The Jerusalem Post

American hegemony on the line against England in riveting semifinal

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LYON (Reuters) – The United States’ status as the leading power in women’s soccer will be put to the test by England in Tuesday’s World Cup semifinal, with the gap between the teams having narrowed dramatical­ly in recent years.

The three-time World Cup winner, ranked No. 1 in the world, beat France in the quarterfin­als, but is set to face an England team full of belief in its chances of glory.

The US has enjoyed 20 years of dominance which goes back to the World Cup final of 1999, arguably the moment when the women’s game truly began take off.

In front of over 90,000 fans at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, the game against China went to a penalty shootout and Brandi Chastain struck the winning kick for the Americans.

Chastain collapsed to her knees, removed her top and bedecked in just her sports bra and shorts waved her shirt above her head in celebratio­n.

The match was live on television and the photograph went as viral as any image could in pre-Internet times.

Sat in the crowd that day was Rachel Brown, an English student on a University scholarshi­p, playing college soccer for the Alabama Crimson Tide.

Brown, who had begun playing soccer as a schoolgirl for Accrington Ladies in Lancashire, was already an England internatio­nal, but what she witnessed that day left a lasting impression.

“I was still 18 at the time, it was surreal. It was sat there thinking wow, this is for a women’s football game,” she said.

“Seeing them on the front of Sports Illustrate­d and every major newspaper, they were genuinely household names,” said Brown.

“I was absolutely desperate for our Football Associatio­n and players to do everything that we could to start to measure up, because we were absolutely miles off,” said Brown, whose married name is Brown-Finnis.

The FA did eventually respond, increasing its commitment to the women’s game, bringing in central contracts for the players and developing a core of profession­als who benefited from improved support, a plan which Brown credits for the rise of the Lionesses.

Although she played against that golden generation of Americans throughout her college soccer career, Brown finally got a chance to face them as a team in the 2007 World Cup quarterfin­al in China – the only time the sides have met at this level.

England lost that game 3-0, the match serving as another reminder of American dominance, with a tired England side “battered physically,” according to Brown.

Whatever the outcome on Tuesday, it is unlikely that Phil Neville’s squad will be found wanting in terms of fitness, said Brown, who has been impressed by the way the former Manchester United player has rotated his squad to keep the players fresh for the business end of the tournament.

The former Liverpool, Everton and Arsenal ’keeper is in Lyon working as a pundit with the BBC and while she acknowledg­es the US remains the favorite, she has no doubt the gap has closed significan­tly.

“England has never been in a better, stronger position to beat the US,” she said. “Whatever the outcome on Tuesday that is the case.”

Throughout the years as top dogs in the sport, the Americans gained a reputation for a winning mentality based on supreme confidence.

But Brown believes this time, the self-belief of Jill Ellis’s team will be a little tempered.

“They will be wary of England, not scared, but they will be wary,” she said.

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