Redmain, who retreated after 119 minutes, danced frantically across his line to prevent the six Peruvian players with spots at the end of the 0-0 draw. 3 Andrew Redmayne went with Bruce Grobbelaar to seal Australia’s place in the World Cup 3 The’s antics helped them beat Peru in the Qatar playoffsCredit: Getty He just had to find the right dance move. Congratulations to Redmayne for making Australia World Cup favorite pic.twitter.com/SoX2TRtmOx – Seth (@ SethMan31) June 13, 2022 And his theaters did the trick when puzzled Alex Valera made a bad effort that was easily saved as the Australians won 5-4 on pen. The 33-year-old had only TWO hats in his name before Monday’s epic appearance, which has already named him “Gray Wiggle”. Pedro Galeze had the dream start for Peru in shooting, after he saved Boyle’s penalty with a huge save. But his jaws hit the deck when Luis Advincula hit the crossbar to level things before Redmayne’s moment of magic died suddenly. Some well-known former Premier League players have started brilliantly on both sides. Former Manchester City and Brighton midfielder Aaron Mui pulled in the numbers early on and woke up Martin Boyle. The former Hibs star made a menacing pass in front of the goal, but no one was there to make the crucial touch. Former Watford striker Andre Carrillo retaliated strongly for Peru, finding Sergio Peιαa in the middle, but was cut by Mitchell Duke. FREE BETS AND REGISTRATION OFFERS – BEST NEW CUSTOMERS OFFERS Boyle hit a series of perfect crosses inches and Jackson Irwin nearly took the lead, but slapped his shot and Bailey Wright was offside. After the break, Mui sent a warning shot just outside the box, and Carrillo responded with a cross over former Brighton stopper Ryan and anxiously near the goal. Aziz Behich almost sealed it with a miraculous goal in overtime, after hitting a cheeky touch on Tapia’s feet and turning over another Peruvian shirt before hitting a shot just outside the right post. 3 Redman replaces Australian No. 1 Matt Ryan on penaltiesCredit: Getty The boss of the Australians, Graham Arnold, admitted that he sent Redmain to hit the heads of the Peruvian players before the penalties. Arnold said: “I’m so proud of the players. Nobody knows what these boys went through to get here, “It was so difficult, the whole campaign and the way they stuck to it and devoted themselves to it, unbelievable. “Andrew Redmain is a very good penalty taker and to try to bring him to the mental aspect while we made this change, to add that little bit of uncertainty to their brains, that was the reason. “Doubts do not bother me, they are the boys I care about, the toy I care about. “I do it for my family and I want to dedicate it to my brother, Colin. When my parents died when I was young, I had no one to really support. My older brother was the one in my whole life and he is the No. 1 “.