San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Norway edges Australia on penalty kicks to advance

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

NICE, France — Ingrid Engen hit the decisive penalty kick and Norway beat Australia in a shootout Saturday night to advance to the quarterfin­als of the Women’s World Cup.

Australia captain Sam Kerr, who was frustrated by Norway most of the night despite some opportunit­ies, fired her penalty shot over the bar. Emily Gielnik had her effort saved as Norway won the shootout 4-1 after the match had finished 1-1.

Norway will face the winner of Sunday’s match between England and Cameroon.

Australia had played the final 16 minutes of extra time at a numerical disadvanta­ge after defender Alanna Kennedy was sent off on a red card for hauling down Norway forward Lisa-Marie Utland. Norway had a number of chances to score in extra time but was repeatedly denied by Australia goalkeeper Lydia Williams.

The game went to extra time after Australia’s Elise KellondKni­ght scored from a corner kick to make it a 1-1 game in the 83rd minute.

Forward Isabell Herlovsen put Norway up 1-0 with a goal in the 31st.

Australia had two penalties denied on video review and Kerr had a goal ruled out for offside in the second half.

It was the fourth time Norway has qualified for the quarterfin­als but the first since 2007.

GERMANY 3, NIGERIA 0

Germany advanced to the Women’s World Cup quarterfin­als for the eighth straight time, beating African champion Nigeria in Grenoble.

Germany captain Alexandra Popp, playing in her 100th internatio­nal match, scored in the 20th minute. Sara Dabritz made it 2-0 in the 27th with a penalty kick and Lea Schuller got the final goal in the 82nd.

Second-ranked Germany, which has outscored opponents 9-0, plays the winner of Monday’s match between Sweden and Canada on Saturday in Rennes, a weeklong layoff that gives time for midfielder Dzsenifer Marozsan’s broken toe to heal. The Germans, who won the tournament in 2003 and 2007, have never failed to reach the quarterfin­als.

No. 38 Nigeria was in the knockout phase for the second time, the first since it lost in the quarterfin­als to Brazil in 1999, and it joined Cameroon to become the first pair of African teams to reach the knockout stage in the same Women’s World Cup. The Indomitabl­e Lionesses play England on Sunday.

Popp scored on a 4-yard header off Lina Magull’s corner kick, her 48th internatio­nal goal. A video review upheld the goal after determinin­g Svenja Huth, who was in an offside position, did not obstruct the view of goalkeeper Chiamaka Nnadozie.

Dabritz scored on a penalty kick beyond the outstretch­ed left hand of Nnadozie, her third goal of the tournament and 13th of her internatio­nal career. Evelyn Nwabuoko had tried to clear a ball but made a studs-up follow through into Magull, for the penalty.

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