Miami Herald (Sunday)

U.S. beats Vietnam, but Netherland­s will be tougher test

- BY STEVEN GOFF

Nothing short of a trip to Sydney for the World Cup final in four weeks’ time will satisfy the U.S. women’s national soccer team and the thousands of supporters logging thousands of miles to witness it.

Such are the steep expectatio­ns for a program ranked No. 1 for more than six years and bidding to become the first men’s or women’s squad to win three consecutiv­e titles.

So when the Group E opener Saturday ended in just a 3-0 victory against World Cup newcomer Vietnam, there was a sense the Americans had clearly done enough to earn three points but had not come anywhere near championsh­ip level.

“It was a good starting point for our team,” said forward Sophia Smith, who scored twice in the first half. “I also know we have a lot more that we can give, a lot more to do, little things to work on.”

Like finish their scoring chances.

“I could have scored maybe three or four more,” said midfielder Lindsey Horan, who had one goal.

“I definitely had a couple I should have put away, for sure,” said forward Alex Morgan, whose missteps included a penalty kick.

“We obviously could have put away a few more chances, myself included,” said Smith, who almost completed a hat trick early in the second half.

Coach Vlatko Andonovski gave his team high marks for overall play but winced at the misses, saying, “Unfortunat­ely, we didn’t capitalize on all the opportunit­ies — great opportunit­ies that we created.”

The Americans had 27 attempts but only eight on target. Thirteen missed the mark and six were blocked by defenders. They also had nine corner kicks. Vietnam registered zeros across the board.

Such inefficien­cy against stronger opposition, such as 2019 runnerup Netherland­s on Thursday in Wellington, could prove costly in a tight contest. That was not a fear Saturday. Once Smith scored in the 14th minute, the outcome was all but settled; it was just a matter of how large the lead would grow. Turns out, it didn’t get very big.

“Obviously, we’d like to finish a few more of our chances we had, a lot more chances that we would want back,” forward Megan Rapinoe said. “But top to bottom, we were dominant. That’s what I like to see.”

Andonovski saw several positive developmen­ts.

Six starters — and eight players overall — made World Cup debuts, including Smith, 22, Naomi Girma, 23, Trinity Rodman, 21, and Alyssa Thompson, 18. Savannah DeMelo, 25, made her first career start — two weeks after making her U.S. debut.

From a game management standpoint, it went about as well as possible. Comfortabl­y ahead, Andonovski rested Morgan the last 28 minutes and provided playing time to Rapinoe and Rose Lavelle — both of whom are working themselves back into peak shape after recovering from injuries.

Until Saturday, Lavelle had gone 3 1⁄2 months without competitiv­e action for the national team or her NWSL club, OL

Reign. She seems far enough along to warrant considerat­ion for a starting role against the

Dutch. (Her footwork was excellent and she hit the crossbar on a shot from distance.) When the sides met four years ago in France, Lavelle scored a sensationa­l goal to all but secure the title.

Julie Ertz, a veteran of the 2015 and 2019 championsh­ip teams, made a seamless return to the backline after years as a defensive midfielder.

With Becky Sauerbrunn (foot injury) unavailabl­e for the World Cup, Ertz now seems to be the defensive leader for this tournament, partnering with Girma.

“Julie has played center back in big games,” Andonovski said. “When we knew Becky was not going to make it, [using Ertz] was something we looked into even deeper.”

Well before training camp opened June 26, the coaching staff worked with Ertz using video analysis to prepare her for the likelihood of starting on the backline.

“Throughout my entire time with the national team, you always kind of have to be versatile,” she said. “We’ve been working on the possibilit­ies of being [on the backline] for a while, at least since I’ve been back” with the program in the spring after a year on maternity leave.

Though the U.S. defense was not tested Saturday, “I know the backline is just going to get better and better,” Andonovski said. “Girma looked like she had three World Cups behind her.”

Andonovski will need the attack to improve — or at least execute more often like it did in scoring the first goal Saturday. Horan completed a terrific no-look pass to Morgan,

whose clever flick at the top of the box unlocked Vietnam’s deep-lying defense and allowed Smith to work her magic.

“They were organized, they were discipline­d, they were tough, they fought hard,” Andonovski said of Vietnam’s defense. “So breaking them down in the way we did in that moment was not easy.”

Smith scored again just before halftime, though the goal was initially ruled offside, then overturned on video replay.

His team will face a fresh set of challenges against the Netherland­s, which will not employ such conservati­ves tactics and does possess far greater talent than Vietnam.

“I am not worried about it. I don’t think anyone on the staff is worried,” Andonovski said of the faulty shooting. “Actually we are very encouraged by the style of soccer we displayed.”

 ?? SAEED KHAN/AFP TNS ?? The United States’ Sophia Smith (11) celebrates scoring her second goal against Vietnam during a World Cup group match at Eden Park in Auckland, New Zealand.
SAEED KHAN/AFP TNS The United States’ Sophia Smith (11) celebrates scoring her second goal against Vietnam during a World Cup group match at Eden Park in Auckland, New Zealand.

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