England players celebrate after defeating Nigeria on penalties in Brisbane to reach the Women's World Cup quarterfinals. Photo: AFP
soccer

England, Australia advance to Women's World Cup quarterfinals

11 Comments
By Andrew DENT

England survived the sending-off of Lauren James to scrape past Nigeria on penalties Monday and were joined in the Women's World Cup quarterfinals by an Australia side boosted by the return of Sam Kerr.

European champions England will play either Colombia or Jamaica in the last eight on Saturday, but they got there the hard way.

Chloe Kelly scored the winning penalty in Brisbane as England beat Nigeria 4-2 in the shoot-out after a tense last-16 tie finished 0-0 at the end of extra time.

England had a major scare before a crowd of 49,461, having come through the whole of extra time a player short following the 87th-minute sending-off of James for a stamp on Nigeria's Michelle Alozie.

Coach Sarina Wiegman, who welcomed key midfielder Keira Walsh back into her side after injury, called it "a very, very hard game".

"How we did that and how the team just kept going, I'm so proud of them," said Wiegman, whose side are regarded as favourites to take the crown from beaten holders the United States.

Georgia Stanway put the first penalty of the shoot-out wide for England, but Desire Oparanozie and Alozie followed suit, both missing the target with Nigeria's first two attempts.

Beth England, Rachel Daly and Alex Greenwood all scored for England before Kelly converted the decisive kick.

"It's amazing, anything that's thrown at us we show what we're capable of," said the Manchester City forward Kelly, who scored the winning goal in last year's European Championship final.

"We've been practising (penalties) a lot and it's working."

The defeat was cruel on Nigeria, the world's 40th-ranked team, who followed up their impressive performances in the group stage by pushing England all the way.

Their England-born defender Ashleigh Plumptre crashed a shot off the woodwork in the first half and Uchenna Kanu also hit the frame of the goal.

"We had every opportunity to get the result and unfortunately we didn't get it done," said their American coach, Randy Waldrum.

"I think we could have (won it in 90 minutes). We had the best chances, we hit the crossbar twice in regulation play. We were a bit unlucky not to get something out of it."

England will discover the identity of their quarter-final opponents on Tuesday when Colombia face surprise-package Jamaica in Melbourne.

Australia 2, Denmark 0

World Cup co-hosts Australia are also into the last eight as their skipper Kerr came off the bench in a 2-0 win over Denmark in front of nearly 76,000 fans in Sydney.

They will play France or Morocco on Saturday in Brisbane after making fairly light work of a toothless Denmark.

To cap a good night's work for the Matildas, talismanic striker Kerr came on with 10 minutes left to huge cheers for her first action of the tournament after a calf injury.

The dangerous Caitlin Foord ran Denmark ragged throughout and scored a fine first after being set up by the impressive Mary Fowler on 29 minutes.

Hayley Raso grabbed a second to make the game safe 20 minutes from time.

The Chelsea predator Kerr, who was supposed to have been the face of the World Cup before injury struck on the eve of the tournament, said it was "a big relief to be back".

"I feel good. I think I was a bit rusty, but, no, I feel great. I'll sleep better tonight than I have for the last three weeks."

Denmark coach Lars Sondergaard said he was "proud but disappointed", having seen his side have the better of the opening part of the game.

"The match today was decided by Australia's effectiveness in front of goal and us not being so efficient in front of goal," he said.

"I think we started better. Up until the 1-0, I think we were the better team and played a very good game up until then."

The home side are getting up a head of steam at this World Cup, where the demise of the United States has opened the door for a new champion.

"I think we're embracing it, I think the girls are loving it," Kerr said of the growing expectation and excitement. "The Australian public has been amazing. We've felt the love, just walking down the street it's been a real buzz."

© 2023 AFP

©2023 GPlusMedia Inc.


11 Comments
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Well played to the Matildas!

It was a joy to watch the talented midfield general Mary Fowler thread the ball through all night to hungry goalscorers Foord and Raso. Superstar Sam Kerr adds another dimension to the ladies in gold, and will be better for the run. The Danes were unable to crack the mean-spiritqed Aussie defense who gave them nothing.

With the additiin of Kerr, and home support roaring them on to new heights, the Matildas have the ability to go deep.

Hats off also to the victorious Lionesses, but they will certainly need to get their fluency and threat in front of goal sorted- soon.

3 ( +5 / -2 )

Nigeria were better than England. One on one, England couldn't get past them. They were as poor as they were in their first two games - slow, sloppy and ineffective going forward. Both sides had a shout for a penalty - giving neither was fair. Manager Randy got his tactics right.

Not sure if it is a mentality issue for England or they just don't have the fitness levels to cope with a fast side. The Nigerians got to every ball first in a straight dash, and persistently won aerial balls. It was a clear red card for James. No excuses.

The new rules for penalties reduce the mobility of keepers. There is now less benefit in risking missing by booting it really hard. Penalty competitions are now being lost on misses. Getting the ball on target may now be more important.

0 ( +1 / -1 )

While I cannot get into women's soccer, to watch as a spectacle, I do think the tournament is great for the fans that do enjoy it and the money it brings.

1 ( +1 / -0 )

Nigeria were better than England

England looked flat and out of ideas.

Nothing like the level they were at during the Euros. Still time to pick it up but that performance won’t make too many fear them.

2 ( +3 / -1 )

I can't get my head around England winning a penalty shoot-out; though it was kind of by default.

-2 ( +1 / -3 )

I can't get my head around England winning a penalty shoot-out; though it was kind of by default

Kind of by default?

So not by default?

Interesting expression.

2 ( +4 / -2 )

Kaaarn Aussie! All the way!

2 ( +3 / -1 )

JimizoToday  11:41 am JST

I can't get my head around England winning a penalty shoot-out; though it was kind of by default

Kind of by default?

So not by default? 

Interesting expression.

Not that hard to understand the meaning. Whether we won by default is open to interpretation - but we won because we missed less penalties than the other side.

-1 ( +0 / -1 )

Whether we won by default is open to interpretation

?

 but we won because we missed less penalties than the other side.

I think the more usual way of looking at is England won because they scored more penalties than Nigeria in the shoot-out.

This method of settling a match has been used for decades and all teams entering the knockout stage are aware of it.

The more prepared teams should have their players practice pens. It is test of technique and nerve.

England edged Nigeria in this.

They go through. Simple.

1 ( +2 / -1 )

England won on penalties. Simply.

2 ( +2 / -0 )

Coach Sarina Wiegman's Lionesses are yet to demonstrate their customary killer instinct. Skillful Matildas are title contenders. All the best to the two sides in the QFs.

1 ( +1 / -0 )

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