segunda-feira, 22 de junho de 2015

Norway Women 1 vs 2 England Women

Resultado de imagem para world cup women's 2015


Lucy Bronze fires England past Norway and into World Cup quarter-finals


Norway 1-2 England 
 Gulbrandsen 54; Houghton 61, Bronze 76

Inspired use of substitutes allied to a stunning winning goal from Lucy Bronze ensured England finally won their first knockout game at a World Cup finals. No matter that Mark Sampson’s side were required to come from behind after an edgy, erratic start. More audacious tactics from the Lionesses’ young coach ultimately earned a quarter-final place.
The next chapter will unfold in Vancouver on Saturday night – or the early hours of Sunday in the UK – against the host nation. By way of further spice Canada are managed by John Herdman, a Newcastle United supporter from Consett in County Durham.
“The team have made history. The team deserve all the credit in the world. They knew this was a big game for them, they wanted to put their names in English football history and the squad have stepped up and delivered for the country,” said Sampson. “We’ve seen in the tournament if you concede the first goal it’s incredibly difficult to win the game. This group of 23 players have shown brilliant resilience, fantastic character and excellent game discipline to come back and win that match. We’ll take huge confidence from this victory.
“It’s a squad effort, the guys on the bench were absolutely outstanding today. The impact they made again. You saw the subs and their support today. The objective was to get to Vancouver, we’re there now and we want this journey to continue.”
Norwegian reporters were applying factor 50 sun block in the press box at kick off where the temperature was 27 degrees centigrade. Pleasant as it was to sit in such wonderful warmth it cannot have been so nice down on the pitch where the artificial turf boosted the ground level mercury to well over 40 degrees.
Judging by his love of tactical surprise Sampson should make a fine chess player. Here he arranged England in a flexible 4-1-4-1 with Fara Williams sitting deep, Toni Duggan the attacking spearhead and Karen Carney and Fran Kirby occupying the wide roles. Controversially there was, once again, no starting place for Jill Scott in central midfield. Indeed England’s coach has not named her in a first XI since declaring Scott to be the “midfielder of Canada 2015”.
Supremely confident – although not arrogant – Norway claim they are probably the tournament’s fittest team but Isabell Herlovsen swiftly emphasised she is quick as well as athletic after pouncing on a rare Carney error. That left her accelerating towards Karen Bardsley but, reacting well to the danger, Bardsley raced off her line, cleverly narrowing the angle. Suddenly under acute pressure Herlovsen miscued and the chance was lost.
When Kristine Minde eluded Claire Rafferty at the far post she was well placed to meet Solveig Gulbrandsen’s long diagonal ball. Fortunately for the Lionesses the angle was awkward and Minde could not squeeze her shot into the bottom corner.
Twenty-five minutes had passed before the first water break – by which time Ingrid Hjelmseth, Norway’s goalkeeper, had frequently seemed temporarily blinded by the strong sun in her eyes. Bronze had no such excuse when her ill-judged backpass was intercepted by the menacing Ada Hegerberg who creditably stayed on her feet under pressure before shooting straight at the impressive Bardsley. England could count themselves fortunate Hegerberg – who had earlier headed a presentable chance wide – did not attempt to win a penalty.
It was proving a deceptively poor England performance, although Sampson’s decision to move Katie Chapman a little deeper alongside Williams did improve things. With Lene Mykjaland having rather less room for manoeuvre than before, the Lionesses at least mustered the odd attacking move. Even so the closest they came to scoring in the first half was from a 35-yard Williams free-kick which drifted over the bar and a similarly off-target Carney shot following a corner.
With hindsight Sampson, whose early game plan screamed containment, was exhibiting the patience of a skilled poker specialist but it still seemed puzzling that Scott’s classy passing and technical assurance remained on the bench.
Across in Norway’s dug-out Even Pellerud must have been reasonably satisfied. Norway’s coach – who led his country to World Cup glory in 1995 – will celebrate his 62nd birthday next month, making him virtually 30 years Sampson’s senior. Yet while it seemed a case of the master putting the apprentice in his place Laura Bassett and Steph Houghton, England’s central defenders, were largely preventing Pellerud’s front three from wreaking too much havoc. Or rather they were until Bardsley did well to turn Gulbrandsen’s shot round a post. When the corner was whipped in to the near post by Mykjaland, Gulbrandsen dodged Rafferty before heading Norway into a far from underserved lead.
As the corner was taken Scott finally came on to replace Kirby, who had been struggling badly throughout. Norway’s goalkeeper had not had a shot to save but, against all odds, she was soon beaten. The equaliser followed another corner, won this time by Scott. Houghton timed her run to meet Williams’s delivery to perfection and her ensuing header restored parity. The moment had arrived for Sampson to liberate Jodie Taylor from the bench. The Portland Thorns striker is his most incisive forward but she underwent knee surgery only eight weeks ago and the coach could not risk sending her on in Duggan’s stead any earlier.
Elise Thorsnes very nearly put Norway back into the lead only seconds after stepping off the bench but her angled shot swerved fractionally over the bar. When Bardsley was forced to save from Hegerberg England appeared up against it again but Taylor’s pace and Scott’s passing had offered them a certain momentum that was amplified as Bronze hit that eye-catching winner. Appropriately the two substitutes created the goal, Scott and Taylor combining to cue up Bronze, advanced from right-back, for a fabulous drive from the edge of the area which Hjelmseth touched but could not hold.
By now Norway’s proud boast of superior fitness rang hollow. Instead Pellerud’s players looked to be running on empty and were relieved to see their keeper save well to deny Chapman. Once again Sampson, supported by Bardsley’s heroics, had confounded the doubters.


