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Adelaide and Sydney draw A-League opener

3 minute read

Adelaide United and Sydney FC drew 1-1 in Friday night's A-League season opener in Adelaide.

Coach MARCO KURZ of Adelaide United looks on during the A-League match between Wellington Phoenix and Adelaide United at Westpac Stadium in Wellington, New Zealand.
Coach MARCO KURZ of Adelaide United looks on during the A-League match between Wellington Phoenix and Adelaide United at Westpac Stadium in Wellington, New Zealand. Picture: Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images

Sydney FC's prized signing Adam le Fondre has scored on his A-League debut to salvage a 1-1 draw against Adelaide United in a cagey season-opener.

Englishman le Fondre's poacher's goal cancelled out an audacious strike from Adelaide's Scott Galloway in Friday night's fixture in Adelaide.

Le Fondre was gifted silver service from playmaker Milos Ninkovic's low cross into the box in the 78th minute, and he neatly clipped his first shot at goal in the A-League into the net.

Le Fondre's strike came after United's Galloway produced a stunner on the cusp of halftime which left Sydney goalkeeper Andrew Redmayne red-faced.

With the clock ticking into the third minute of a scheduled two-minute injury time, Galloway beat Redmayne with a bold attempt from 15 metres.

German midfielder Mirko Boland, busy throughout his debut for the Reds, crossed to teammate Craig Goodwin on the edge of the 18-yard box, who played back into Galloway's path.

The 23-year-old took a controlling touch, settled onto his right boot, and launched a shot which sailed over a despairing and diving Redmayne, who was too far off his line.

"We all make mistakes, it's about how you respond to them afterwards," Sydney FC coach Steve Corica said.

"And I think we showed great character, the boys stuck together and we got a point in the end."

Galloway's goal was a rich reward for Adelaide who, with Goodwin influential along the left flank, controlled much of the opening half.

Sydney's hyped recruits le Fondre and Siem de Jong showed glimpses but the Sky Blues took until the 40th minute to record a shot at goal.

Galloway's top-shelf finish then delivered Adelaide momentum and thereafter they set about stifling Sydney's renowned attacking flair in the second half.

The Reds, before a parochial 10,018-strong home crowd, largely succeeded until le Fondre slipped the defence to equalise with the visitor's only shot on target in the second half.

Adelaide, like Sydney, could only muster three shots on target though coach Marco Kurz was heartened by his side's performance.

"We played a very good first half, we had game control and good pressure on the ball," he said.

"In the second half, if you will beat Sydney you must score two goals and we missed maybe the last pass, the last consequence, in the finishing."

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