PASADENA, Calif. (Nov. 9, 2002) - The U.S. Women's National Team won the
2002 CONCACAF Women's Gold Cup in dramatic fashion with a 94th minute "golden
goal" from Mia Hamm in sudden death overtime to defeat Canada, 2-1, in the
championship game on a wet, soggy field at the Rose Bowl. It was Hamm's
first goal of the tournament, but the 136th of her career.
"Canada is an athletic team," said U.S. captain Julie Foudy, who played a
marvelous match in midfield. "They are combative and they're the kind of team
that will always gets in a foot or a tackle. In conditions like this
tonight, that's a perfect game for them, because they are a scrappy team. I
give them tremendous credit. Their federation has put a lot of support
behind their women's team and you can see the result."
It was the fifth regional title for the U.S. women, having won Women's
World Cup Qualifying Tournaments in 1991 and 1994, both over Canada, a
CONCACAF event in 1993 in New York, and the inaugural Women's Gold Cup in
2000. It was also the second title at the Rose Bowl following the historic
penalty kick victory at the 1999 Women's World Cup.
"We knew the game against Canada was going to be a tough one," said U.S.
defender Brandi Chastain. "Playing against Canada always is, because we've
played so many games against them in the past and because they've improved so
much in recent years. It has become a great game for us, and a true rivalry."
The USA and Canada had already qualified for the 2003 Women's World Cup
in China by virtue of their victories in the Women's Gold Cup semifinals, but
were playing for regional bragging rights. The USA dominated the match
played on a field covered in puddles, but Canada's 5-4-1 formation was
tremendously organized, making it difficult for the U.S. to find space in the
attacking third. The USA displayed some excellent, crisp, high-paced
possession despite the bad conditions, and had created chances throughout the
match, but Canadian goalkeeper Karina LaBlanc was excellent all night.
The USA struck first with a remarkable goal from Tiffeny Milbrett in the
27th minute. The sequence started when Aly Wagner played a pass into
Kristine Lilly's path on the left wing. Lilly beat the speedy Candace
Chapman around the corner and whipped a cross into the middle for Milbrett,
who was making a hard lateral run across the six-yard box. Milbrett beat
Silvana Burtini to the ball and fired a beautiful first-time volley with her
left foot over LeBlanc and into the roof of the net. It was the 95th
international goal of her career.
"She's a world class finisher and she proved that again tonight," said
Hamm about Milbrett, who scored seven goals in the tournament despite playing
just three total halves. Milbrett was named the Most Valuable Player of the
Women's Gold Cup and shared tournament top scoring honors with Canada's
Charmaine Hooper and Christine Sinclair, who both also scored seven times.
"It was an incredibly ball from (Kristine Lilly)," said Milbrett about
her goal. "She had to beat that defender, took her on a good 20 yards down
the field and got off a great cross. I delayed my run a little bit and it
was a perfect ball, perfect timing."
During the last 30 minutes of the first half, a heavy fog descended on
the Rose Bowl, lowering visibility, and Canada's equalizer came in the haze
off a corner kick. The goal in stoppage time of the first half was from a
scramble in front of the U.S. net after Burtini's cross bounced off several
Canadian players before popping free to Hooper, who poked a soft shot that
hit U.S. goalkeeper Briana Scurry's foot, then bounced back to Hooper, who
cracked the rebound off Scurry and into the roof of the net from close range.
It was Hooper's 10th career goal against the USA.
The goal ended the USA's 527-minute shutout streak in Women's Gold Cup
action dating back to the 2000 event. Hooper scored the only other goal ever
allowed by the USA in Gold Cup play in a 4-1 U.S. semifinal win at the 2000
tournament. Despite allowing its first goal of the tournament, the U.S.
defense was stellar in winning countless balls in the air and on the ground,
and did a fine job of denying Hooper scoring chances.
"Considering the field and the weather, I thought our team played
marvelously from start to finish," said U.S. head coach April Heinrichs.
"The first half was phenomenal. The only flaw in that game was that corner
kick where the ball was bouncing around, it was a bit sloppy and difficult to
clear."
The fog lifted for the second half and Hamm came off the bench for the
USA, sparking the team offensively, as Wagner continually probed and poked at
the Canadian defense all night with her passes from the midfield. but the
center back trio of Sharolta Nonen, Randee Hermus and Breanna Boyd proved
tough to break down.
