Albuquerque Journal

Au revoir France

The United States knocks the host country out of the World Cup

- BY ANNE M. PETERSON ASSOCIATED PRESS

PARIS — Megan Rapinoe went from controvers­y to triumph, scoring twice for the United States in the much-anticipate­d clash with host France to send the defending champions into the semifinals of the Women’s World Cup with a 2-1 victory Friday night.

France had been vying to become the first nation to simultaneo­usly hold the men’s and women’s World Cup trophies but fell well short as their aggressive play, home-field advantage and flag-waving crowd that belted out La Marseillai­se failed to faze the ever-confident U.S. team.

“I mean, you have to give it up to the French team. I think they outplayed us for sure with the ball, but we were so good defensivel­y, so strong. We hit them where it hurt. We took our chances,” Rapinoe said. “This team — unreal, unreal amount of heart.”

Rapinoe, who was called out on social media by President Donald Trump after video surfaced of her saying she wouldn’t visit the White House if the United States won in France, now leads the top-ranked Americans to Lyon to face No. 3 England on Tuesday in the semifinals.

Rapinoe scored on a free kick in the fifth minute that bounced between French players and past goalkeeper Sarah Bouhaddi. After scoring, she went to the corner and raised

both arms in celebratio­n for the U.S. fans in the sold out Parc des Princes stadium.

She raised her arms again in the 65th minute after blasting a cross from Tobin Heath that Bouhaddi dove for but couldn’t stop. It was her fifth goal of the tournament.

Fourth-ranked France pulled back on Wendie Renard’s header off Gaetane Thiney’s free kick in the 81st.

“It did live up to expectatio­ns, I’m happy to say that,” U.S. star Alex Morgan said.

Rapinoe was caught up in a controvers­y this week when a video surfaced of her using an expletive while vowing not to visit the White House. While the interview was from January, it attracted the president’s attention and he tweeted: “Megan should never disrespect our Country, the White House, or our Flag, especially since so much has been done for her & the team.”

A day before the match, Rapinoe said she stood by her comments, except the coarse language. Rapinoe, who also had a pair of goals on penalty kicks in the United States’ 2-1 victory over Spain to open the knockout stage, even suggested the uproar might help her team. “I think, if anything, it just fires everybody up a little bit more,” she said.

The Americans have played the French 24 times, with France winning just three. But the three matches prior to Friday’s quarterfin­al had tilted toward France, with two wins and a draw.

“The media and fans and everyone bought into this being a final being played as a quarterfin­al match. And it was. I feel like it was a great match,” Morgan said. “I think we have the edge on them in World Cups and major tournament­s, but lately they’ve had the edge on us with friendlies. So I think it was a great match for both of us.”

Because of the loss Friday, France does not qualify for the 2020 Olympics. The top three European finishers at the World Cup qualify.

“Yes, it is a failure on a footballin­g level,” France coach Corinne Diacre said. “I don’t think we should shy away from that.”

 ?? ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? United States goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher, left, deflects the ball away from France’s Valerie Gauvin during the U.S. win over France Friday in the quarterfin­als of the Women’s World Cup.
ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/ASSOCIATED PRESS United States goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher, left, deflects the ball away from France’s Valerie Gauvin during the U.S. win over France Friday in the quarterfin­als of the Women’s World Cup.
 ?? ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? France’s Amandine Henry, right, and Delphine Cascarino react after their loss to the U.S. Friday.
ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/ASSOCIATED PRESS France’s Amandine Henry, right, and Delphine Cascarino react after their loss to the U.S. Friday.
 ?? ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? United States’ Julie Ertz heads the ball during a win over France Friday in the quarterfin­als of the Women’s World Cup.
ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/ASSOCIATED PRESS United States’ Julie Ertz heads the ball during a win over France Friday in the quarterfin­als of the Women’s World Cup.

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