San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Rout puts Americans back on track

- By Ann Killion Ann Killion is a San Francisco Chronicle columnist. Email: akillion@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @annkillion

TOKYO — Gather round, children, and hear the story of a soccer team that lost its opening match and went on to win a gold medal.

It happened in 2008. And it could happen again.

That’s the message that the U.S. women’s national team sent loud and clear Saturday, rebounding from their lackluster loss to Sweden with a 61 dismantlin­g of New Zealand in Saitama, Japan.

With the win, the Americans are now in second place in their group based on goal differenti­al. Their final game of group play is Tuesday against Australia.

“We should be ruthless,” said Carli Lloyd. “It’s a switch that should never be turned off . ... Grit, heart, fight.”

Lloyd and Tobin Heath are the only members of this team that was part of that 2008 squad that lost its opening game to Norway and then rebounded to win its next two games (including a thrashing of New Zealand). That team eventually won the gold medal, beating Brazil when a 26yearold Lloyd scored the game’s only goal in extra time.

Lloyd is 39 now, part of a world championsh­ip team that has far more resources to draw on than that 2008 group, which was coming off a fractured, disastrous 2007 World Cup.

The average age of the team that Vlatko Andonovski fielded on Saturday was 30, with both Lloyd and Megan Rapinoe, 36, getting the start over Alex Morgan and Christen Press (both 32).

But it was young dynamo Rose Lavelle, 26, who allowed the team to finally take a deep breath, with a gorgeous goal in the ninth minute, popping the cork on the team’s Olympic scoring. The team had a 20 lead at half, and after first lady Jill Biden arrived for the second half, the team pulled away with four more goals — which included two own goals from New Zealand.

The lopsided result is sure to relax a team that looked flat and baffled during a 30 loss to Sweden.

“We didn’t go, in two days, from being a really great team to not being a good team,” said Crystal Dunn. “We are well equipped to deal with adversity.”

We’ll see. This team hasn’t had to deal with much adversity for awhile. It had a 44game winning streak going before Sweden’s body blow, the first loss under Andonovski. And adversity has consequenc­es in this program.

A reminder of that stood on the other sideline. New Zealand coach Tom Sermanni replaced U.S. coach Pia Sundhage in 2012, after Sundhage coached the team to a gold medal in London. Things went great in his first year, but early in his second year the team struggled at the Algarve Cup. Fourteen months before the 2015 World Cup, Sermanni was fired, with an 1842 record, and replaced by Jill Ellis, who went on to win two world championsh­ips.

There isn’t much room for error on this team.

On Friday, the U.S. women’s lawyers filed an appeal of a federal judge’s dismissal of the portion of their groundbrea­king gender discrimina­tion lawsuit involving equal pay. The timing is based on legal maneuverin­gs, but it is fitting that it comes as the team is trying to win yet another championsh­ip. This team’s relevance is both in its accomplish­ments on the field and its societal impact.

 ?? James Hill / New York Times ?? Lindsey Horan hops on Julie Ertz after Horan’s goal gave the United States a 20 lead before halftime.
James Hill / New York Times Lindsey Horan hops on Julie Ertz after Horan’s goal gave the United States a 20 lead before halftime.

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