The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Olympic champ Canada rallies to defeat Ireland

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Conceding a goal directly from a corner kick against Ireland on Wednesday, Olympic champion Canada was in trouble in its second game of the Women’s World Cup at Perth, Australia.

After a disappoint­ing 0-0 draw with Nigeria in its opening match of the tournament, and with iconic forward Christine Sinclair on the bench, Canada’s hopes of advancing from the group stage were under threat.

Up against a determined Ireland, an inspired Katie Mccabe and torrential rain at Rectangula­r Stadium, the odds were stacking up against the Canadians.

But with the character of Olympic gold medallists, a touch of fortune and some help from the bench, Canada recovered. Adriana Leon scored the decisive goal early in the second half to complete a come-from-behind 2-1 win that moved her country to the top of Group B and within sight of the round of 16.

That hadn’t looked like being the case when Mccabe curled a fourth-minute corner into the back of the net to give Ireland the lead and its first ever goal at a World Cup.

Launching her kick from the right, it was too high for anyone to get a touch and drifted beyond the reach of Canada goalkeeper Kailen Sheridan before dipping under the bar.

It was a stunning strike and a contender for goal of the tournament.

“It’s bitterswee­t. Of course it’s nice to score and get us off to a good start, but it’s results that matter in this game, at this level and in these type of tournament­s,” said Mccabe, who was named player of the match and was in tears after the final whistle. “I’m heartbroke­n for the girls and I felt we deserved something from the game.”

Ireland, in its debut at the World Cup, was eliminated after back-to-back losses. The Irish lost to co-host Australia 1-0 in their opening match.

“To captain these girls is an absolute honour and an absolute privilege. I’m so proud of each and every single one of them, we’ve done so much to get here and it’s about pushing on now,” Mccabe said.

Both teams knew a win was vital to their hopes of advancing from the group.

After her team got off to an underwhelm­ing start against Nigeria, Canada coach Beverly Priestman benched Sinclair, internatio­nal soccer’s all-time leading scorer, for the second game.

In her absence, Canada continued to struggle, going behind early and conceding more chances as Ireland applied the pressure.

Vanessa Gilles wasted a chance to even the score when she sent a shot over from close range as Ireland looked set to go into the break in front.

That was until Megan Connolly’s own-goal in the fifth minute of added time at the end of the first half granted Canada a lifeline. Connolly got the slightest touch on Julia Grosso’s cross to take the ball beyond Ireland keeper Courtney Brosnan.

It was a let off for Canada and Priestman responded by making three halftime substituti­ons, bringing on Sinclair, Sophie Schmidt and Shelina Zadorsky.

That depth of quality proved the difference, with Schmidt making a quick impact by providing the assist for Leon’s goal in the 53rd.

Spain, Japan move on to knockout stage

As she has many times before, Jennifer Hermoso answered the call for Spain.

She scored twice and assisted in her 100th internatio­nal appearance to push La Roja past Zambia 5-0, a victory that locked both Spain and Japan into the knockout round.

Spain and Japan are the first teams to clinch berths in the tournament’s round of 16. They will play on Monday in Wellington to decide seeding.

“I’m very happy to be in the last 16, I’m proud of moments during the game,” Spain coach Jorge Vilda said. “And I’m very happy that Spain is a team of 23 football players. We saw that today.”

Hermoso, Spain’s all-time leading scorer, deposited a onetime header off a perfect cross from Alexia Putellas in the 13th minute. She then gathered a rebound and scored on an empty net in the 70th minute.

Earlier in the day, Hikaru Naomoto and Aoba Fujino scored two minutes apart in the first half to lead Japan to a 2-0 victory over Costa Rica.

 ?? GARY DAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Canada’s Julia Grosso celebrates after her crossing pass was deflected into the net by Ireland during their match on Wednesday.
GARY DAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Canada’s Julia Grosso celebrates after her crossing pass was deflected into the net by Ireland during their match on Wednesday.

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