Tag: special moment

  • Poppa masterstroke as exiled star fires; wake-up call behind forgotten prodigy’s return: Talking Pts

    Poppa masterstroke as exiled star fires; wake-up call behind forgotten prodigy’s return: Talking Pts

    The Socceroos might’ve finished 5-1 winners against Indonesia in their crucial World Cup qualifier in Sydney and taken a giant step towards automatic qualification for next year’s World Cup in North America, but coach Tony Popovic made it clear there’s still plenty of room for his side to improve describing the performance as “solid but it wasn’t great.”

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    Goals to Martin Boyle, Nishan Velupillay, Lewis Miller and a double from Jackson Irvine send Australia to China with three vital points in the bag and full of confidence, but all too aware that its job half done when it comes to jumping the hurdles this international window presented.

    The mental resilience the side showed to escape unscathed – albeit with some fortune – from a tricky 15-minute opening period is also a sign of growth as is a welcome surge in the way chances were finally converted into goals. This result bloats Australia’s goal difference column too and that could be one less thing to worry about come the final matchday of round three in June.

    It wasn’t all good news though with Martin Boyle and Adam Taggart coming off at halftime. Popovic revealing post-game that both have fitness concerns.

    OMINOUS SIGN BEFORE A BALL WAS KICKED

    A crowd of 35,241 packed into the Sydney Football Stadium and the Indonesian fans not only made their presence felt but had the decibel reader reaching its upper limits.

    The Indonesian national anthem was greeted with full voice by those in red and more than one Socceroos player turned to look at the raucous away end. It did not sound,

    look or feel like a Socceroos home game until the goals started flying in.

    Remarkably, the Team Garuda faithful were still chanting at 5-1 down in the second half.

    “It’s part of football and it’s what we love about it, that teams can come away from home and bring that energy and atmosphere,” midfielder Jackson Irvine said.

    “I thought our fans were equally brilliant and pushed us in the key moments of the game and gave us that extra leg up probably when we needed it.”

    A TALE OF TWO PENALTIES

    Perspective is in the eye of what colour jersey you were wearing.

    The decision to award Indonesia a penalty in the seventh minute after the Brisbane Roar’s Rafael Struick was ruled to have been fouled by the recalled Kye Rowles was

    contentious through an Australians lens, but while it was on the softer side it was the right call.

    Kevin Diks dulled the debate by hitting the woodwork. A sprawling Mat Ryan guessed the right way in any case and might’ve saved it.

    Indonesia coach Patrick Kluivert, in his first match in charge, believed his side struggled to shrug off that setback.

    “If you shoot the penalty in it would be a totally different match of course,” Kluivert said.

    “From that moment we changed something in our minds.

    “We had a grip of the game. I think that we played better than Australia.

    “If you score 1-0, I’m sure it will be a totally different game.”

    10-minutes later Australia was sent to the spot after Nathan Tjoe-A-On pulled off a tackle on Lewis Miller in the box that looked more like something James Tedesco would execute on this ground in a Roosters jersey. Boyle did the honours from the spot.

    The goal helped calm the nerves after the Socceroos were let off the hook just moments prior. The side looked far more settled from that point and Australia led 3-0 at the break thanks to two more goals from Velupillay and Irvine.

    “It’s the hardest I’ve been pressed in a home game in a long time,” Irvine said.

    “There was absolutely no time on the ball in the middle of the park.

    “Once we broke that pressure it looked like we were going to score every time we went through.”

    3-0! Socceroos dominant first half surge | 01:31

    POPPA PULLS THE RIGHT SELECTION CALLS

    This was not an easy squad to pick.

    Six regular starters were missing through injury and Popovic had key calls to make when it came to his starting wingers and striker.

    As Velupillay wheeled away to celebrate with the fans in the 20th minute he had fellow winger Martin Boyle and striker Adam Taggart to thank for the opportunity.

    Boyle’s pass found Taggart whose lunging effort resulted in Velupillay being able to run onto the ball and calmly slot Australia’s second.

    “It’s a special moment for the boy,” Popovic said.

    “Starting your first game, pressure, a stadium that’s full. It doesn’t come bigger than that.

    “When he looks back, he should be really proud of that.”

    This was the first time Boyle had seen minutes under Popovic after failing to get on the pitch in the November window against Saudi Arabia and Bahrain. 14-goals and 9

    assists in 36 games for Hibernian in Scotland made a compelling case for selection.

    Velupillay is working his way back into form after a nasty ankle injury suffered against Saudi Arabia in Melbourne. To start him in a game of this magnitude was bold. Taggart deserved his spot after five goals in his last 11-games for Perth Glory in the A-League but hadn’t even been picked in a squad by Popovic yet before this window.

    For a goal that released the pressure valve in this campaign to be created by two players who’d never featured under this manager and scored by one still not quite at

    top form domestically must be applauded.

    Unfortunately, Taggart and Boyle were both substituted at half time with potential fitness issues. Taggart appeared to feel for his groin multiple times just before the break. Asked if there was anything amiss with both players Popovic said “there could be.”

    “They both had a bit of a niggle, maybe Adam a little bit more than Martin Boyle.”

    “Adam was definitely coming off and Martin was a bit of a precaution.”

    IRVINE GOAL A FULL CIRCLE MOMENT

    Jackson Irvine is the heartbeat of the Socceroos midfield. His goals in the 34th and 90th minutes were the 12th and 13th of his international career and came on the same

    ground where he scored his first ever for Australia in 2017.

    “From a personal point of view a special night,” he said.

    “I never take it for granted being here and I haven’t played in this stadium since that night.”

    THE RETURN OF DANIEL ARZANI

    Arzani replaced Velupillay in the 72nd minute and was greeted by warm applause. It was his first appearance for Australia since a 26-minute spell in a World Cup qualifier

    against Bangladesh in June last year.

