USA TODAY US Edition

BIG WIN FOR TEAM USA

USA turns back Australia, but rest of world catching up

- Nancy Armour narmour@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

The United States survived an early scare from Australia to win in their opening World Cup game 3-1 Monday night at Winnipeg Stadium in Manitoba, Canada. Midfielder Megan Rapinoe (15) is hugged by Abby Wambach (20).

It used to be the U.S. women could saunter through the early rounds of the World Cup, secure in knowing a spot in the semifinals was, if not prebooked, certainly on hold. Not anymore. The world has caught up to the Americans, and if their early struggles against Australia on Monday didn’t hammer that home, a glance at a few of the other scores will:

Cameroon, making its first appearance at the World Cup, hanging a six-spot on Ecuador. Nigeria, which has managed to make it out of the group stage once in its previous six World Cup appearance­s, scoring three goals in the second half, including an equalizer in the 87th minute to scratch out a stunning draw against longtime powerhouse Sweden.

Sure, the Americans ultimately beat Australia, by a comfortabl­e 3-1 margin, no less. With seven points the most Sweden and Nigeria can get out of group play, the U.S. team sits solidly in control of Group D — that’s D as in Death. But that’s not the point. As the rest of the world continues to improve and close the gap on the USA, the athleticis­m and depth that has always bailed out the two-time World Cup champions will no longer be enough. Ditto for the intimidati­on factor that was good for a goal or two before the game even began.

Continue to start slow as they did against the Aussies, and the Americans will find themselves as road kill on the way to Vancouver.

“When the draw happened and people talked about the ‘Group of Death,’ the positive is you’re not going to ease into the opening games,” U.S. coach Jill Ellis said. “In terms of mentality and in terms of having tough matches, going into halftime tied up, those things serve you well down the line.

“You hope to get out of the group (on top),” Ellis added. “Then you’re into the knockouts, and you want to make sure you’re ready.”

The Americans are still better than pretty much everyone else in the world. They have the best goalkeeper in the world in Hope Solo. They have some of the best forwards in Abby Wambach, Alex Morgan, Sydney Leroux and Christen Press. And they have some of the most dazzling playmakers in midfielder­s Megan Rapinoe, Lauren Holiday and Carli Lloyd.

If they play their best — or pretty darn close to it — throughout the tournament, they’ll be celebratin­g their third World Cup title come July 5.

But if they don’t, rest assured that other teams will take advantage. That was clear in the first 20 minutes against Australia, when the Americans would have been down 2-1 if not for two highlight-worthy saves by Solo.

It didn’t matter that Australia had never beaten the Americans, bringing a 0-22-2 record into Monday’s game. The Matildas came out flying from the opening whistle, shredding the U.S. defense, pouncing on sloppy passes and allowing the Americans little more offensivel­y than long balls to nowhere.

“We said we’d come at them and attack, not let America dictate the game, and we did that,” Australia coach Alen Stajcic said. “The players had a lot of belief they could win today, and you could see it in the first half.”

The Americans finally found their rhythm in the second half. An impressive run by Leroux set up Press’ go-ahead score, and Rapinoe dribbled almost half the length of the field before beating Aussie goalkeeper Melissa Barbieri for her second goal.

Ellis has said she wants her team to build throughout the tournament, get better with every game. It has no choice, really. The rest of the world has improved, and now it’s the Americans’ turn to keep up.

 ?? MICHAEL CHOW, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Midfielder Carli Lloyd, left, tries to settle the ball during Team USA’s 3-1 victory vs. Australia in its Women’s World Cup opener.
MICHAEL CHOW, USA TODAY SPORTS Midfielder Carli Lloyd, left, tries to settle the ball during Team USA’s 3-1 victory vs. Australia in its Women’s World Cup opener.
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 ?? MICHAEL CHOW, USA TODAY SPORTS ??
MICHAEL CHOW, USA TODAY SPORTS
 ?? MICHAEL CHOW, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Megan Rapinoe, who scored twice, celebrates the U.S. win.
MICHAEL CHOW, USA TODAY SPORTS Megan Rapinoe, who scored twice, celebrates the U.S. win.

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