Ottawa Citizen

Lionesses hoping to sway neutrals for Japan semifinal

Despite dispatchin­g Canada, England keen to garner support

- JOHN MACKINNON asiekiersk­a@edmontonjo­urnal.com Twitter.com/@alicjawith­aj

Although most of the 54,027 fans were cheering against his team on Saturday, England coach Mark Sampson called the Women’s World Cup quarter-final against Canada at BC Place “the best sporting arena I’ve been in my life.”

“The hairs on the back of the neck stood up when Christine Sinclair went to speak before the game and the crowd erupted and stood up,” Sampson said. “I thought it showed a lot of respect for the women’s game in this country.”

While the Canadians dwell on the heartbreak­ing 2-1 loss that ended the host team’s run in the World Cup, the English Lionesses are focused on their first appearance in a Women’s World Cup semifinal, where they will face one of the most dominant teams of the tournament, Japan, in Edmonton on Canada Day.

The defending World Cup champions will certainly present England with different challenges than the Canadians did. “They’re really technical, good footballer­s, their movement, their passing, it’s brilliant,” said England forward Jodie Taylor, who scored a goal against Canada.

“They’re a great team. We’ve got a lot of respect for them and admire them as footballer­s. I’ve watched them for years. But there’s something special going on in our team right now, and we have a lot of belief in how we’re playing and progressin­g through the tournament.”

Taylor said although it will be a tough game, England isn’t intimidate­d. The players are going into the game with “a quiet confidence.”

“What we’ve seen now is we’re a tough team to score against,” Sampson said. “We’re scoring goals — two goals (per game) in the last four matches — and we’re in a great place to really attack the semifinal.”

Despite being the squad that booted the Canadians out of the tournament, Sampson is hoping to attract some new fans to his team’s cheering section Wednesday.

“Our team has been, I think, excellent ambassador­s for the game. We’ve really enjoyed being in all the cities — Moncton, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver and now looking forward to experienci­ng Edmonton,” he said. “We’ve represente­d our country with great pride and passion. I really hope that a lot of sports fans will connect with that and, hopefully, the neutrals might start to support the England team.”

 ?? GERRY KAHRMANN /POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? England’s Jodie Taylor, left, and Jill Scott celebrate Taylor’s goal against Canada in the quarter-final of the Women’s World Cup. England plays Japan in semifinal action Wednesday.
GERRY KAHRMANN /POSTMEDIA NEWS England’s Jodie Taylor, left, and Jill Scott celebrate Taylor’s goal against Canada in the quarter-final of the Women’s World Cup. England plays Japan in semifinal action Wednesday.

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