Philippine Daily Inquirer

OLE! OLE! OLE!

Carmona’s late stunner takes Spain into maiden Women’s World Cup final

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AUCKLAND—Olga Carmona’s stunning 89th-minute strike gave Spain a 2-1 win over Sweden on Tuesday to propel them into the Women’s World Cup final for the first time in their history.

Spain’s thrilling victory at Eden Park sets up a showdown in Sydney on Sunday with either Australia or England, who met in the other semifinal on Wednesday.

The last-four clash in Auckland seemed to be drifting toward extra time before suddenly bursting to life when substitute Salma Paralluelo put Spain ahead with nine minutes left.

Rebecka Blomqvist equalized for Sweden in the 88th minute only for fullback Carmona, Spain’s captain, to score with a superb shot in off the underside of the crossbar from the edge of the box 60 seconds later.

“We are so proud of everything we have done and for getting to the final because now we are one small step away from glory,” said Paralluelo.

It has been a remarkable run for a nation who had never previously gone beyond the last 16 at a Women’s World Cup, and for a team who had been in disarray in the months leading up to the tournament.

Fifteen Spanish players told their federation last September that they no longer wished to be considered for selection, mainly out of unhappines­s with coach Jorge Vilda, and only three of them returned for this World Cup run.

Familiar feeling

While their dream of World Cup glory remains alive, Sweden are left with a familiar feeling after going so far at another major tournament before falling short.

This is the third time in four World Cups that they have reached the semifinals, only to lose on each occasion.

Peter Gerhardsso­n’s side also lost in the last four at the European Championsh­ip last year, having been beaten in the final of the Tokyo Olympics on penalties against Canada in 2021.

“Everyone just feels sadness and huge disappoint­ment,” said Gerhardsso­n, whose team had been so impressive in beating

Japan 2-1 in the last eight.

“We were up against an excellent Spanish side and they were able to disrupt us a lot more than Japan did.”

Vilda decided against handing a start to Paralluelo, after she came off the bench to score the winner in the quarterfin­al against the Netherland­s.

Instead he recalled Alexia Putellas and the reigning Ballon d’Or winner started for the first time since Spain were walloped 4-0 by Japan in the group phase.

The plan was clearly to dominate possession and make a more physically imposing Sweden do the chasing.

Spain had far more of the ball in the first half but the closest they came to breaking the deadlock was from long range when Jennifer Hermoso laid the ball back to Carmona, whose shot whistled wide.

Sweden had taken the game to Japan in the quarterfin­als but they offered next to nothing here until suddenly they almost struck three minutes before halftime.

Nathalie Bjorn sent a hanging cross from the right to the back post for Fridolina Rolfo— facing seven of her Barcelona club colleagues in the Spain starting lineup—but her sidefoot volley was saved by Cata Coll.

Vilda’s plan was clearly to save the pacy Paralluelo for when the Swedish defense was tiring, and it was just before the hour mark that he turned to the former athlete.

Paralluelo replaced Putellas, who has still not completed 90 minutes at this World Cup as she continues to recover full fitness following a serious knee injury.

[N]ow we are one small step away from glory

Substitute’s persistenc­e

The substitute’s persistenc­e almost brought the opener for Spain with 20 minutes left as she stretched to keep the ball in play, but Alba Redondo turned her cutback wide.

Paralluelo then struck with nine minutes of normal time remaining, showing a killer instinct to lash a shot low into the corner.

“She is a player with enormous potential and she is a long way from touching the ceiling in terms of what she can do,” Vilda said. “She is very young and has only been focusing fully on training for football for a year. We will see the best of Salma in the future. She is already shining now, but I am sure that in the future she will do so even more.”

Sweden drew level in the 88th minute thanks to two substitute­s of their own.

Lina Hurtig had only just come on when she nodded down a cross for Blomqvist to fire home, raising the specter of extra time.

But Carmona, the Real Madrid left-back, had other ideas as she clinched victory for Spain in style.

SALMA PARALLUELO Spain

 ?? —AFP ?? Spain’s Olga Carmona (right) controls the ball against Sweden.
—AFP Spain’s Olga Carmona (right) controls the ball against Sweden.

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