Two goals in two minutes helped Australia secure a 5-1 thrashing of Indonesia to inch closer to World Cup qualification as Dutch legend Patrick Kluivert was well beaten in his first game in charge.
Indonesia missed an early penalty before a Martin Boyle spot-kick and a Nishan Velupillay strike during a frantic opening 20 minutes did the damage at Sydney Football Stadium.
A brace from Jackson Irvine and another by Lewis Miller sealed the win.
“The result today was very important and the fact that we did it with five goals, really pleased,” said man-of-the-match Irvine.

“I think the scoreline flatters us a little bit, to be honest,” the goalkeeper said. “At the start of the game they had two big chances, and if they put one of them away, it could have been a different game.
“But momentum is an important thing in sport, and we’ve kick-started that winning momentum now in an important [FIFA] window, and it’s important we learn and get better.”
The win was a huge boost for Tony Popovic’s men in the race to come second in Asian Group C behind runaway leaders Japan and automatically qualify for the 48-team tournament in North America next year.
Australia now have 10 points, four clear of Indonesia, with three games to play, including a crucial away fixture against China on Tuesday.

Only the top two progress automatically, with the third and fourth forced into another round of Asian qualifying.
Defeat reinforced the scale of the task facing former Barcelona forward Kluivert, who was appointed in January after South Korea’s Shin Tae-yong was sacked.
His side head home for a must-win showdown against Bahrain next week in their bid to reach the World Cup for the first time since independence in 1945.
Australia were without a handful of injured regulars, including Leicester defender Harry Souttar and Middlesbrough midfielder Riley McGree.
But they still got the job done against a team featuring 10 players born in the Netherlands and naturalised to play for Indonesia.

But Kevin Diks’s spot-kick hit the post.
Ten minutes later, it was the Socceroos’s turn when they were awarded a penalty after a VAR intervention and Hibernian striker Boyle made no mistake.
With momentum on their side, the hosts doubled their lead two minutes later when Adam Taggart found Velupillay, who calmly chipped in over advancing goalkeeper Maarten Paes.
Irvine made it 3-0 in the 34th minute, forcing a fine save from Paes but converting the rebound.
Both Miller and Irvine added to the tally in the second half from Craig Goodwin corners before Indonesia’s Ole Romeny pulled one back late on.