
Football: AFC Asian Qualifiers: Socceroos v China PR
Socceroos play tonight in Adelaide ahead of a match in Japan next week.
- Published by David Knox
- on
- Filed under Programming, Video
The Socceroos take on China in Adelaide tonight with coverage kicking off at 7.30pm AEDT, live on 10, 10 Bold and 10 Play, and Paramount+.
Socceroos will be under new leadership for the remainder of their Road to 26 Qualifiers following the announcement of Tony Popovic as head coach.
Just when you think you’ve caught your breath, five days on from the clash in Adelaide, Popovic’s men will travel to Saitama for one of the most challenging showdowns against Japan on Tuesday, 15 October. Proceedings are set to get underway from 8.45pm AEDT live and exclusive to Paramount+.
China is hungry for a win after back-to-back defeats against Japan and Saudi Arabia, making them the prime opponent for our Socceroos, who are eager to clinch a crucial victory to keep their World Cup dreams alive.
The Blue Samurai have had an absolutely lethal start to the latest set of qualifiers, putting a whopping seven unanswered goals past China before knocking off Bahrain 5-0.
Thursday, 10 October
Socceroos v China PR.
For Sydney, Melbourne: Live from 7.30pm AEDT on 10, 10 Play and Paramount+
Brisbane: Live from 7.00pm AEST on 10, 10 Play and Paramount+
Adelaide: Live from 7.30pm ACDT on 10, 10 Play and Paramount+
Perth: Live from 4.30pm AWST on 10 Bold, 10 Play and Paramount+
Japan v Socceroos.
Tuesday, 15 October at 8.45pm AEDT.
Live and exclusive to Paramount+.
- Tagged with Socceroos
One Response
I will watch a bit of the match tonight, but what I don’t get is despite the commercials having a campaign to keep sport on free-to-air, the away game (against one of our biggest rivals in Asia) is only on a streaming service that you pay for. Personally, 10 had a chance to launch a sports channel in order to put their money where their mouths are when it comes to keeping sport on free-to-air (that was when they lost TVSN to Seven), but they blew it by launching another home shopping channel that no one would watch. So with the “Keep Sport on Free-to-Air” campaign, it has basically become double-standards, when they are against putting sport on a streaming service (like Amazon Prime), but put it behind their own paywall when they go their way.