    His last minutes prior to that came against Kuwait in a friendly match in 2018. That was just before the anterior cruciate ligament tear on debut at Celtic that would change the trajectory of his then skyrocketing career.

    It took just two minutes for Popovic to call Arzani to the sideline for a chat after his introduction, but generally he worked hard in defence and looked lively in attack.

    All of this after Popovic told Arzani his effort in camp during the October international window last year “wasn’t good enough” and that his “level was really poor in

    training.”

    It appears to have been the wake-up call the 26-year-old – once dubbed the next big thing in Australian football – needed.

    Five months on from that camp and Arzani has impressed his mentor this time around. Popovic does not give out easy minutes even with Australia 4-0 up at the time.

    It was an impressive response from a player who can only enhance the fortunes of himself and his country with similar application.

    Socceroos calm ahead of crucial clashes | 01:56

    STATE OF THE PITCH

    There’d been concerns about the state of the Sydney Football Stadium pitch in the days prior to kick-off and those fears weren’t alleviated once the game got underway.

    Several players lost their footing or looked unsure on the ball. It was not ideal and hampered the fluidity of the game.

    “Tough pitch for the players,” Popovic said.

    “Very hard underneath and slippery on top. The players were in two minds. Half the players wore studs, and half the players had moulds. It was a difficult one for them tonight. It took a lot out of them.”

    MAT RYAN BACK TO HIS BEST ON AN HISTORIC NIGHT

    Lost in the euphoria of scoring five goals was the three incredible saves Mat Ryan pulled off between the sticks.

    On a night where the goalkeeper became the third most capped player in Socceroos history with 97, moving ahead of another former skipper in Lucas Neill and now only

    behind Mark Schwarzer with 109 and Tim Cahill on 108 appearances, Ryan was immense.

    He stopped Jay Idzes’ header from a freekick in the 5th minute, made a superb diving save to his left in the 53rd minute and another clutch reflex save down low to his right

    in the 84th minute.

    “I have to say I’m not surprised after seeing him when he came into camp,” Popovic said.

    “Just a different demeanour and that comes from playing.

    “You can see he’s full of confidence and he showed that when he came in. He was a real presence around the group and tonight he stood tall.”

    The fact the captain was dropped to the bench for the first three games of Popovic’s tenure now seems a distant memory. His move to Lens in France from Roma in Italy

    has been a masterstroke.

    Davidson hoping to re-ignite Roos career | 02:26

    ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT AT THE BACK

    Australia’s backline was hardest hit by the current run of injuries between November and March.

    Popovic picked Lewis Miller, Jason Geria, Cameron Burgess, Kye Rowles and Aziz Behich.

    Geria, Burgess and Rowles formed the central trio of that combination, and the coach made it clear there was plenty to work on. Indonesia’s goal was well taken, but the lead-up was scrappy.

    “The goal they scored probably summarised how we defended,” Popovic said.

    “They didn’t create, we gave them chances, we gave them the penalty, we gave them the goal as well.

    “Defensively we weren’t great, we were a little bit on edge, a little bit sloppy in our defending.”

    WHERE ARE THE SOCCEROOS AT WITH PROJECT POPPA AND WHAT’S NEXT?

    Project Poppa is progressing, but it’s far from the finished article. That’s not a bad thing, but just the reality of only being in the job for six-months.

    “I aim quite high,” Popovic said with a smile when asked how far along the side is when it comes to implementing his game style.

    “They’re not where we want to be, but that’s not a negative that’s a positive. They’ve taken strides forward and it’s not easy to do what they did tonight.”

    Popovic pointed to decision making as an area that needs work.

    “How do we identify quicker what is happening on the field?” he said.

    “That will happen with more games together.

    “I felt that this camp or this window of the first game is the first time I’ve felt in training and just around the hotel that this group is now starting to build into something.”

    Now, it’s off to China for their next qualifier on Tuesday night.

    Australia remains second in group C and in control of its own fate when it comes to securing automatic qualification for next year’s World Cup.

    That goal could be a maximum of three games away.

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  • Touching tribute as Matildas put on a show in friendly win over China

    Touching tribute as Matildas put on a show in friendly win over China

    Substitutes Clare Wheeler and Cortnee Vine had crucial impacts off the bench as the Matildas farewelled Australia before heading to the Paris Olympics with a 2-0 win over China on Monday night.

    In front of more than 76,000 fans at Sydney’s Accor Stadium, the Matildas produced a better attacking display than they showed in last Friday’s 1-1 draw against the same opponent at Adelaide Oval.

    However, they still had to wait until after half-time to break China’s resistance, with Wheeler and Vine key factors in the win after entering the contest at the start of the second-half.

    Mary Fowler, Hayley Raso and Cortnee Vine celebrate. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Midfielder Wheeler, who came on for Emily van Egmond, heading the hosts into the lead in the 48th minute after timing her run to perfection to be first to a well-placed free-kick from Steph Catley.

    Sydney FC star Vine, who replaced striker Michelle Heyman, provided the assist for Australia’s second goal in the 56th minute.

    Her inch-perfect through ball found Hayley Raso, who rounded goalkeeper Xu Huan before guiding the ball home.

    China had a couple of opportunities to fight their way back into the contest, but they were comfortably dealt with by Matildas keeper Mackenzie Arnold, who came on late in the first half for Lydia Williams.

    The Matildas should have gone ahead as early as the 11th minute with a chance created by right-back Ellie Carpenter, who mesmerised China’s defence with a superb turn before storming into the penalty area and delivering a low cross that Wu Haiyan failed to properly clear.

    The ball fell invitingly for the unmarked Tameka Yallop, but the Brisbane Roar star rushed her shot and failed to test goalkeeper Xu.

    The official crowd attendance figure of 76,798 is displayed on the big screen. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    However, Xu was called into action five minutes later, standing tall to deny Matildas winger Hayley Raso, who should have done better with her chance.

    But Raso made amends after half-time with the match-sealing goal as the Australians did more than enough to take winning form to Paris.

