The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

U.S. women down Mexico to secure an Olympic spot

- ByAnneM. Peterson

CARSON, CALIF. » Samantha Mewis’ goal on a blistering free kick in the second half against Mexico left no doubt that the United States was on its way to the Olympics.

Mewis scored twice and the U.S. national team secured its place in Tokyo this summerwith a 4-0 semifinal victory Friday night in the CONCACAF Women’s Olympic Qualifying tournament.

“I hope so,” she said about her statement-making goal putting the U.S. firmly in control. “There were ups and downs in the game. I thought Mexico played really well, they did a great job and theywere a hard teamto beat. I think every time we were able to score it helped us kind of reset ourselves.”

Rose Lavelle and Christen Press also scored for the United States, which extended its unbeaten streak to 27 games.

The United States will face Canada in the tournament’s title game on Sunday. Canada earned the region’s other Olympic berth with a 1-0 victory over surprising­ly resilient CostaRica 1-0 in the earlier match Friday.

Canada has finished as runner up to the United States in the last three qualifying tournament­s.

“Canada is always a really hard team, we obviously have a big rivalry with them and of course they’re playing well defensivel­y — and offensivel­y. So it’s going to be a tough game, but we’re excited for the challenge,” Mewis said.

The top-rankedU.S. team is coming off a victory in the World Cup last summer in France. It was the team’s fourth title in soccer’s premier tournament.

The United States has made the field for every Olympics since soccer became an Olympic sport in 1996, and has won the gold medal four times. But the Americans were eliminated by Sweden in the quarterfin­als four years ago in Brazil for the team’s earliest exit in the tournament.

“Coming into this game we had the same attitude as the game before and the game before. And that attitude is not going to change going forward: Every game that we go into is going to be the most important, whether its a qualifying tournament or a friendly game, or any game that we have in front of us,” U.S. coach Vlatko Andonovski said

Mexico, ranked No. 26 in the world, finished second in its group to draw the United States in the semis.

Mexicomade the field for the 2004 Olympics, but has not been back since. However, Mexico is on the rise, boosted by a domesticwo­men’s league. The team won its first two group-stage matches before falling 2-0 to Canada.

“The competitio­n that they have here in the U.S., the number of options that they have to play, I think every practice is probably tougher than a lot of their matches,” Mexico coach Christophe­r Cuellar said. “I thinkwhen you train at that level, andyouhave that kind of competitio­n, the game becomes a little easier.”

The United States swept its group stagematch­eswithout allowing a goal. Lindsey Horan led the way with five goals and Press added four. Neither Press nor Horan started against Mexico.

 ?? CHRIS CARLSON - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. players celebrate after a goal by midfielder Rose Lavelle, second from right, during the first half of a CONCACAF women’s Olympic qualifying soccer match against Mexico on Friday, Feb. 7, 2020, in Carson, Calif.
CHRIS CARLSON - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. players celebrate after a goal by midfielder Rose Lavelle, second from right, during the first half of a CONCACAF women’s Olympic qualifying soccer match against Mexico on Friday, Feb. 7, 2020, in Carson, Calif.

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