The Guardian (USA)

The Matildas’ road to World Cup glory is over. So who should Australia support now?

- Rafqa Touma

Before the Matildas faced off against England in the World Cup semi-final, there was camaraderi­e in the air.

Now, as Australia reels from the Wednesday night defeat, there’s a sense of angst and trepidatio­n – and a lingering question: who do we support now?

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To help you decide which team to back when the Lionesses face Spain in Sunday’s final, we’ve asked the Guardian Australia office what they think. Peruse, ponder and then let us know which team you will be supporting in the comments.

The case for England

Who could possibly support England after seeing all their cynical game management/time wasting last night? Me.

– Graham Russell

I’m backing England because this is about women’s sport and [England’s coach] Sarina Wiegman is a gun. (And the only female coach in the last eight. I’ll make a wager that by the next Women’s World Cup, there’ll be at least three.) –

While food is a totally reasonable divining rod to determine which team to back, I have an alternativ­e proposal. Back the team whose uniform you personally feel you would look cuter in. While Spain’s blood red and marigold look is certainly dramatic, it’s just not as appealing to me as the Lionesses’ sleek sky and navy away game uniform. Thus, to my deep distaste, I must root for the English.

Gabrielle Jackson – Alyx Gorman The case for Spain

I’m backing Spain because my

Scotch/Irish ancestors would haunt me if I backed England in any way.

– Andrew Messenger

I’m swayed by the way England played in the semi-final against Australia, which on the one hand was impressive­ly clinical, but also featured next-level tactical fouling and timewastin­g that went all but unpunished. And even more so by patronisin­g English reactions that implied the Sydney crowd booing those tactics showed their naivety as newbie fans who didn’t understand how tournament­s were won. So definitely hoping for Spain to outdo the Lionesses in a cynical display of gameswoman­ship and come through with a dubious late penalty.

– Mike Ticher

I usually revert to supporting countries that weren’t colonial powers, but both were. So I’m going to have to go for Spain purely because their anthem is better.

As a member of the “done wrong by England” club, my Aboriginal and Scottish ancestors would flog me from beyond the grave if any inkling of English support entered my mind. It’s olé olé for me this weekend!

Our family has an informal system for determinin­g whom to back in World Cup matches that don’t involve Australia (also works for Olympics, Euros etc). In order of priority:

Which country has the best food. Which country is the least problemati­c, geopolitic­ally.

Which country’s players seem the nicest.

Luckily, the clear superiorit­y of Spanish food spares us from having to rank colonialis­t atrocities (and reckon with the Spanish Inquisitio­n).

Josh Nicholas Phoebe McIlwraith – Nick Miller

I’m Chilean-Australia so my relationsh­ip with Spain is ~complicate­d~ but I will very much be backing La Roja over England after last night’s display (not bitter at all)! Sucks about their coach, but I hope they win on pure spite.

– Sarah Basford Canales The case for not backing either team

After Spain’s revolt over their coach and my total inability to support England as an Australian, I feel as if I am in a nightmare from which there is no escape. I am abstaining from barracking.

– Caitlin Cassidy

Sunday night will be a historic match for women’s football, with both teams making the final for the first time. At face value, there are reasons to support the Lionesses: it’s a chance for English redemption after semi-final

losses in 2015 and 2019. And their manager, Sarina Wiegman, is the first person to lead two different nations to a World Cup final, men or women’s. But after the heartbreak of Wednesday night, no self-respecting Australian could possibly be expected to suffer the ignominy of backing their colonial overlords.

That leaves Spain. Was I moved when Salma Paralluelo came off the bench against the Netherland­s to become their youngest-ever goal scorer, and then again to secure their win against Sweden? Yes. Do reports about how the Spanish team have been treated by their coach, Jorge Vilda, and football federation sound like a living nightmare undeservin­g of the vindicatio­n of winning? Also yes. It makes for an intractabl­e dilemma; the only winner here is dour fence-sitting.

We should go for England because if our colonial overlords win, then we have only been knocked out by the

Donna Lu

champions – and there is pride in that (BTW – pride anyway! Matildas are the best!). However, on the flipside, England are England so we should go for Spain.

 ?? ?? Teresa Abelleira of Spain and Jessica Carter of England. Choosing which team to barrack for is a vexed question for Australian­s in the wake of the Matildas’ semi-final defeat. Composite: AAP/PA
Teresa Abelleira of Spain and Jessica Carter of England. Choosing which team to barrack for is a vexed question for Australian­s in the wake of the Matildas’ semi-final defeat. Composite: AAP/PA
 ?? ?? England’s Chloe Kelly celebrates after the Lionesses beat the Matildas to secure a spot in the final. Photograph: Zac Goodwin/PA
England’s Chloe Kelly celebrates after the Lionesses beat the Matildas to secure a spot in the final. Photograph: Zac Goodwin/PA

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