    “We wanted to turn up, we wanted to win the game, we wanted to put on a show, so we came out and did a little better than we did in the last game,” Raso told Network 10.

    The Matildas’ Olympics squad will be announced on Tuesday but the players were informed before Tuesday night’s match if they had been chosen.

    Farewell Lydia

    In her 104th and most likely final appearance for the Matildas, veteran goalkeeper Lydia Williams started the match and wore the captain’s armband.

    Emotional before the game when honoured in a ceremony that involved Australian sporting great Evonne Goolagong Cawley, Williams remained composed during her time on the pitch despite the crowd roaring every time she touched the ball.

    She was then given a hero’s farewell when replaced by Australia’s first-choice goalkeeper Mackenzie Arnold in the 43rd minute.

    After handing over the skipper’s armband to Steph Catley, Williams was embraced by all of her teammates as she left the field.

    Lydia Williams is presented with a gift from Evonne Goolagong Cawley. (Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images
    Matildas players create a guard of honour. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images
    Lydia Williams thanks the crowd. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    The hugs continued when she reached the sidelined, where she shared a special moment with Arnold, after which she was cuddled by coach Tony Gustavsson and the Matildas’ entire bench.

    Williams has announced she will retire from international football after the upcoming Olympic Games.

    “To come this far has been incredible,” Williams said.

    We will know on Tuesday whether she is selected in Australia’s 18-player squad for Paris, or is among the four travelling reserves.

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  • ‘Very disappointed’: Blues boss fumes amid worrying trend; five-star Gunners fire — PL Wrap

    ‘Very disappointed’: Blues boss fumes amid worrying trend; five-star Gunners fire — PL Wrap

    Chelsea slumped to another damaging home defeat against Brentford on Saturday as Eddie Nketiah hit a first Premier League hat-trick in a 5-0 win for Arsenal against struggling Sheffield United.

    Mauricio Pochettino’s Chelsea appeared to have turned a corner in recent weeks, taking seven points from their three previous fixtures, but their 2-0 loss means they have just one home win from their past 13 games in the league.

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    Ethan Pinnock took advantage of non-existent marking to head the visitors in front shortly before the hour mark at Stamford Bridge after Chelsea had failed to capitalise on their first-half dominance.

    Goalkeeper Robert Sanchez was embarrassed in added time after joining his team’s attack for a corner, failing to catch Neal Maupay in a race as he broke with the ball, allowing Bryan Mbeumo to score in an empty net to compound home fans’ woes.

    The result means Brentford leapfrog Chelsea into 10th place in the Premier League table, pushing Pochettino’s men into the bottom half.

    “I’m not happy and think the players also and the whole club is not happy about the run (at home),” said the Argentine manager.

    “It’s a long time that we need to be more consistent here and very disappointed with this. We feel the responsibility that we need to change the dynamic.” The former Tottenham boss said on Friday that Christopher Nkunku is nearing a comeback from the knee injury that has prevented the £52 million ($63 million) signing making a competitive appearance yet for his new club.

    On this evidence, the French international’s return cannot come soon enough as Chelsea’s other new striker, Nicolas Jackson, again failed to fire.

    Chelsea goalkeeper Robert Sanchez’s late surge up the field backfired in spectacular fashion. (Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS / AFP)Source: AFP

    MORE COVERAGE

    Everton facing historic penalty that could condemn PL strugglers to humiliating first

    CL Wrap: Pitch invader’s cheeky act; group of death blown wide open

    ‘Disgusting’: Matildas star breaks silence on ‘vile’ abuse after World Cup heartbreak

    “If you don’t score, you need to blame ourselves,” said Pochettino. “We were not nasty or clinical in front of the goal.”

    It was a different story for London rivals Arsenal, who roared back from 2-0 down to draw against Chelsea last week to preserve their unbeaten league record.

    Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta shuffled his pack —including dropping captain Martin Odegaard to the bench — for the visit of bottom club Sheffield United and Nketiah celebrated his recall to the starting line-up in style.

    Replacing the injured Gabriel Jesus as Arsenal’s target man at the Emirates Stadium, Nketiah proved he was up to the task as a swivelled finish gave the home side a 28th-minute lead.

    The England forward arrowed a shot into the top corner early in the second half and completed his treble with a stunning strike from distance just before the hour mark.

    Substitutes Fabio Vieira and Takehiro Tomiyasu added gloss to the scoreline with a penalty and a close-range finish as Arsenal moved up to second in the table, two points behind Tottenham, who beat Crystal Palace on Friday.

    “It’s amazing,” said Nketiah. “It’s not been easy — last month I lost my aunty so I want to dedicate these three goals to her. Her family was here watching so it is a really special moment.”

    Bournemouth came from behind to beat fellow strugglers Burnley 2-1 and secure their first league win of the season thanks to a fine solo effort from Antoine Semenyo and a sensational lob from distance by Philip Billing late in the game.

    Eddie Nketiah bagged a hat-trick against Sheffield United. (Photo by Alex Pantling/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Hwang Hee-chan scored a brilliant equaliser to slow Newcastle’s Premier League charge as Wolves battled back to earn a 2-2 draw after Callum Wilson’s double at Molineux on Saturday.

    England international Wilson scored twice as Newcastle led 2-1 at the break, on course for their fifth league win in six games.

    But South Korea international Hwang grabbed a deserved equaliser for the home team in the 71st minute.

    Wilson replaced the injured Alexander Isak in the only change to the Newcastle side that started Wednesday’s 1-0 Champions League defeat at home to Borussia Dortmund.

    There was no Sandro Tonali in the squad as the Italy midfielder begins a 10-month ban for betting offences.

    Wilson scored the opener after a scramble in the box started when the ball slipped through Jose Sa’s hands as he came to try and collect Anthony Gordon’s cross.

    Wilson’s first effort was blocked by defender Toti but when the ball bounced up the Newcastle striker acrobatically turned it home, adjusting to fire over his shoulder.

