Chattanooga Times Free Press

Cameroon faces calls for punishment

- BY ROB HARRIS

VALENCIENN­ES, France — After all the rage and rebellion in the stadium, England players received a far more convivial reception back at their hotel they shared with Cameroon.

It came remarkably from Cameroon supporters who were far more graceful than some of their dissenting national team players earlier on Sunday evening in the humid cauldron of Stade de Hainaut.

England players who had denied their country a place in the Women’s World Cup quarterfin­als by winning 3-0 were applauded back into the Royal Hainaut Spa and Resort Hotel.

The England traveling party led by Phil Neville welcomed the unexpected reception.

The manager had concerns the moment he was informed by the team operations manager that they were sharing with the opposition in the small city of Valencienn­es.

“I thought, ‘No, that’s not right,’” Neville said. “Then we went to the hotel and it’s been amazing. We saw them go out to training (on Saturday) and they had a ghetto blaster and the kit man went out singing and dancing.

“My players joined in dancing in the corridors. Our meal and meeting rooms were side by side. That’s the spirit of football.”

But what unfolded Sunday in the last-16 game was far from the “carnival atmosphere” Neville enjoyed the previous day in the newly opened hotel on a site of a former hospital.

By revolting against VAR decisions and contemplat­ing not resuming play, the Cameroon players left Neville “completely and utterly ashamed.”

The Cameroonia­ns were convinced of a plot against them by the refereeing team.

In the dressing room at halftime, trailing 2-0 after Ellen White had been awarded a second goal initially scrubbed out for offside, Cameroon coach Alain Djeumfa inflamed the anger.

“The referee wants England to win today,” Djeumfa said, according to an account of midfielder Raissa Feudjio.

As Cameroon seethed and wept at times on the field, there was at least one high-profile advocate of the petulant behavior: the head of the FIFA administra­tion.

FIFA secretary general Fatma Samoura tweeted the Cameroon players “inspired many young girls” with “passionate and talented play on the field that made your fans proud and your country is proud of you.”

The view from the Confederat­ion of African Football was very different.

Isha Johansen, president of CAF’s women’s committee, said the match “reflected badly not only on African women’s football but African football on the whole” and wants punishment­s imposed.

“It is an issue which will be addressed and dealt with at the appropriat­e levels of governance,” she added on Monday.

But Samoura endorsed the conduct of players who openly undermined the authority of referee Quin Liang by forcing delays to restarts as they huddled to protest against England goals.

Instead, Liang was just following the laws of the game by allowing White’s goal to stand and then denying Ajara Nchout a chance to pull it back to 2-1 for another offside call that went against Cameroon on a video review. Nchout was in tears as angry teammates delayed the restart once again.

England players seemed more clued up about the applicatio­n of VAR and the laws after pre-tournament briefings before flying out.

“Maybe (it’s) why you’ve seen our players in a little more control,” defender Lucy Bronze said.

As the opposition anger boiled over, the English just waited for it to subside.

“As soon as you get caught up in that, or get worried about it,” defender Millie Bright said, “you will lose momentum in the game. We stayed away from it.”

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