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England score in last-minute penalty kick for 3-0 to rub salt in the wound for Matildas

Frances Howe
Updated ,first published
Pinned post from 8.35am on Oct 29, 2025
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MATCH REPORT: Frustrating loss for Matildas could have been worse after almost surviving second half

By Glenn Moore

Australia have suffered a frustrating defeat to England, beaten 3-0 after being reduced to 10 women after just 19 minutes.

The early red card for Alanna Kennedy left the Matildas up against it in Derby, their task made even tougher when the European champions scored from the free-kick given for Kennedy’s offence.

The referee shows Alanna Kennedy a red card.Getty Images

But while England added a second before the break, Australia held out until deep into injury-time, when a penalty was harshly awarded by the VAR and converted.

In the circumstances it was hard for Sam Kerr, seeking her first international goal since returning from a near two-year absence, to shine in the 69 minutes she had, but she nearly produced an equaliser out of nothing when given a rare opportunity.

It wasn’t easy for anyone else either, but Mackenzie Arnold’s handling was impeccable, while Steph Catley marshalled the defence superbly.

Eight of the Australian team were in the starting XI beaten by England in the Women’s World Cup semi-final in Sydney two years ago, but more relevant as Joe Montemurro builds towards the Asian Cup in four months time were the five changes from the team that beat Wales 2-1 in Cardiff on Saturday.

Arnold, Ellie Carpenter, Catley, Kennedy and Amy Sayer came in and Kerr reclaimed the captain’s armband.

It looked a stronger XI but England, despite a raft of changes including two debutants, dominated the early stages.

Arnold had to make a trio of saves, and when she was beaten, after Clare Hunt failed to cut out a simple pass, the offside flag rescued her.

Ironically, the first time the visitors managed a spell of sustained possession it cost them. Passing the ball around the back, Kennedy tried to evade pressure with a Cruyff turn but lost possession to Alessia Russo.

As the England centre-forward advanced towards goal, Kennedy hauled her back for an obvious red card.

Aggie Beever-Jones drove the free-kick into the wall, but Lucy Bronze laid it back to her and she rifled her second attempt into the top corner.

Brazil had more than matched England when they similarly went down to 10 players at the weekend, but the Lionesses had obviously learned from that experience. They moved the ball well and penned Australia back.

However, the next chance fell to Kerr, created by some smart interplay with Carpenter in the 27th minute. Hannah Hampton made a sharp save with her foot at the near post.

Kerr might have had another opportunity had Caitlin Foord released her quicker after winning possession near the halfway line. When the ball was eventually worked to the skipper, Bronze prevented her shooting.

Lucy Bronze celebrates her birthday goal with teammate Ella Toone.Getty Images

Five minutes later Bronze, on her 34th birthday, was shooting herself, whipping the ball past Arnold following Ella Toone’s cutback.

At 2-0 down with 40 minutes gone and with 10 players against a team in the mood for goals, it seemed Australia could be heading for a heavy defeat.

That, though, was one of the last times Australia were cut open. Arnold saved well from Kiera Walsh and Georgia Stanway, Catley diverted a Lucia Kendall header on to the bar, but the Lionesses were otherwise blunted until the last minute.

Then, after Katrina Gorry had clipped Missy Bo Kearns in the box with her tackle follow-through, but after the midfielder had played the ball out of play, the referee was suddenly told to head for the screen by the VAR.

The penalty, which no one had appealed for, was given and smacked home by Stanway.

AAP

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‘We can’t use those excuses’, says Montemurro

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Joe Montemurro has said it would be wrong to use the red card as an excuse for Australia’s loss to England this morning, saying England had been dominant on the ball before the Matildas were down to 10 players.

“Unfortunately, the direction of the game changed once went a player down. I thought we were just sort of growing. England are a good side and they had a little bit of the ball before Alanna went down,” he said.

“We did a lot of work this week in terms of just solidifying some ideas and we’re just disappointed that we didn’t get a chance to show it... There’s no such things as friendly games anymore. You can have situations that change the game and that’s what happened tonight.

“But look, we can’t use those excuses. We have to be better and we have to be smarter.”

Ellie Carpenter: ‘A game that we want to forget’

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Ellie Carpenter has said this match is one to forget for the Matildas, that makes two against England.

“You know it’s never easy going down to 10 men very early. Yeah, very poor from us tonight obviously,” she said.

Carpenter during the match against England.Getty Images

“But I am proud that we did play 80 minutes with 10 men. Unlucky to concede with the penalty at the end. But honestly, a game that we want to forget.”

Looking forward to the Asian Cup, Carpenter said, “I think we obviously have a lot to work on. The Asian Cup is very soon and I think tonight, it was a big lesson for us. Also how we handle things,” she said.

Full-time statistics

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See England’s shooting practice in numbers

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Sam Kerr: ‘We had such a different plan for the game’

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After the whistle, Kerr said the early red card deprived the Matildas of showing what they’d worked on in training.

“It’s tough to go down to 10 men against a good team like England and we didn’t really even get to show what we had or what we worked on in the last week,” she said.

“It’s really hard to judge the game because we had such a different plan for the game. But, I thought to only concede I guess one in the second half, a penalty at the end, I thought that was a positive but it’s really hard to judge when you go down against 10 men, you don’t plan for that all week.”

Full-time at Pride Park Stadium

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That’s it, it’s over. Just two more friendlies scheduled before the start of the 2026 Asian Cup.

Australia battled hard when a player down but came up short against the European champions.Getty Images

That couldn’t have been a worse ending to the game for the Matildas who had managed to hold on to a 0-2 scoreline and almost a clean sheet in the second half.

Australia 0-3 England, full-time

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Georgia Stanway scores from penalty kick

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Siemsen is into the action straight away and Australia are holding off a third goal from England. A sliding tackle from Gorry stops an attempt from Kearns but the referee has gone to look at VAR.

Georgia Stanway scores England’s third goal from the penalty spot.AP

You’ve got to be kidding. In the sixth minute of extra time, the referee has given England a penalty kick and Stanway – who scored a penalty against Brazil on the weekend – takes it. She rarely misses these and nails it this time.

That is salt in the wound.

Australia 0-3 England, 90+6 minutes

Foord shown a yellow on her way out

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Australia make two final substitutions in additional time. Remy Siemsen and Jamilla Rankin are on for Cooney-Cross and Foord, who is shown a yellow card on her way off for taking the long way round it appears.

Australia 0-2 England, 90+2 minutes

Should England have scored more?

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You can imagine Wiegman may have something to say to her team about how few conversions they’ve made considering how dominant they’ve been. That’d be a better conversation to be privy too than what Montemurro will have to say.

Raso passes to Carpenter who finds Wheeler for a moment of Australian possession inside England’s box. It’s given back to Hampton with not much of any threat to her goal.

Caitlin Foord battles for possession with England’s Missy Bo Kearns.Getty Images

There will be six minutes of extra time.

Australia 0-2 England, 90 minutes

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