    Wolves levelled in the 36th minute after Mario Lemina got the right side of Kieran Trippier at the far post to head in Pedro Neto’s corner.

    Newcastle were presented with the chance to retake the lead in first-half stoppage time when they were awarded a controversial penalty.

    Hwang took a loose touch inside his own box and was adjudged to have clipped Fabian Schaer as he stepped in to nick the ball away.

    Hwang Hee-Chan scored the equaliser as Wolves drew with Newcastle United. (Photo by Adrian DENNIS / AFP)Source: AFP

    Contact appeared minimal and there was a lengthy check from the VAR official before referee Anthony Taylor’s decision was upheld.

    Wilson picked up the ball and restored Newcastle’s lead even though Sa got a strong hand to his penalty.

    Wolves were the dominant team after the break and got the reward they deserved. Newcastle goalkeeper Nick Pope chose to punch rather than catch a free-kick and Toti beat a man before driving into the box and feeding Hwang, who turned to leave Dan Burn in a heap before rifling the ball home.

    Wolves almost immediately lost key man Neto to an apparent hamstring injury as he looked to work a shooting chance, with Sasa Kalajdzic his replacement.

    The visitors upped the pressure in an effort to find a winner but Wolves held on.

    The point leaves Newcastle sixth in the Premier League table, while Wolves are in 12th spot.

    Newcastle earlier acknowledged confirmation of Tonali’s 10-month ban from football.

    World governing body FIFA confirmed on Friday that it had granted a request from the Italian football federation to extend the ban worldwide.

    Newcastle said that Tonali would be eligible to return to competitive action from August 27, 2024 after participating in “a therapeutic plan and educational program in Italy”.

    FULL PL RESULTS

    Chelsea 0-2 Brentford

    Arsenal 5-0 Sheffield United

    Bournemouth 2-1 Burnley

    Wolves 2-2 Newcastle

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  • Kerr’s classy post-game act that shocked teammate caught on camera

    Kerr’s classy post-game act that shocked teammate caught on camera

    Overlooked in the emotional scenes following Australia’s momentous win over Denmark was a moment of sheer class between Sam Kerr and Steph Catley.

    Accor Stadium went berserk as Kerr was substituted into the game in the 80th minute, making her first appearance at the 2023 World Cup. Vice-captain Catley handed over the captaincy armband to the superstar striker as she walked onto the pitch.

    As Australia celebrated the 2-0 win on Monday night, coach Tony Gustavsson approached the pair as the team began to huddle for their customary post-match pep talk.

    Kerr followed the chat by pulling the armband out from her shorts and offering it to Catley, who had led the Aussie side for all three group games in Kerr’s absence.

    TV cameras showed Catley’s jaw dropped when Kerr shoved the accessory into her stomach, but was quick to knock it back as a classy symbol of respect to the Chelsea player.

    Sam Kerr receives the captain’s armband from Steph Catley as she is brought in during the clash against Denmark. Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images.Source: Getty Images

    Kerr had earlier been widely praised for continuing to have a positive impact on the team while being unable to play as a result of a mysterious calf injury and gave the half time talk during Australia’s tournament opener against Ireland.

    Her significance as a culture-driving personality was on display after the Denmark win as she spoke to the playing group with passion during the team huddle.

    While it was unclear what was said, her words left teammates pumped up heading into a blockbuster quarter-final against France in Brisbane on Saturday.

    Kerr and Catley both spoke about their special moment when speaking on the Matildas’ social media channels.

    Catley said she had to convince Kerr to put the armband on when she ran onto the field late in the game.

    “Well she was shaking her head and saying, ‘No, no, no, I don’t want it’. And I was like, ‘Please’. This is yours put it on,” Catley said.

    Kerr said she appreciated Catley’s gesture.

    Sam Kerr hands over the armband to Steph Catley. Photo: Twitter, @OptusSport.Source: Supplied
    Sam Kerr gave her teammates a rev up. Photo: Twitter, @OptusSport.Source: Twitter

    “Me and her share this role,” she said.

    “I know most of the time I wear this armband, but this tournament she’s just shown she’s a born leader and I didn’t think it really needed to come to me. But it was a nice gesture by her.”

    Gustavsson also spoke to the players during the huddle and Aussie football star Chloe Logarzo explained the scene to viewers on Optus Sport’s World Cup broadcast.

    “It’s normally led by Tony,” she said.

    “Some times other people say stuff, but it’s all about getting close. Talking about the success of the night. How well they did and how proud he is of the team. Knowing that this circle is what’s going to get us to the final.”

    It was far from the only classy gesture from Kerr after the full time whistle.

    She was seen shaking hands and taking photos with fans after the game and also shared a special moment with girlfriend Kristie Mewis.

    Kerr and Mewis, a US Women’s National Team midfielder, have been a public item since at least the Tokyo Olympics.

    Kerr’s return from injury gives Australia a small selection headache with some concern over how it could impact Australia’s other attacking weapons when they step onto the field against France.

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  • How Kerr’s shock injury added ‘fire’ to Tillies; boss hails new-found ‘maturity’: Talking Pts

    How Kerr’s shock injury added ‘fire’ to Tillies; boss hails new-found ‘maturity’: Talking Pts

    The Matildas faced an uphill task as soon as they found out Sam Kerr would be absent from their opening Women’s World Cup fixture against Ireland.

    But Tony Gustavsson’s troops displayed a steely side that helped them get the better of a feisty Irish outfit in a gritty 1-0 victory.

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    Without Kerr up front, it meant the attack would have to find a new way to get the desired result but it was far from pretty.

    However Gustavsson was quick to point out that in tournament football, three points is as valuable as anything as the Matildas now gear up for their second Group B fixture against Nigeria on July 27.

    Foxsports.com.au analyses the big moments from the Matildas’ World Cup opener in TALKING POINTS!

