England have their sights set on ending their semi-final curse after a stunning strike by Lucy Bronze on Thursday helped Phil Neville’s team to a 3-0 victory over Norway in Le Havre and took them into the semi-finals of the FIFA Women’s World Cup.
David Beckham was among the crowd at the Stade Oceane to see midfield stalwart Jill Scott open the scoring inside three minutes of the quarter-final, becoming just the second English player to score at three separate Women’s World Cups.
Ellen White grabbed her fifth goal of the tournament five minutes prior to halftime and Bronze made sure of the victory with a rising shot high into the net as the hour mark approached.
Photo: AFP
England were so comfortable toward the end that they could even afford to squander a penalty, Nikita Parris having her late spot-kick saved.
There were striking similarities between Bronze’s efforts and her goal that gave England a 2-1 win over the same opponents at the 2015 Women’s World Cup.
The Lionesses exited that tournament in the semi-finals and also fell in the last four at Euro 2017.
Now they will hope to go a step further, although a daunting challenge awaits against hosts France or holders the US in Lyon, France, on Tuesday next week.
“We are a team that has lost in the semi-finals of the last two major tournaments and I suppose the main reason I was brought into this job was to get us through a semi-final,” Neville said.
“What I said to them at the end, and I am not ashamed to say it, was: ‘Are you ready to win a World Cup,’ because we are in it to win it and I think we are in good shape,” Neville added.
France and the US were yesterday to meet in a blockbuster quarter-final in Paris, but Neville insisted that his team were not afraid of what awaits them next.
“Both teams hold no fear for my players. We actually said when we qualified against Japan that that we were in the best side of the draw because of this semi-final,” he said. “My players and I want the biggest games and this will be the biggest game of the World Cup.”
Norway had ousted Australia on penalties in the previous round, but this was a step too far for a team who came to France without superstar striker Ada Hegerberg.
“We lost against a better team than us,” coach Martin Sjogren said. “Of course, we believed we could hurt England, but at this stage of the tournament all teams are very, very good.”
They could not recover after falling behind to Scott’s early goal, with Bronze charging forward down the right and cutting the ball back for the Manchester City midfielder to side-foot in off the far post.
It was a landmark goal for Scott, who first found the net for her country against Argentina at the 2007 Women’s World Cup.
England looked like scoring every time they went forward in the first half, with White hitting the post before the second goal came on 40 minutes.
This time Parris teed up White to convert from close range and join Australia’s Sam Kerr and Alex Morgan of the US at the top of the Women’s World Cup scorers’ chart.
Any hopes Norway had of a second-half comeback were doused in the 57th minute when Bronze was fouled on another charge forward.
Substitute Beth Mead laid the ball back to Bronze from the resulting free-kick, and the Olympique Lyonnais star smashed home in style.
England then stood firm to secure a fourth straight clean sheet, although they missed the chance to score a fourth goal from the spot with seven minutes left.
Captain Steph Houghton was shoved over in the box by Maria Thorisdottir, but Parris saw her kick kept out by Ingrid Hjelmseth.
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