VICTORIA, B.C. (August 25, 2002) - The U.S. Under-19 Women's National
Team once again got scintillating performances from its forwards and rode a
Kelly Wilson hat trick to a hard-fought 6-0 victory over Denmark in the
quarterfinals of the 2002 FIFA Under-19 Women's World Championship.
The USA now travels to Edmonton, Alberta, to face Germany in a semifinal
on Thursday, Aug. 29, at the 60,000-seat Commonwealth Stadium. The U.S. will
play the first semifinal, kicking off at 5:15 p.m. MT (7:15 p.m. ET) and fans
can follow the action live on www.ussoccer.com's MatchTracker presented by
Philips Electronics. The match featuring the USA-Denmark winner was
originally set for 8 p.m. MT, but was changed to accommodate Canadian
television, and Canada vs. Brazil will now be the second semifinal, kicking
off at 8 p.m. MT. Canada earned its semifinal berth by crushing England,
6-2, in their quarterfinal today, while Brazil earned their ticket with a 4-3
sudden death overtime victory over Australia yesterday. Germany advanced to
the semis with a 2-1 overtime victory over Japan today.
In a match that was much tougher than final score indicated, Denmark
created some danger throughout the game from forwards Sandra Jensen and Marie
Herping, but the U.S. back line was there every time to snuff out chances
while U.S. goakeeper Ashlyn Harris made several good saves when called upon.
At the other end of the field, Denmark could not handle the USA's
striking trio of Wilson, Lindsay Tarpley and Heather O'Reilly, who accounted
for all six goals, with O'Reilly scoring twice in the first half and Tarpley
getting one in the second. Tarpley and O'Reilly each had a pair of assists
as well.
Still stinging from a 2-1 loss to Japan that sent them to Victoria to
face the USA, Denmark came out with something to prove and had several
dangerous chances early on as Herping had a shot saved by Harris and then
Johanna Rasmussen struck a dangerous cross a few minutes later.
Then O'Reilly took over.
The Americans started to assert themselves after 10 minutes and got the
early goal it needed to settle the team down through a brilliant strike from
O'Reilly. The goal scoring sequence came from a Wilson cross on the left
wing. Rasmussen headed the ball almost straight up in the air, but when she
tried to head it again, she cleared it poorly and the ball bounced on the
left elbow of the six-yard box. O'Reilly wasted no motion in striking rocket
off Andersen's hands, off the cross bar and into the net. It was the first
shot of the game for the USA, which put on a clinic of scoring efficiency,
taking just nine shots in the first half, but putting seven on goal and four
in the net.
"Denmark is a great team," said U.S. head coach Tracey Leone. "They are
so well organized defensively and with players like Rasmussen, Jensen and
Herping in their attack, it always a scary game. They really are an
exceptional team in that they are great at what they do, but it was helpful
to get an early goal. Anytime you can get a goal within the first 15
minutes, it's a little bit of a confidence booster."
The early part of the game was end-to-end as Denmark worked its tactical
plan well, getting eight players behind the ball before launching counter
attacks through Jensen and Herping. The Danes attacked with speed through
the midfield and put pressure on the USA's three-woman back line, but Jill
Oakes, Rachel Buehler and Jessica Ballweg put the breaks on every Danish
charge. Oakes had a particularly solid match in the center of the defense,
winning almost every challenge she entered.
Tarpley created the second U.S. goal in the 23rd minute, taking a high
ball down off her chest in midfield and penetrating to goal before striking a
left-footed spinner that looked as if it might sail over Andersen. The
Danish goalkeeper made a great save diving backwards to swat the ball down,
but gave up a bad rebound and O'Reilly pounced on the ball, pounding in a
half-volley from one yard out past the fallen Andersen.
O'Reilly almost got another in the 42nd minute when her shot from 25
yards out hit the crossbar, but Denmark would not get to the break unscathed,
as the U.S. scored two goals in five minutes at the end of the half. One
minute after O'Reilly hit woodwork, she took a pass from Tarpley and drove
into the left side of the penalty area, froze a defender with a stop-and-go
move, then dribbled at Andersen, drawing the goalkeeper out of her net.
O'Reilly then toed a perfect square pass to Wilson, who slid to bury the ball
from five yards out into the open net.
"Hard work up top pays off," said O'Reilly, who has four goals and six
assists in the tournament. "A defense will eventually make mistakes or maybe
kick the ball out bounds and get you throw-ins in their end. You just have
to keep digging away and hope things will happen."
O'Reilly and Wilson were not done as in the 2nd minute of stoppage time
the two combined again as O'Reilly sent a chip over the Danish defense.
Wilson got her body in front of Ellen Larsen and bent the ball under the
charging Andersen with the outside her right foot and into the net from 14
yards out.
Leone put in defender Keeley Dowling for Manya Makoski at halftime and
switched to a lineup featuring four backs, which made it tougher for Denmark
to counter attack, but Jensen still ran at the U.S. the entire second half.
Tarpley got her goal in the 56th minute as Leslie Osborne sent a high
ball back into the penalty area after a cleared corner kick. The ball
bounced and Tarpley beat Andersen to it, nodding in a header from six yards
out, but got a slap across the neck from the goalkeeper as the two collided.
It was the U.S. captain's fourth goal of the tournament.
