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During the Cold War, both Australia and Thailand aligned themselves with the United States against Communism. Formal relations between Australia and Thailand were established on 19 December 1952. [11] When the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) was formed on 8 September 1954 in Manila, both Thailand and Australia were founding members. [12]
The following details the Australia men's national soccer team results in competitive and also non-competitive matches. Games are listed in chronological order, grouped by decade and year, from 1980 to 1999.
Only "A" internationals are included. Although there is some conjecture regarding the status of a number of games, the table includes all fixtures recognised by Football Australia as "A" internationals and as such is used to recognise caps, goal scorers, captaincy records, etc. [1] [2] [3] Last match updated on 19 November 2024 vs. Bahrain.
The group's first round of matches began on 7 July and its last matches were played on 16 July. All six group matches were played at venues in Bangkok, Thailand. The group consisted Thailand (the host of the tournament) as well as Iraq, Australia and Oman.
22 June 1974 FIFA World Cup Group 1: Australia : 0–0 Chile West Berlin, West Germany: 16:00 UTC+1: Report: Stadium: Olympiastadion Attendance: 17,400 Referee: Jafar Namdar Note: While official match reports show Richards as having been booked twice (in the 37th and 83rd minutes), the referee showed Richards cards on four occasions.
Thailand: Kallang, Singapore: 20:30 UTC+8: Zulkarnaen Zainal 90' Report: Sutee Suksomkit 71' Stadium: National Stadium Attendance: 35,000 Referee: Halim Abdul Hamid : Penalties: Hafizat Jauharmi Zulkarnaen Zainal Hasrin Jailani Fadzuhasny Juraimi Rafi Ali: Choketawee Promrut Surachai Jaturapattarapong Thanunchai Baribarn Pipat Thonkanya
Thailand did it three times: in 2000, 2002, 2014, 2016, 2020, and 2022, while Singapore did it once in 2004 and 2007. Australia , an AFF member outside Southeast Asia, has not played the ASEAN Championship due to the initial agreement.
In October 1945, the Chifley government sent Lieutenant-Colonel Allan J. Eastman of the Australian Army as their representative in Allied-occupied Bangkok. J. C. R. Proud, the Australian political representative in Singapore, summed up the government's position with regards to peace with Thailand when he advised Eastman that "the death in Siam of so many Australian prisoners of war is a fact ...