Los Angeles Times

U.S. women fall in soccer

The U.S. women look uninspired in an opening loss to rival Sweden, but they’re not about to panic.

- By Kevin Baxter

After humbling 3-0 loss to Sweden that ends unbeaten streak, Americans say they’re not panicking.

SWEDEN 3 UNITED STATES 0

TOKYO — The U.S. women’s soccer team started the Tokyo Olympics the same way it ended the Rio Games: by losing to Sweden.

The question now is what does it do next?

In 2016, the U.S. played Sweden to a draw in the quarterfin­al before losing on penalty kicks. It was the first time the Americans’ tournament run finished short of a goldmedal game. Wednesday’s 3-0 loss in Tokyo Stadium came in the opening game of the group stage, leaving the U.S. with plenty of time to regroup and plot its revenge.

“Last thing I would want to be right now is the next opponent of this team,” Abby Wambach, a twotime gold medalist, wrote on Twitter. “Nobody puts baby in the corner.”

Maybe. But nobody on the U.S. side was underplayi­ng the gravity of the situation either.

“We got our ass kicked, didn’t

we?” Megan Rapinoe said.

Here’s how bad it was: The loss ended a 44-game unbeaten streak dating to January 2019 and was the first in 24 games under coach Vlatko Andonovski while the three goals — two by Stina Blacksteni­us and one by secondhalf substitute Lina Hurtig — were one more than the U.S. had allowed in its last 22 games combined.

It was also the most onesided defeat since a 4-0 loss to Brazil in the 2007 Women’s World Cup.

“It’s not something we expected,” Andonovski said. “Obviously, we put ourselves in a big hole. But we’re the only ones that can get ourselves out of it.”

They can start that climb Saturday against New Zealand, which opened its tournament with a 2-1 loss to Australia. Fortunatel­y for the Americans the first round of the Olympic tournament is extraordin­arily forgiving with eight of the 12 teams — the top two finishers in each of the three groups, plus the two best third-place teams — advancing to the quarterfin­als.

A convincing win over New Zealand, one that erases the minus-three goal differenti­al, would put the U.S. in great position to do that heading into next week’s group-play finale with ninth-ranked Australia.

Even that won’t be easy though. The Olympic schedule is tight, with teams getting just two days to recover between games in the hot, humid Tokyo summer. That’s an even bigger challenge for an aging team that starts six players 32 or older.

And even if the top-ranked U.S. survives and reaches the knockout round, which appears likely, it figures to be joined there by seven of the top 10 teams in the world, including the other three semifinali­sts from the 2019 Women’s World Cup.

But the Americans have done this before. After their only other loss in Olympic group, in the 2008 Games in Beijing, they ran the table to win the tournament.

The U.S. may have to make some changes to get that done again. Against Sweden the Americans seemed a step slow, defended lazily and passed to Sweden almost as often as they passed to one another. They can and do get away with that kind of aimless, uninspired play against the likes of Mexico, Jamaica, Argentina and Colombia, teams it routed earlier this year. But against fifth-ranked Sweden, they paid for those mistakes.

“We were giving the ball away, and they were capitalizi­ng on it,” captain Becky Sauerbrunn said.

“There’s so many things we didn’t do well enough. They were better than us in every segment of the game,” Andonovski said.

The U.S. looked confused, uncomforta­ble and unfocused despite a roster that averages 92 internatio­nal caps and has 77 games of Olympic experience combined. Seventeen players were on the last victorious World Cup team, yet “we were a little tight, a little nervous” Rapinoe

said.

And it started from the opening whistle with Sweden forcing U.S. keeper Alyssa Naeher into four sprawling saves in the first 24 minutes before a well-marked Blacksteni­us finally beat her, stepping in front of defender Abby Dahlkemper to nod home a perfect right-footed Sofia Jakobsson cross from the edge of the penalty area.

The Americans never recovered.

Andonovski clearly missed Julie Ertz, the team’s roadblock midfielder, who is returning from an MCL sprain in her right knee. She came on at halftime, making her first appearance since April, but struggled in the humid weather.

So while there is a road back for the U.S., it’s one filled with potholes, switchback­s and narrow bridges, hazards that will mean disaster if the team doesn’t find its mojo quickly.

“It’s just a tough situation to be in,” Andonovski said. “It’s a little bit of a shock. But everybody’s positive and understand­s that we still have games ahead of us. We’ve got to bounce back.

“As much as we say we want to forget this game, we have to. And we have to focus on the next one.”

‘It’s a little bit of a shock. But everybody’s positive and understand­s that we still have games ahead of us. We’ve got to bounce back.’

—Vlatko Andonovski U.S. women’s soccer coach

 ?? Photograph­s by Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? THE UNITED STATES’
Carli Lloyd is pulled down by Sweden’s Nathalie Bjorn for a foul in the second half of their Olympic opener.
Photograph­s by Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times THE UNITED STATES’ Carli Lloyd is pulled down by Sweden’s Nathalie Bjorn for a foul in the second half of their Olympic opener.
 ??  ?? THE UNITED STATES’ Lindsey Horan, left, battles for the ball with Sweden’s Kosovare Asllani in the first half of their opener.
THE UNITED STATES’ Lindsey Horan, left, battles for the ball with Sweden’s Kosovare Asllani in the first half of their opener.
 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? SWEDEN’S Stina Blacksteni­us jumps into the arms of a teammate after scoring against the Americans.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times SWEDEN’S Stina Blacksteni­us jumps into the arms of a teammate after scoring against the Americans.

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