, Joey Lynch here, and welcome to another round of the Guardian’s live coverage of the 2026 Women’s Asian Cup, tonight bringing you all the action as the Matildas take on Iran at Robina Stadium on the Gold Coast. Or as Dragan Talajić called tonight’s host city after his Bahraini men stunned the Socceroos in a 2024 World Cup qualifier here, “The Golden City.”
The result of tonight’s contest doesn’t carry much in the way of uncertainty. The high-powered Matildas, ranked 15th in the world, should defeat their 68th-ranked opponents rather handily this evening, with the focus instead largely centered on just how they go about doing this. As while their principles of possession showed signs of promise against the Philippines in their opening 1-0 win, the hope will be that Joe Montemurro’s side can use that performance as a whetstone for a much more lethal edge against the Iranians.
Because while the 85% possession and 15 shots against the Filipinas were good, that they were accompanied by just the lone Sam Kerr goal left something to be desired. And with the stiffest test of their group stages to come on Sunday evening when they take on South Korea in Sydney, they’ll want to come into that one with some level of momentum – especially considering the Taegeuk Warriors put three past the Philippines in their Group A meeting earlier this afternoon.

The Shirzanan, meanwhile, will take the pitch once again with football serving as something almost something of a backdrop to a much larger, morose tale being told: the United States and Israel’s ongoing attack on Iran. The ongoing conflict ensures that their thoughts will be torn between the task at hand on the Gold Coast and their loved ones back home, a rising death toll amid a potential broadening of the war, and what future of their nation looks like.
The playing group have already made international headlines after not singing the official anthem of the Islamic Republic before their opening game defeat against South Korea and we already know there’s a plan for Iranian diaspora that opposes the current regime to make their presence known at the game this evening.
So, perhaps not a lot of intrigue surrounding the result itself, but plenty of other narratives and storylines that will line the path to the final whistle.
Kick-off is at 7pm local/8pm AEDT

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