Australia’s FIFA World Cup 2026 campaign ended in dramatic fashion after a controversial goalkeeping switch failed to pay off in a penalty shootout defeat to Egypt, with goalkeeper Patrick Beach revealing he had no prior knowledge of the decision.
Head coach Tony Popovic substituted the impressive 22-year-old Beach late in extra time of Australia’s Round of 32 clash, bringing on veteran captain Mathew Ryan specifically for the shootout. The gamble backfired as Ryan failed to save a single penalty and Egypt triumphed 4-2 on spot-kicks after the match finished 1-1.
Patrick Beach: ‘I found out at the same time you guys did’
Beach, who started every match of Australia’s World Cup campaign despite beginning the tournament as Ryan’s deputy, admitted he only discovered the plan when he was substituted.
“You have to talk to the coaches about that. I found out at the same time you guys did.”
The young goalkeeper added that neither he nor Ryan had been informed beforehand.
“Obviously there was a plan that was put in place, and it wasn’t for us to know about. The coaches made a decision, and as far as it goes, Matty and I are here to do the job of whatever works best for the team and brings the best outcome for our team.”
Ryan also confirmed he had not been briefed before kickoff.
“No, no, I wasn’t told before the match.”
Tony Popovic defends controversial decision
Despite the criticism, Popovic stood by his tactical call, pointing to Ryan’s experience and penalty-saving record.
“Okay, it didn’t work, so we can look at many things in the reasons behind it, but with Maty’s experience, and I think if you look at his record in saving penalties, we just felt that Maty’s experience will be the difference.”
The decision ultimately failed to produce the desired outcome, with Egypt converting all four of their successful penalties to book a last-16 clash against Argentina.
Australian greats criticise goalkeeper substitution
The move drew widespread criticism from several former Socceroos.
Former goalkeeper Mark Bosnich said he was “astounded” by the decision, while fellow Australia legend Mark Schwarzer insisted the goalkeeper already on the field should have remained between the posts.
Former Socceroo Robbie Slater also questioned the coaching staff’s judgement, arguing Beach’s strong form deserved to be rewarded.
Slater additionally criticised the decision to hand 18-year-old defender Lucas Herrington a penalty in such a high-pressure situation. Herrington struck the crossbar during the shootout, ending Australia’s hopes.
Herrington accepts responsibility
Despite the disappointment, Herrington said he was confident when selected to take a penalty.
“The coaching staff trusted me, I was confident going into it, I knew where I wanted to put it, unfortunately, it is just part of football, I missed.”
Australia’s controversial tactical gamble will now remain one of the defining talking points of their 2026 World Cup exit, with questions continuing over whether replacing an in-form goalkeeper for the shootout ultimately cost the Socceroos a place in the last 16.