Hamm got to work right way, and in the 48th minute got loose in the right
side of penalty area only 15 yards out, but LeBlanc was quick off her line to
block the shot almost at Hamm's feet. In the 50th minute, Cindy Parlow
brought a ball down beautifully with her instep behind defense, but Hermus
came up with a great tackle before she could shoot.
Still, the USA ran at Canada for 45 minutes as Hamm had several more
chances, only to be denied by LeBlanc. Parlow just missed on a sliding shot
from a Hamm cross and defender Joy Fawcett had a goal called back for offside
in the 78th minute.
Canada took just one shot in the second half, a 35-yard blast by Hooper
that almost caught Scurry off her line, but flew over the goal. Despite the
attacking superiority, the USA could not find the net and the game went into
overtime, but four minutes later, it was over, as Wagner won a head ball in
the midfield to put Hamm in a footrace to the goal with Boyd. The world's
all-time leading scorer executed a finish of class and composure, lifting it
with her instep over the stranded LeBlanc and dropping the ball into the
right corner of the net as Boyd clattered into her.
"In the second half, (Canada) played eight and sometimes 10 players
behind the ball, and we were still able to find a variety of ways to get
behind them," said Heinrichs. "I really have to credit our players with
applying every lesson we've learned during these five games to pick apart
Canada's bunker. And eventually, what a phenomenal goal to finish the
tournament with."
"We have so much respect for Canada and how hard they play," added Hamm.
"That's why our focus and commitment was there tonight. Every player made an
impact in this tournament. Everyone unselfishly said, 'what do I have to do
to win.' And that's how you win tournaments like this. It's a grind, and
people get injured, and other people have to carry the load, and this team
did that."
Fawcett and Brandi Chastain, along with Wagner, Shannon MacMillan and
Milbrett were all named to the Women's Gold Cup Best XI. Cindy Parlow was
named Honorable Mention All-Tournament Team. The match marked the second big
win for the U.S. Women's National Team Program over Canada this fall, both
with a golden goal, as the U.S. Under-19 Women's National Team defeated
Canada in the 2002 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship last Sept. 1, as team
captain Lindsay Tarpley scored the winner in the 109th minute in Edmonton.
The U.S. team will now have several months off before regrouping next January
to begin the run to the 2003 Women's World Cup in China.
CAN: 1-Karina LeBlanc, 3-Breanna Boyd, 6-Sharolta Nonen, 5-Andrea Neil
(14-Carmelina Moscato, 46) 9-Candace Chapman, 16-Brittany Timko, 11-Randee
Hermus, 15-Kara Lang (2-Melanie Booth, 91+), 17-Silvana Burtini, 12-Christine
Sinclair, 10-Charmaine Hooper-C. Subs not used: 8-Clare Rustad, 13-Amy
Walsh, 19-Kristina Kiss.
U.S. WOMEN'S NATIONAL TEAM GAME REPORT
Participants: USA vs. Canada
Competition: 2002 CONCACAF Women's Gold Cup - Championship
Venue: Rose Bowl - Pasadena, California
Date: Nov. 9, 2002; Kickoff - 7:00 p.m. (PT)
Attendance: 6,911
Weather: Wet, rain, fog - 64 degrees
Scoring Summary:
USA - Tiffeny Milbrett (Kristine Lilly) 27th.
CAN - Charmaine Hooper (Unassisted) 46+.
USA - Mia Hamm (Aly Wagner) 94.
USA: 1-Briana Scurry; 15-Kate Sobrero, 6-Brandi Chastain, 14-Joy Fawcett,
4-Cat Reddick; 5-Tiffany Roberts (2-Lorrie Fair, 46), 11-Julie Foudy-C,
13-Kristine Lilly, 10-Aly Wagner; 12-Cindy Parlow, 16-Tiffeny Milbrett (9-Mia
Hamm, 46). Subs not used: 3-Angela Hucles, 7-Heather O'Reilly, 8-Shannon
MacMillan, 17-Jenny Benson, 18-LaKeysia Beene.
Statistical Summary:
USA
CAN
Shots
.
14
5
Saves
1
4
Corner Kicks
5
2
Fouls
.
8
19
Offside
..
2
2
Misconduct Summary:
None
Officials:
Referee: Dianne Ferreira-James (GUY)
Asst. Referee: Isabel Tovar (MEX)
Asst. Referee: Lynda Bramble (TRI)
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