The Phnom Penh Post

France held by Austria in Euro

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AMANDINE Henr y’s secondhalf header rescued a 1-1 draw for tit le contenders France against women’s European Championsh­ip newcomers Austria i n the Netherland­s on Saturday.

Captain Lara Dickenmann and Ramona Bachmann scored as Switzerlan­d recovered from a goal down to beat Iceland 2-1 in the earlier game.

France and Austria top Group C with four points, one ahead of Switzerlan­d, while Iceland will bow out after the group phase.

France dominated almost the entire game in Utrecht, but it was Austria’s Lisa Makas who scored first in the 27th minute, drilling home from just inside the area the French failed to clear a throw-in.

Henry then slammed in a header from a corner delivered by Elise Bussaglia on 51 minutes.

France’s Marie-Laure Delie had two good chances early into the game but was denied by Austrian goalkeeper Manuela Zinsberger.

Austria threatened twice before scoring, with French keeper Sarah Bouhaddi stopping Laura Feiersinge­r’s shot and Makas missing the target with a flicked free-kick.

In the second half, Zinsberger brilliantl­y tipped Henry’s curling shot onto the crossbar, while French substitute Kadidiatou Diani was denied by the keeper and then missed the goal altogether in stoppage time.

“I’m frustrated. We deserved to win. I thought Austria didn’t really play, preferring instead to sit back and wait,” said French coach Olivier Echouafni.

“Austria waited and we gave them the chance to score.”

Austrian coach Dominik Thalhammer did not object, saying his team had settled for a “defensive performanc­e.”

“France are a world-class team but we managed to put them under pressure for 15 minutes of the first half and at the end of the second, too.”

Earlier in Doetinchem, Iceland took the lead on 33 minutes as Fanndis Fridriksdo­ttir beat Gaelle Thalmann in the Swiss goal with a low left-footed strike.

Ten minutes later, Dickenmann fired home a cutback from Bachmann.

Bachmann then scored the winner on 52 minutes after an excellent exchange in midfield, with Noelle Maritz providing the final cross for the Chelsea striker to head home.

“It was a very exciting game for the fans, but it was certainly a test of everybody’s nerves,” said Swiss coach Martina Voss-Tecklenbur­g.

The Swiss put Iceland under pressure from the start, but they were restricted to a Maritz effort that sailed over the bar.

Iceland were a threat on the counter-attack, but Dagny Brynjarsdo­ttir and Gunnhildur Jonsdottir headed over from free-kicks.

The game was held up for about eight minutes in the second half for Thalmann to receive treatment after a nasty collision with Jonsdottir.

Iceland pushed in search of a late equaliser but Fridriksdo­ttir misfired from long range while Switzerlan­d’s Bachmann rattled the crossbar four minutes into the 11 minutes of stoppage time.

Iceland had a series of corners in the closing stages but Dickenmann saved the Swiss on the goalline after an effort was flicked on before Swiss substitute Eseosa Aigbogun was denied by keeper Gudbjorg Gunnarsdot­tir after a superb run by Bachmann.

“Technicall­y we could do much better, passing and receiving and running without the ball,” said Iceland coach Freyr Alexanders­son. “But the atmosphere was good and the support for the Icelandic team was world-class. We are very happy for their support, we really wanted to give them a victory tonight, but that was not the case.”

 ?? TOBIAS SCHWARZ/AFP ?? France midfielder Amandine Henry (third right) celebrates after scoring against Austria at the Women’s Euro 2017 on Saturday.
TOBIAS SCHWARZ/AFP France midfielder Amandine Henry (third right) celebrates after scoring against Austria at the Women’s Euro 2017 on Saturday.

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