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    Kerr RULED OUT for WC opener | 01:07

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    MATILDAS MOTIVATED BY KERR INJURY

    The Matildas have plenty of motivation. There’s the chance to make history – not just to go beyond the quarterfinals for the first time ever, but to win a maiden Cup. And to do it on home soil too. It’s a chance to deliver their own ‘Cathy Freeman moment’ and a lasting legacy on the Australian sporting landscape.

    But the injury to captain Sam Kerr only adds another level of motivation for the Matildas, who were honest about the emotional impact of losing their talisman.

    Steph Catley said: “I think it was probably one of the most heartbreaking moments of my career. Sam’s one of the best players in the world. She’s our spiritual leader and she means so much to this team.

    “So to have her go down a day before a moment like this was pretty awful, but I think as a team it added something to us, added a fire and a little bit of extra fight. I think everyone looked up and said ‘Well I’ve got to step up now because we don’t have Sam.’”

    Kerr missed out on the Matildas’ opening fixture due to a calf injury. (Photo by DAVID GRAY / AFP)Source: AFP

    Midfield maestro Katrina Gorry said: “It doesn’t matter who goes down, we know that everyone can step up and play an important role in our team. And I think, losing Sammy gives us an extra bit of fire to keep on winning, to keep on putting our best foot forward, and to keep on playing well for her.”

    Ellie Carpenter said: “It was heartbreaking for Sam, and also for myself and the whole team. She was with us the whole game and we did this win for her. She’ll be back soon.”

    The Matildas aren’t just playing for the record-breaking crowds in the stadium, for the nation as a whole and for the generations of young women they are inspiring. They’re doing it for their spiritual leader – and judging from her involvement in the pre-game huddle, her words of support from the sidelines or at halftime, Kerr will still play a key role regardless of whether she is on the pitch.

    Despite being unable to play, Kerr still had an important role. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    KERR-SIZED HOLE IN ATTACK UNABLE TO BE FILLED

    As soon as news filtered through Sam Kerr would be absent from the Matildas’ first two games with a calf injury, discussion immediately turned to how the team would fare in attack.

    After all, Kerr is the talismanic striker who can score a goal out of nothing and is also the leader of the team on the field.

    She had developed a lethal one-two punch alongside Caitlin Foord in a two-pronged attack up top, but with Kerr out, it meant Gustavsson had a big decision to face.

    Would he opt for Foord as the lone striker and go with Cortnee Vine and Hayley Raso on the wings in front of a three-player midfield?

    Or would Gustavsson opt for a direct Kerr replacement and stick with his trusted 4-4-2 formation?

    The Swede would turn to the second approach, thrusting 20-year-old star Mary Fowler into the starting team in place of the injured skipper.

    However, Fowler and Foord never quite looked in sync up top.

    Foord relentlessly charged across the final third in chase of the ball and was full of energy, but she never quite got the clear cut chances she was after.

    As for Fowler, she constantly had to drop deep just to pick up the ball and although she had some nice touches to sprint away from her marker, she struggled when it came to the final phase.

    Fowler battled hard in attack for the Matildas. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Vine and Raso also battled to make their mark in the contest, although the latter won the penalty which ultimately led to the only goal of the game.

    All up, the Matildas had 13 shots with just two on target: the penalty from Steph Catley and midfielder Katrina Gorry’s ambitious attempt from 30 yards out.

    Despite the hosts’ blunt attack, Gustavsson was not terribly concerned but admitted he knows his side is certainly capable of much, much more going forward.

    “I don’t want to overanalyse this in the sense that it was the absence of Sam, it was Ireland’s defending,” Gustavsson said in the post-match press conference.

    “We know we can do better in attack. We showed it in parts of the attack when we had some good combination play down the right side, we isolated Vine one-on-one on the left side a couple of times.

    “In the beginning of the second half, we played faster and had more movement off the ball.”

    Gustavsson also pointed to a sense of first-game jitters in front of a record crowd as another reason behind the Matildas’ attacking issues, but feels that the team can kick on after the initial hurdle.

    With Kerr set to miss the Nigeria fixture in Brisbane on July 27 before being reassessed for the Canada clash on July 31, it remains to be seen if Gustavsson places faith in Fowler once again.

    Of course, replacing the youngster means it’s a second strike partner in as many games for Foord which could be detrimental, especially in tournament football.

    Foord will no doubt reprise her role for the Matildas’ fixture against Nigeria. (Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    MATILDAS KEEP CALM AS KEY FLAW ADDRESSED

    The biggest ever crowd for a women’s football game in Australia and the first ever World Cup in the Southern Hemisphere. Wednesday night was a milestone moment for the sport – and more pressure than ever on the Matildas to succeed on home soil.

    The emotion was clear on the faces of the Australian players from the moment they walked out to the roar of over 75,000 fans.

    Ellie Carpenter said: “Walking out, it’s more than a game – it was an occasion tonight. It was very emotional, seeing the anthem and then hearing 80,000 people sing it with you. Such a special moment, one that I’ll remember forever.”

    Katrina Gorry said: “I think singing the national anthem, you know, with 75,000 people, it was pretty special for all of us. I think a few of us had tears in our eyes. And I think it just reflects on our career and how special this time is.”

    And Steph Catley said: “We’ve never played to this type of occasion before. I think the build-up was incredible – we’ve never felt or seen anything like it.”

    With five of the XI Australian players making their World Cup debuts, the Matildas could very easily have lost their heads – especially as the match wore on and the resilient Irish defence stifled the Australian attacks time and again.

    Clare Hunt was one of five players making their World Cup debuts. (Photo by DAVID GRAY / AFP)Source: AFP

    Indeed, remaining calm and composed in big occasions has proved a major problem for the team in the past – most particularly in the 2022 Asian Cup when the Matildas were favourites to go all the way but fell apart under pressure in an early knockout defeat to South Korea.

