UAE send stunned champions Japan tumbling out of Asian Cup on penalties
• Japan 1-1 UAE (aet – UAE win 5-4 on penalties)
• Victory is one of competition’s greatest ever upsets
• Iraq beat Iran on penalties to settle classic encounter
United Arab Emirates produced one of the greatest Asian Cup upsets to send champions Japan tumbling out of the tournament 5-4 on penalties after their quarter-final in Sydney finished 1-1 after extra-time on Friday.
Japan’s Shinji Kagawa missed the first sudden-death spot-kick to hand the initiative to UAE, whose defender Ismail Ahmed nervelessly converted the decisive penalty to send his team into a last-four meeting with the hosts Australia on Tuesday.
The winner of that semi-final in Newcastle will meet Iraq or South Korea in the final at Stadium Australia on 31 January.
The substitute Gaku Shibasaki had earlier saved the blushes of the Samurai Blue by equalising nine minutes from the end of normal time after Ali Ahmed Mabkhout had given the Gulf nation an early lead with his fourth goal of the tournament.
Mabkhout’s powerful shot into the corner of the net after seven minutes was the first goal Japan had conceded in Australia, stunning the blue-shirted, drum-thumping band of their supporters behind the goal into rare silence.
Japan have not won the Asian Cup four times in the last six tournaments by panicking, though, and they continued to press forward after the goal with the neat inter-passing game that won them three from three in the group stage.
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The former Manchester United player Shinji Kagawa missed the decisive penalty for Japan in the shootout. Photograph: Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images
They failed to convert possession into clear-cut chances, however, with Takashi Inui wasting the best of them in the first half by directing his far-post header straight at the goalkeeper Majed Naser.
Japan had kept the UAE’s chief creator, Omar Abdulrahman, quiet before half-time but the languid midfielder nearly helped his side double the lead four minutes after the break with a delightful flick into the box that Mabkhout just failed to control.
Inui had been replaced by Yoshinori Muto at half-time and the substitute had two chances to make a quick impression but flashed a shot wide before also failing to hit the target with a free header. That set the template for the next half an hour of the match.
The UAE goal was under almost permanent siege but a combination of stout defending and misfiring Japan forwards kept the underdogs ahead until Shibasaki lashed the ball into the net from the edge of the area after a one-two with Keisuke Honda.
Having been handed a lifeline, Japan looked determined to finish the tie in normal time but continued to waste a string of chances and the profligacy continued into a strangely passionless extra half an hour.
Honda sent the opening spot-kick high over the bar but Khamis Esmaeel did the same with the UAE’s third penalty and the shootout went to sudden death.