Germany beat France 4-2 to finish top of Group A as French goalkeeper Berangere Sapowicz became the first player sent off at the women’s soccer World Cup on Tuesday.
Goals from Kerstin Garefrekes, an Inka Grings double and a last-gasp Celia Okoyino da Mbabi effort saw Germany win the tournament’s highest-scoring match with Marie-Laure Delie and Laura Georges getting two back for France.
However, both coaches were furious with Finnish referee Kirsi Heikkinen, who handed our five yellow cards in addition to Sapowicz’s red after a dangerous tackle on Fatmire Bajramaj.
“I think it was overdone,” Germany coach Silvia Neid said. “Bruno Bini [France coach] got really worked up because he got three yellow and one red [cards]. You didn’t dare to do anything after that. I think it was too much.”
“In the last game, the referee didn’t know where the cards were and this time she was juggling them,” Neid said.
“The first two yellow cards, the players were just playing the ball, which is what they do. If you apply her [referee] logic there should be 20 yellow cards in a game,” Bini said.
Both teams were already qualified for the last eight with two-time defending champions Germany next meeting Japan, who finished second in Group B after losing 2-0 to England in Augsburg.
Second-placed France next play Group B winners England.
The Germans made most of the early running in a tense first half on front of a sell-out crowd of 45,000.
Skipper Garefrekes broke the deadlock after 25 minutes when the Frankfurt midfielder rose highest to pick up a free-kick and head in her second goal of the tournament.
Six minutes later, the hosts were 2-0 up after Duisburg striker Grings latched on to a Simone Laudehr cross to head into goal.
However, France were transformed in the second half, with substitute Delie getting one back after 56 minutes heading in a Sandrine Soubeyrand corner just a minute after her earlier effort had been held by goalie Nadine Angerer.
A Grings free-kick on 60 minutes was held by Sapowicz, but minutes later the Paris Saint Germain goalie was sent off for a dangerous tackle as Bajramaj raced toward goal with the Turbine Potsdam midfielder stretchered off.
Sapowicz was replaced by Celine Deville and Grings stepped up to convert the penalty on 68 minutes.
Four minutes later, Georges reduced the deficit with a powerful header off a corner, and moments later they were almost leveled as Delie shot just wide from inside the box.
In the dying minutes of the game, a Grings free-kick hit the side-netting and a Bajramaj effort was cleared off the line before Okoyino da Mbabi put the result beyond a doubt a minute from time.
Neid said her side were just beginning to relax after difficult wins against Nigeria (1-0) and Canada (2-1).
“I think they feel really liberated now,” she said. “From the beginning they showed how they really like playing and how they really wanted to win the game. It was really fantastic and that’s a compliment I’ve already paid my team.”
Germany top Group A with a maximum nine points with France second with six, Nigeria on three and Canada zero.
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