    Steph Catley “I think we had a few nervy moments which is natural – this is the biggest moment of a lot of our careers. We expected some nervy sloppy moments and we had them but to get over the line, to keep a clean sheet, to fight the way we did, I think it sets us up really well for the tournament.”

    Tony Gustavsson said in his post-match press conference: “We spent a lot of time throughout these two years talking about tournament football and game management and playing what the game needs at that moment.

    “Yeah, it wasn’t the greatest game of football, right? It wasn’t the fantastic attacking team that we can see. But it’s a team that knows how to win a game and find a way to win a game and do what’s needed in that moment, and that’s what I’m most impressed with from the players tonight.”

    “I’ve been around in tournament football long enough to know that sometimes it’s those games where you just need to grind through and find a way to win.

    “That shows a maturity in this team. Being able to do it with five debutants that could have got really nervous and shaky and be frustrated that we didn’t play good enough and lose their heads.”

    The Matildas made mistakes and were sloppy on the ball at times – but for a team full of World Cup debutants, and missing their captain and leader, it was remarkable how calm they remained under pressure.

    Gustavsson was most impressed with how the Matildas found a way to grind out a win. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    FIERY BATTLE PROVES TILLIES ARE MORE THAN UP FOR THE FIGHT

    Before a ball was even kicked, Matildas and Ireland fans were salivating at one battle set to play out in epic fashion on the field: Hayley Raso v Katie McCabe.

    Raso, the diminutive right winger for the Matildas, is full of pace and has proved to be a constant thorn in the side of opposition left-backs over the years.

    But McCabe, one of WSL heavyweights Arsenal’s finest, was more than up to the task.

    Neither Raso or the Irish skipper took a backwards step throughout a feisty contest in which a total of 21 fouls were awarded, 12 against Australia and nine against Ireland.

    The pair flung themselves into several crunching challenges, highlighting the lengths they would go to for their nations.

    McCabe, operating as the left wing-back in a 3-4-3 formation for the World Cup debutants, kept Raso in check for her defensive duties as the Arsenal star looked to fly forward time and time again.

    Both Raso and McCabe were momentarily injured in separate challenges with one another; Raso went down clutching her knee after a crunching tackle while McCabe hurt her wrist when she fall awkwardly after a clearance.

    The duo’s intense battle set the standard for their teammates, with Ireland defender Niamh Fahey bumping into Matildas star Katrina Gorry in the second half.

    When Ireland poured green shirts forward in attack, the Matildas’ backline also showed they were up for the fight and repelled their Group B rivals in the box time and time again.

    The fiery nature of the opening game certainly showed this crop of Aussies are more than up for the fight, no matter the rival.

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  • ‘Can’t believe it’: Matildas ‘very emotional’ after Cathy Freeman’s inspirational visit — WC Daily

    ‘Can’t believe it’: Matildas ‘very emotional’ after Cathy Freeman’s inspirational visit — WC Daily

    Matildas captain Sam Kerr has repeatedly said she wants to lead Australia to World Cup glory and create her own ‘Cathy Freeman moment’.

    But Kerr and her Tillies teammates last week received a very special visit from the Australian sporting legend herself.

    The Sydney 2000 Olympic Games 400m gold medallist Freeman, a proud Kuku Yalanji woman, is the sporting hero of ‘over half the team’, and joined the team in Melbourne last Wednesday.

    Kerr told Freeman: “You’re an inspiration to the whole team … You’ve been an idol for all of us for so long. What you did for us as a country, hopefully we can replicate even half of that. We’ll remember this night for the rest of our careers. It’s been amazing.”

    “A lot of girls were very emotional,” Matildas veteran Aivi Luik said.

    “I still can’t believe that happened because a couple years ago, we were going through some questions about who your sporting hero is and why, and over half the team said that Cathy Freeman was their hero.

    “The staff, because of that, tried to get her in, and bless her heart, she came in.

    “She doesn’t do a lot of public speaking but she did that for us. We asked her questions informally and she spoke back to us just like she was a friend, and we got a lot of good insight from that.”

    FEATURE: How 2019 WC heartbreak exposed Matildas’ great flaw … and the brutal journey to fix it

    Cathy Freeman of Australia celebrates winning gold in 2000.Source: News Corp Australia

    WOMEN’S WORLD CUP PREVIEW PODCASTS – LISTEN NOW!

    PART ONE: Preview of EVERY group and which players could catch your eye

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    Freeman told the Aussies: “The power of you just being here is unimaginable. It’s beyond your wildest dreams what you’re going to be able to do.

    “You’re going to be able to get into the blood of everybody who is on the journey with you. It’s just a crazy, wild ride.

    “You’re writing your name in history, ladies. And you should be really proud of that.”

    Luik said: “She told us was that we know who we are, we know why we do this, and while we want to perform and give results for others outside the circle, at the end of the day, you believe in yourself and you do it for yourself.”

    “All athletes do what they do because they love the sport, and (Freeman said) to not lose track of that, and that gives you the confidence to go out there and do your job.”

    Luik praised Freeman’s resilience to perform despite having the “weight of the nation” on her shoulders at the Olympics.

    “She was just one and we’re a whole team, so I think we’re quite lucky in that regard that we have our friends and teammates there to support each other,” Luik said,

    “We came away from that feeling a little bit of a weight off our shoulders, and just completely inspired.”

    Freeman and her family joined the Matildas for a team dinner and was presented with a signed team jersey.

    Australia’s opening match of the tournament is against Ireland on Thursday night in Sydney – at the same stadium where Freeman made history in 2000.

    Freeman celebrates her iconic win.Source: Supplied

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    In February, Sam Kerr said: “The legacy left there from that one special moment at the 2000 Olympics was everlasting for all of us.

    “Ask half the girls in the team, their idol growing up was Cathy Freeman.

    “That’s the legacy we want to leave – that we inspire the nation, we move the nation to believe in women’s football, believe in the Matildas.”

    And Kerr also wrote in her book, My Journey To The World Cup: “I loved her so much.