The final U.S. goal came in the 68th minute as O'Reilly played Tarpley in
the middle of the field about 40 yards from the goal. On the dribble, the
ball ran away from Tarpley, but she got close enough to slide and slip ball
through to Wilson. With a defender on her hip, Wilson dribbled into the
penalty area and skidded a shot under Andersen with her left foot from 14
yards out to complete her hat trick. With seven goals, Wilson is the second
leading scorer in the tournament behind Christine Sinclair, who has 10 based
on her five-goal explosion against England today.
Defender Rachel Buehler was shown a yellow card in the 71st minute for a
hard foul, the first caution of the tournament for the young U.S. team. The
Americans recorded their third shutout in a row and have not given up a goal
since the 47th minute of the first match of the tournament against England.
"Jill Oakes is such a steady center back, you just feel so secure with
her back there, and having Ballweg and Buehler along side of her, it's quite
a tidy back line," said Leone. "In the second half, we put Keeley Dowling
back there and Kendall Fletcher and both also played very well."
Denmark had two chances in the waning minutes of the game as Jensen made
a thundering run down the right flank in the 85th minute, but was forced off
the ball by Oakes and Fletcher. With just second left, Jensen won a ball in
the USA's defensive third and cracked a swerving drive at Harris, but the
16-year-old U.S. goalkeeper made a great catch to snare the shot.
"Ashlyn got some action tonight and really stepped up," said Leone of her
goalkeeper who saved all five of Denmark's shots on goal. "She showed some
great experience even though she is such a young player. For her to hold
some of those shots was outstanding. She was in a zone tonight."
The USA travels to Edmonton tomorrow afternoon after spending two
fantastic and successful weeks in Victoria, B.C., where they played four
matches at Centennial Stadium while scoring 21 goals and giving up just one.
"Once you get down to last eight teams, it's an all-out war," said Leone.
"Now we're down to four and the ante is being upped even more. Germany is an
excellent team and I know it's going to be a great final four."
DEN: 18-Sarah Andersen, 2-Louise Pedersen, 3-Ellen Larsen (15-Maria Juul
Jensen, 32), 4-Kristina Boldt, 14-Malene Olsen, 7-Ditte Larsen-Capt.
(16-Pernille Jorgensen, 77), 8-Mariann Gajhede Knudsen, 10-Cecile Pedersen,
17-Marie Herping (11-Dorte Petersen, 65), 13-Johanna Rasmussen, 9-Sandra
Jensen. Subs not used: 1-Susanne Graversen, 5-Camilla Mogensen, 6-Trine
Boman Jensen, 12-Cecilie Frandsen.
U.S. UNDER-19 WOMEN'S NATIONAL TEAM GAME REPORT
Participants: U. S. U-19 National Team vs. Denmark U-19 National Team
Competition: 2002 FIFA Under-19 Women's World Championship - Quarterfinal
Venue: Centennial Stadium - Victoria, B.C., Canada
Date: August 25, 2002 - Kickoff 7:00 p.m. PT
Attendance: 4,800
Weather: Cool, breezy - 65 degrees
Scoring Summary:
USA - Heather O'Reilly (Unassisted) 11.
USA - Heather O'Reilly (Lindsay Tarpley) 27.
USA - Kelly Wilson (Heather O'Reilly) 43.
USA - Kelly Wilson (Heather O'Reilly) 47+
USA - Lindsay Tarpley (Leslie Osborne) 56.
USA - Kelly Wilson (Lindsay Tarpley) 68
USA: 18-Ashlyn Harris, 2-Rachel Buehler, 4-Jill Oakes, 3-Jessica Ballweg
(14-Sarah Huffman, 59), 10-Leslie Osborne, 8-Kendall Fletcher, 7-Lori
Chalupny, 13-Manya Makoski (11-Keeley Dowling, 46), 9-Heather O'Reilly,
15-Lindsay Tarpley-Capt. (5-Kerri Hanks, 68), 16-Kelly Wilson. Subs not used:
1-Megan Rivera, 12-Angie Woznuk, 17-Megan Kakadelas, 19-Stephanie Ebner.
Statistical Summary:
USA
DEN
Shots
16
6
Shots on Goal
9
5
Saves
5
3
Corner Kicks
7
7
Fouls
7
11
Offside
2
2
Misconduct Summary:
USA - Rachel Buehler (caution) 71st minute.
Officials:
Referee: Anri Hanninen (FIN)
Asst. Referee: Vibeke Larsen (NOR)
Asst. Referee: Lynda Bramble (TRI)
4th Official: Dagmar Damkova (CZE)
2002 FIFA Under-19 Women's World Championship
Top Goal Scorers
SINCLAIR, Christine CAN 10
WILSON, Kelly USA 7
MARTA BRA 5
TARPLEY, Lindsay USA 4
O'REILLY, Heather USA 4
CRAWFORD, Hayley AUS 3
DANIELA BRA 3
KELLY BRA 3
LANG, Kara CAN 3
RASMUSSEN, J. DEN 3
WARD, Katy ENG 3
MITTAG, Anja GER 3
OHNO, Shinobu JPN 3
WORBIS, Guadalupe MEX 3
MAGGS, Ellen ENG 2
BRESONIK, Linda GER 2
OSBORNE, Leslie USA 2
28 players with one goal
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