England sunk by own goal in stoppage time
EDMONTON, Alberta — Laura Bassett scored into her own net during secondhalf stoppage time, giving Japan a 21 victory over England in a Women’s World Cup semifinal.
The decisive goal Wednesday came when Japan’s Nahomi Kawasumi drove up the right side and sent a cross into the middle for Yuki Ogimi. Bassett reached out with her right foot and caught the ball flush, inadvertently sending it toward her net. The ball struck the crossbar and bounced in just before goalkeeper Karen Bardsley could get across.
The defending champions advanced to play the United States in the championship game at Vancouver on Sunday. It’s a rematch of the 2011 championship game in Germany, when Japan won on penalty kicks after a 22 draw.
The U.S. is 2416 against Japan.
“However we played in this game, the fact is, we’re going to the final,” Japan coach Norio Sasaki said through an interpreter. “And I’d like to congratulate the players for that. ... We should really cherish this moment that we are going to the final.”
Bassett was inconsolable at the end of the match, lying flat on the ground, her face in the turf. She then needed assistance from teammates and her coach before leaving the field.
“This team can’t be afraid to cry,” England coach Mark Sampson said. “There’s nothing wrong with that at all.”
It was a torturous finish for the sixthranked Lionesses, who have made their deepest run in four World Cup appearances. England had never won an elimination game until this year.
“Of course, when there’s a huge disappointment there’s going to be an outcry,” Sampson added. “But it’ll sink in soon what they’ve achieved and how proud everyone is of their teammate ... and what we’ve done to put football in our country to a place it’s never been before.”
England will remain in Edmonton to play topranked Germany in the thirdplace match Saturday. Germany lost 20 to the United States on Tuesday.
England lost despite controlling much of the second half against the fourthranked Japanese. And that was despite what Sasaki had said a day earlier, when he suggested his players were “superior.”