    “She was so fast and strong, and she coped so well with the unbelievable pressure that was put on her. I watched her race in the Sydney 2000 Olympics over and over and over again.”

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  • ‘I made a mistake’: Neymar makes mysterious public apology to pregnant girlfriend

    ‘I made a mistake’: Neymar makes mysterious public apology to pregnant girlfriend

    Neymar has offered a puzzling public apology to his girlfriend, Brazilian model Bruna Biancardi, just weeks after announcing she was pregnant with his child.

    The football star posted a lengthy and emotional statement to Instagram on Thursday, bringing in seven million likes in a matter of hours as he discussed mysterious actions in his private life that seemed to have driven a wedge between the couple.

    In the message to his 210 million Instagram followers, Neymar, 31, admitted that he had “made a mistake” and “was wrong”, saying: “If a private matter has become public, the apology must be made public.”

    “I made a mistake. I was wrong,” Neymar wrote. Picture: Instagram.Source: Supplied

    “Justifying the unjust. It was not needed. But I need you in OUR life,” he wrote in his native Portuguese.

    “I saw how much you were exposed, how much you suffered through all of this and how much you want to be by my side. And me right beside you.

    “I risk saying I’m wrong every day, on and off the field. Only I solve my mistakes in my personal life at home, in my intimacy with my family and friends …

    “All of this hit one of the most special people in my life. The woman I dreamt of following beside me, the mother of my child. Reached your family, who today is my family. It reached the intimacy of such a special moment that is motherhood.”

    Neymar, who confirmed in April that he and Biancardi are expecting their first child together, said he had “already apologised for my mistakes, for unnecessary exposure” but feels “obligated to publicly reaffirm that”.

    In April, the couple announced they were expecting their first child together. Picture: Instagram.Source: Supplied

    “I can’t imagine life without you. I don’t know if we’ll work out, but TODAY you’re sure I want to try,” he continued.

    “Our purpose will prevail, our love for our baby will win, our love for each other will strengthen us.”

    He concluded the message by saying “ALWAYS US. I love you,” to Biancardi.

    Biancardi has kept quiet about the effusive apology on social media, having only posted standard lifestyle and beauty blogger content since it was shared.

    Neymar and Biancardi are believed to have started dating in 2021 but kept the romance a secret before going public on Instagram in January last year.

    The pair announced that they had gone their separate ways in August 2022 before rekindling the romance soon after.

    Their reunion was followed in April by an announcement that Neymar and Biancardi were expecting their first child together.

    Neymar is also a father to son David Lucca, 12, whom he shares with his ex-girlfriend, social media influencer Carolina Dantas.

    “We know that you are here to complete our love, make our days much happier,” they wrote in a pregnancy announcement. Picture: Instagram.Source: Supplied
    Neymar is also a father to son David Lucca, 12, whom he shares with his ex-girlfriend, Carolina Dantas. Picture: Instagram.Source: Supplied

    In the pregnancy announcement, the couple shared a series of sweet photographs showing Biancardi’s baby bump as Neymar cradled and kissed her stomach.

    The model wore blue jeans and a white crochet bra, which she styled with a matching cardigan and unbuttoned jeans showing off her belly.

    The pair confirmed the exciting news in a caption that gushed over their “beautiful family”.

    It read: “We dream of your life, we plan your arrival and know that you are here to complete our love, make our days much happier.

    “You’re going to join a beautiful family, with a brother, grandparents, uncles and aunts who already love you very much!

    “Come soon child, we are waiting for you!

    “‘Before I formed you in the womb I chose you; before you were born I set you apart’ — Jeremiah 1:5.”

    The post also sparked engagement rumours as Biancardi was seen wearing a silver band on her ring finger.

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  • Crash Craddock Q&A: Leave your questions now

    Crash Craddock Q&A: Leave your questions now

    Ben Stokes isn’t backing away from his day one declaration. Was it the right call? Join Crash Craddock for a live Ashes Q&A. Leave your questions now.

    Did Australia just pull off its greatest Ashes victory of all-time?

    Where does the Bazball phenomenon go now?

    Was Ben Stokes’ decision to declare on day one a mistake?

    Now is your chance to fire all your Ashes cricket questions at one of the best and most experienced minds in the game.

    Renowned cricket journalist Robert Craddock will be answering all your Ashes questions from 12pm AEST.

    Leave your questions in the Q&A tool and Crash will tackle the best of them.

    The Bazball weakness that could cost England the Ashes

    – Robert Craddock

    A majestic first Test has proved that Bazball is a peerless way to entertain fans but, in its ever so subtle way, Uzzball is the best route to the Ashes.

    Hats off to England for the life they have breathed in the game, but the loss of this Test will rock them to the core.

    English headlines like “A real kick in the Bazzballs’’ may be raising grins this morning but there is also an underlying truth that England has been kicked where it hurts most.

    If England keep losing this summer the joy of this side’s fabulous freedom of expression will be replaced by a more intense scrutiny of their cavalier methods. There’s only one thing English fans love more than entertainment – winning.

    Make no mistake, Australia will be a better side for this win.

    As you read this story somewhere in Birmingham Marnus Labuschagne and Steve Smith will surely be playing mini-practice shots in their hotel rooms, craving to make an imprint next Test after failing in the opener.

    England, however, limp away with limited options and major selection issues everywhere, from injured spinner Moeen Ali to error-prone keeper Jonny Bairstow and whether veteran swing maestro Jimmy Anderson has reached the end of the line sooner than expected.

    Bazzball has been wonderful for the game but for all the razzle and dazzle on display in England’s second innings, no batsman made 50 on a flat deck. They are not unlucky losers.

    In a near anonymous hour before Pat Cummins and Nathan Lyon magnificently stole the show, Usman Khawaja spotlighted the fact that his flexible batting mantra – let’s call it Uzzball – has the one precious gear Bazball is missing.