England won a knockout match at the Women's World Cup for the first time as Lucy Bronze hit a stunning long-range strike to set up a quarter-final tie against host nation Canada.
Bronze fired into the top corner from the edge of the penalty area as England battled back against Norway.
Solveig Gulbrandsen's flicked opener had given the Norwegians a deserved lead after the break.
Steph Houghton equalised with a header from a corner before Bronze's winner.
England closed out the final 14 minutes and there were emotional scenes at the end as the substitutes charged on to the pitch to join their team-mates in celebrating a famous victory.
And England now have the opportunity to better the quarter-final defeats suffered in each of their three previous World Cups - which they reached directly after qualifying from the group stage - when they meet Canada in Vancouver at 00:30 BST on Sunday.
To secure the tie with hosts, England had to overcome a nation that won the 1995 World Cup,  were 2013 European Championship runners-up and a side they had not beaten in four previous attempts at major tournaments.
For a long period, it looked as if England would lose out to a team five places below them in the world rankings as Mark Sampson's outfit struggled to keep the ball and failed to cope with the direct approach of the physical Norwegians in sweltering conditions.
Indeed, when Gulbrandsen climbed highest at the front post nine minutes into the second half to deflect a corner past Karen Bardsley, Norway's lead was entirely deserved.
Bardsley had played her part in keeping the scores level in the first half as holes appeared in the England defence, saving from Isabell Herlovsen and Ada Hegerberg.
Still, she was partly to blame for the Norwegian goal, needlessly tipping Gulbrandsen's shot behind when the ball was heading well wide.
At that point England were second best, constantly wasting possession and failing to provide support to lone striker Toni Duggan.
If going behind jolted them to life, so too did the introduction of Jill Scott, who provided the energy and industry that England's attacks previously lacked.
It was Scott who forced the corner that led to Houghton's equaliser, the England captain arriving to meet Fara Williams' cross with a powerful header that flew inside the far post.
And the Manchester City midfielder played her part in the winner, linking well with fellow substitute Jodie Taylor on the right of the penalty area before the ball was laid off for Bronze to smash a right-footed drive into the net via the hand of goalkeeper Ingrid Hjelmseth.
England finished strongly and rarely looked like surrendering the advantage, with the final whistle sparking joyous celebrations.
Attention now turns to Vancouver and a clash with a Canada team that beat them 1-0 in a pre-tournament friendly and are managed by Englishman John Herdman.

LINEUP, BOOKINGS (0) & SUBSTITUTIONS (5)

Norway Women

  • 01 Hjelmseth
  • 06 Mjelde
  • 07 Ronning (Thorisdottir - 45' )
  • 03 Lund
  • 13 Wold (Karlseng Utland - 87' )
  • 08 Gulbrandsen
  • 17 Mykjaland
  • 04 Ims
  • 19 Minde (Thorsnes - 70' )
  • 09 Herlovsen
  • 21 Hegerberg

Substitutes

  • 02 Thorisdottir
  • 05 Karlseng Utland
  • 10 Sonstevold
  • 11 Holstad Berge
  • 12 Vesterbekkmo
  • 14 Schjelderup
  • 15 Sandvei
  • 16 Thorsnes
  • 18 Bjanesoy
  • 20 Haavi
  • 22 Hansen
  • 23 Fiskerstrand

England Women

  • 01 Bardsley
  • 12 Bronze
  • 05 Houghton
  • 06 Bassett
  • 03 Rafferty
  • 11 Moore
  • 04 Williams
  • 10 Carney
  • 16 Chapman
  • 22 Kirby (Scott - 54' )
  • 18 Duggan (Taylor - 63' )

Substitutes

  • 02 Scott
  • 07 Nobbs
  • 08 Scott
  • 09 Aluko
  • 13 Chamberlain
  • 14 Greenwood
  • 15 Stoney
  • 17 Potter
  • 19 Taylor
  • 20 Sanderson
  • 21 Telford
  • 23 White
Ref: Esther Staubli
Att: 19,829

MATCH STATS


Possession47%53%90minsNorway WomenEngland Women

Shots

1512

On target

43

Corners

87

Fouls

55

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