HANGZHOU, 20 September 2007
The combined forces of Daniela, Pretinha and 40,000 screaming Chinese fans were enough for Brazil to snatch a late win against a determined Danish side in Hangzhou. The win, combined with China’s 2-0 victory over New Zealand in Tianjin means China join Brazil in the quarterfinals.
In Group C earlier in the day, Norway made light work of Ghana, topping the group with a 7-2 victory, while Australia broke Canadian hearts at the death to grab a 2-2 draw and the coveted 2nd spot. Norway will face China, while Australia will have to think of ways to cope with Brazil’s blistering forwards.
The Danish game-plan was clear from the outset – their defensive 4-5-1 was designed to keep Brazil at bay while hoping to spring counter-attacks with pacy wingers. As a defensive plan it worked brilliantly for almost 91 minutes.
In the first half Brazil didn’t have a single chance on goal from inside the Danish area. In fact, it was Denmark who first threatened the breakthrough. After only seven minutes Brazilian goalkeeper Andreia had to be at full stretch to keep out Maiken Pape’s header.
The Brazilians became frustrated – all their speed and skill in thrilling approach work floundered at the 18 yard box. They began snatching at long shots and not coming close. For all Marta’s undoubted skill, too many times she held onto the ball for too long and promising opportunities were spurned. At half-time, Denmark were in second place as China vs New Zealand also stood at 0-0.
The majority Chinese fans in the Hangzhou Dragon Stadium were cheering every forward move of Brazil’s to the rooftops. Some went so far as to jeer and boo when Denmark had free kicks and corners. But the biggest roar of the night so far, the one that threatened to lift the roof from its impressive suspensions, came when the stadium PA announced that Li Jie had scored to make it China 1 New Zealand 0.
Chinese joy was complete on 79 minutes when Xie Caixia made sure of China’s qualification with a second goal. Petrinha’s cool finish from player of the match Daniela’s cut back was the icing on the cake, confirming both Brazil’s dominance and China’s qualification.
It was hard not to feel for the Danish team – they had given so much to yet another fantastic game in this Women’s World Cup and yet, as in their earlier epic against China, had come out narrow losers. Hopefully these matches will serve as both the enduring memory of this year’s first round (rather than the farcical opening game) and the blueprint for a future of increasingly sophisticated, competitive and exciting women’s football.
More to come on the fans (including Ghana’s infectious and tireless dance troupe) and Group C…
Posted by l
Posted by l
Posted by l