AUSTRALIA coach Holger Osieck credited his team's compact structure as the foundation for their 6-0 Asian Cup thrashing of Uzbekistan.
With a place  in the final of the Asian Football Confederation's premier tournament at stake,  a tight contest was expected in the semi-final between heavyweights Australia  and an Uzbekistan side that had impressed throughout the competition.
But  a one-sided match in Doha's Khalifa International Stadium caught everyone by  surprise, as Australia ran riot to book their place in the final against Japan  and leave German Osieck delighted with the performance of his  players.
"We had a brilliant game today," Osieck said. "The  players put on a great show and performance. I'm full of praise and credit for  them, what they did today was fantastic.
"You can't expect a result like  this. We definitely wanted to win the game and go to the final but you can never  predict the score.
"The secret was the way we presented ourselves on the  pitch. We were well structured, we had a great shape, we played high, we tried  to create. Harry Kewell (who scored the game's opening goal) had a great game  and he's had a great tournament so far but he's not the only one.
"All  the other boys have done well and I'm very happy with the way our team has  developed in the tournament.
"The entire team works well defensively. We  are very compact and the defence starts with the strikers, they close the  opponents down and we are very well-structured behind them.
"When the  opposition dribble into midfield, they run into a wall. We win the ball and we  play our game. It sounds simple but it took some time to get the structure  together.
"The more we play together, the better we  become."
Uzbekistan coach Vadim Abramov could scarcely comprehend the  manner in which his side was comprehensively dismantled.
"Congratulations  to Australia," Abramov said. "Their win is historic but it's a bad day  for the Uzbekistan team.
"The way we played today, I cannot describe it.  We were prepared but we played badly, this is a big problem, we made too many  mistakes.
"Up until now, I believed that we could beat Australia and win  the tournament. I don't know what happened. After the second goal, we wanted to  attack but we made too many mistakes at the back."
Australia face Japan  in the Saturday's final after they beat South Korea on penalties following a 2-2  draw in the other semi-final.
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