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'Worst ever': Insane moment of madness decides A-League grand final

What shaped as a fairytale finish became anything but for the Perth Glory, as Sydney FC won the A-League grand final on penalties.

A failed panenka kick from outgoing A-League star Brendon Santalab went straight into the hands of Sky Blues keeper Andrew Redmayne.

Redmayne twice proved too difficult to get past from the penalty spot, handing Sydney FC a memorable win.

In front of a record crowd, the two teams played a grinding, defensive style which saw few shots on target.

The Glory’s heartbreak will be particularly painful, after looking to more dangerous side for much of the contest.

It was the first grand final in eight years to be 0-0 at the end of extra time.

Sydney goalkeeper Andrew Redmayne was the hero in the penalty shootout, saving two shots.
PERTH, AUSTRALIA - MAY 19: Sydney FC celebrate after defeating Perth Glory on penalties during the 2019 A-League Grand Final match between the Perth Glory and Sydney FC at Optus Stadium on May 19, 2019 in Perth, Australia. (Photo by Will Russell/Getty Images)

The referees will breathe a sigh of relief, after a controversial VAR review resulted in a Sydney FC goal being struck down, to the outrage of fans on social media.

Any anguish was washed away when the fourth and decisive penalty kick found the back of the net.

Unfortunately for Santalab, his failed panenka drew a considerable amount of criticism from fans.

No amount of purple hamburgers could take away the heartbreak Perth Glory fans were feeling on Sunday.

Western Australia was whipped into Glory fever heading into the grand final against Sydney FC at Optus Stadium.

Fans attending the match could even purchase a specially-made burger featuring a purple bun.

But for the record 56,371 crowd - the biggest ever at an A-League grand final - only one thing truly mattered - victory.

With the game locked at 0-0 after extra time, it meant penalties would decide the champion.

Glory survived a nailbiting shootout against Adelaide a week earlier.

But there was no happy ending this time around, with Sydney goalkeeper Andrew Redmayne becoming the hero.

Redmayne put his team in the box seat with a sharp save to deny Andy Keogh.

And he held his nerve to save Brendon Santalab's cheeky chip.

When Reza Ghoochannejhad whipped his penalty home, the title was Sydney's.

Glory have endured a somewhat tortured history when it comes to grand finals, despite snaring the last two titles in the now-defunct NSL.

In the 2000 NSL grand final, Glory led Wollongong Wolves 3-0 at half-time before losing on penalties.

And in 2012, Glory led Brisbane 1-0 in the title decider before two late Besart Berisha goals sunk Perth's hopes.

Berisha's second - nailed from the spot in the dying moments - remains the A-League's most controversial penalty ever awarded.

Hopes were high Glory could end their Championship drought under the watch of master coach Tony Popovic.

But the fans will have to wait at least another year for that drought to end.

And spare a thought for Popovic, who has now lost all four of his A-League grand finals, three of which were at Western Sydney.

Sunday's crowd beat the previous record for an A-League grand final - the 55,436 that were on hand for Melbourne Victory's crushing 6-0 win over Adelaide United in the 2006/07 decider.

The record for any A-League fixture is the 61,880 set for Sydney's 4-0 win over Western Sydney at ANZ Stadium in October 2016.

WITH AAP