Orlando Sentinel

FOUR-STAR WINNERS

Goals by Rapinoe, Lavelle give Americans back-to-back titles

- By Alicia DelGallo

U.S. players, from left, Alex Morgan, Carli Lloyd, Megan Rapinoe, Kelley O’Hara, Julie Ertz and Alyssa Naeher cheer while receiving the World Cup trophy Sunday. The U.S. won its record fourth Women’s World Cup title and second in a row, beating the Netherland­s 2-0.

LYON, France — A month of buildup and high expectatio­ns is over. Seven matches played. Seven matches won. Countless records broken. The United States is back-toback World Cup champions.

Fireworks flew and U.S. players danced in confetti as it dropped out of the sky to celebrate their 2-0 victory over Netherland­s in Sunday’s 2019 World Cup final at Stade de Lyon.

Sixty-one minutes of tension and buildup during the match released with one swift kick from Megan Rapinoe. She buried a penalty kick to break a scoreless deadlock and breathe life into the attack. Eight minutes later, Rose Lavelle lasered a game-winner into the net, handing the U.S. women a record fourth world title in front of an announced crowd of 57,900.

“I feel like this team just is in the midst of changing the world around us as we live and it’s just an incredible feeling, really,” said Rapinoe, the tournament’s golden boot (top goal scorer) and golden ball (top player) winner.

The United States carried into the match a reputation as a larger-than-life force made of confident battle-tested players. Nothing could

shake their focus, not even the worldwide attention and scrutiny that spun around the team all tournament.

But Netherland­s played with confidence and passion, chasing down balls and winning duels. The Dutch were the first team to hold the U.S. scoreless beyond 12 minutes of play. Multiple players went down with knocks and bruises throughout the match. U.S. defender Kelley O’Hara had to sub off at halftime after a head-to-head collision and Becky Sauerbrunn’s bloody face was patched up before she re-entered the game in the second half.

“They gave us a heck of a game tonight,” U.S. coach Jill Ellis said. “Netherland­s made it incredibly hard on us. They got numbers behind the ball, looked to transition — an incredibly discipline­d, strong team. I said to the players at halftime, I said, ‘At some point it’s gonna break.’ ”

The breakthrou­gh finally came when the referee signaled for a video review in the 61st minute. The crowd waited with bated breath. Then the decision came down: penalty kick for the United States.

Rapinoe stepped up and sent a grounder into the right side of the net for a 1-0 lead. A yellow card was given to Netherland­s’ Stefanie Van Der Gragt, who was responsibl­e for the penalty after a high kick caught Alex Morgan in the arm.

“With the high kick, I mean I have a massive bruise on my arm, so she got pretty high up there,” said Morgan, who also plays for the Orlando Pride. “So I was very happy because up until that moment the goalkeeper was having the game of her life.

“They were obviously an opponent worthy of playing in a final.”

Dutch goalkeeper Sari Van Veenendaal won the golden glove award, given to the best keeper in the tournament. She finished the World Cup with 20 saves, including seven in the final.

The lethal U.S. attack that has garnered so much praise over the years relaxed after Rapinoe’s goal and the shots started to flow one after another.

Lavelle rifled the ball into the net from the top of the box in the 69th minute to double the Americans’ lead.

Morgan and Tobin Heath pushed time and time again in the minutes that followed but either misfired or had shots blocked or saved. By the end of the game, the U.S. had 17 shots to Netherland­s’ six.

The World Cup is over. The USWNT has its highly sought-after fourth star. Now what?

“First we celebrate,” Morgan said. “I’m ready for a glass of champagne, finally.”

 ?? RICHARD HEATHCOTE/GETTY ??
RICHARD HEATHCOTE/GETTY
 ?? PHILIPPE DESMAZES/GETTY-AFP ?? United States midfielder Rose Lavelle is at the center of the celebratio­n after scoring the Americans’ second goal in the Women’s World Cup final against the Netherland­s. The U.S. team held on to win its record fourth World Cup title.
PHILIPPE DESMAZES/GETTY-AFP United States midfielder Rose Lavelle is at the center of the celebratio­n after scoring the Americans’ second goal in the Women’s World Cup final against the Netherland­s. The U.S. team held on to win its record fourth World Cup title.
 ?? RICHARD HEATHCOTE/GETTY ?? American Alex Morgan kisses the FIFA Women’s World Cup trophy after her team’s victory in the final over the Netherland­s on Sunday in Lyon, France.
RICHARD HEATHCOTE/GETTY American Alex Morgan kisses the FIFA Women’s World Cup trophy after her team’s victory in the final over the Netherland­s on Sunday in Lyon, France.
 ?? RICHARD HEATHCOTE/GETTY ?? Megan Rapinoe of the USA strikes her signature celebratio­n pose after scoring her team’s first goal in Sunday’s Women’s World Cup final as teammates Samantha Mewis and Alex Morgan join her.
RICHARD HEATHCOTE/GETTY Megan Rapinoe of the USA strikes her signature celebratio­n pose after scoring her team’s first goal in Sunday’s Women’s World Cup final as teammates Samantha Mewis and Alex Morgan join her.

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