    Not fourth or fifth gear where wheels screech, crowds roar and commentators gasp, but the gear which decides the fate of so many Test matches … first.

    Khawaja’s recent form surge, including his two epic Edgbaston innings, has him on the verge of becoming a great of the Australian game – an astonishing achievement given he has been dropped from the team seven times.

    The veteran was under fire in the fire hour of the last day when he scored five runs off 41 balls and Australia looked to be going nowhere.

    Bazball would never have allowed such a dawdle, but Khawaja’s strength of mind and soundness of defensive technique won Australia a Test, and quite possibly the Ashes.

    For all that Khawaja has achieved in his stunning comeback to the five-day game, this was one of his finest hours as a Test batsman where he shut out all the temptations to snatch at the match or challenge England at their own cavalier game.

    Amazingly, the only time Australia seemed genuinely in front in the game was the last ball of the match.

    Australia will be better for this win because there were times when they seemed a bit disorientated by what was happening around them.

    Statistician Ric Finlay spotted the difference between the two teams, who both lost 18 wickets for the Test.

    Australia scored 668 runs to England’s 666 but Australia faced a staggering 384 more balls for roughly the same amount of runs.

    Remarkably, Australia hit one more four (68 to 67) and four more sixes (11 to 7), which means that for all the huffing and puffing associated with Bazball, one of its underrated features is batsmen rotating the strike.

    The only predictable thing about this series is its unpredictability. A great English summer awaits us.

    Stokes defends costly gamble

    – Daniel Cherny

    Ben Stokes has defended his decision to declare before stumps on day one after England let the first Test slip from an impregnable position.

    Australia’s two-wicket win came on the back of heroics from Pat Cummins and Nathan Lyon, who put on an unbeaten 55 for the ninth wicket, but the Aussies may have run out of time had Stokes not ended England’s innings at 8-393 late on the opening day in a bid to make early inroads into Australia’s top order.

    Joe Root was 118 not out and smoking them when Stokes called time on the innings, following a pattern under England’s Bazball approach.

    Aussie openers David Warner and Usman Khawaja survived those early salvos and while their side slumped to 3-67 the following day, Australia recovered to make 386 in its first innings.

    As it turned out, the tourists won the match well past 7pm on the final day and inside the last five overs.

    Yet Stokes suggested he had no regrets over his decision to call time on the innings.

    “I‘m a captain and a person who has seen that as an opportunity to pounce on Australia,” he said.

    “You know, no opening batsman likes to go out for 20 minutes before the close of play and the way in which we played and took Australia on actually allowed us to be able to do that.

    “And, you know, I could also turn around and say, ‘if we didn‘t declare would we have got that excitement that we did at the end of day five?’

    “I‘m not 100 per cent sure. But, you know, I’m not going to be looking back on this game as you know ‘what ifs.’ There’s so many things that happened throughout the five days, which we could look back on and say if that went our way, could this game have been different? But the reality is that, you know, we just didn’t manage to get over the line this week.”

    Stokes said that no one factor had cost England the game, but paid credit to Lyon and Cummins.

    “You play cricket over five days, there‘s so many things that goes on that you could look back at, you know, sort of 20 individual moments which you could go like ‘if that happened, if that went our way, could this game have been different?’ But I don’t like to look at things like that. At the end of the day, the game went down to the wire and Australia managed to get over the line.”

    Cummins gets one back for ‘hurt’ of 2019

    Pat Cummins said the memories of Australia’s heartbreaking one-wicket defeat at Headingley four years earlier went through his mind as he and Nathan Lyon brought their side back from the brink at Edgbaston on Tuesday.

    The Australian skipper meanwhile spoke of how special it was to be able to share the stirring win with his father and brother after they lost their wife and mother Maria to cancer earlier this year.

    Cummins and Lyon combined for a stunning unbeaten 55-run ninth-wicket stand to wrest the first Test from England at 7:21pm on day five.

    It was Cummins who had delivered the ball that Ben Stokes hit for four to win the epic third Test in 2019 at Leeds for England by one wicket, and Lyon who had infamously fumbled in the dying stages of that match.

    That the pair were in the middle when Australia pulled off a similarly remarkable win was not lost on Cummins.

    “Yeah, I’d be lying if I said it didn’t (cross my mind),” Cummins said.

    “We’ve been on the other side of it last series, so I think just what a wonderful Test match, really hard fought and it’s one of those ones when you’re on the other side of it, really hurts, feels like one that got away so it’s a pretty happy dressing room in there at the moment to be 1-0 up in this series and a lot of those guys were there at Headingley.

    “So to feel like we clinched one, kind of that perhaps was out of our grasp there for a little while is pretty satisfying.”

    It has been a trying year personally for Cummins, who flew home midway through the tour of India to be with his mother before she died.

    Cummins’ father Peter was in the Australian rooms sharing in the celebrations on Tuesday night at Edgbaston. And as it turns out, that wasn’t the only special experience he had shared with his son during the week, with the pair attending a Bruce Springsteen concert at Birmingham’s Villa Park after play on day one.

    “Yeah, just really special. Dad’s been here all week. So I just feel really lucky to have him here. It‘s been a tough few months. My brother’s been here all week as well. Dad was here in 2019 with Mum, so just having him here is just really special. I went with him to Bruce Springsteen on the first night this week as well. So it’s been a good week, he’s pretty happy.”

    Robert CraddockSenior sports journalist

    Robert ‘Crash’ Craddock is regarded as one of Queensland’s best authorities on sport. ‘Crash’ is a senior sport journalist and columnist for The Courier-Mail and CODE Sports, and can be seen on Fox Cricket.

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  • Fallen giant’s ‘fairytale’ as son of cult hero sparks playoffs madness in 123rd minute

    Fallen giant’s ‘fairytale’ as son of cult hero sparks playoffs madness in 123rd minute

    Sheffield Wednesday is going back to the EFL Championship after Josh Windass scored in the dying moments of extra time to beat Barnsley 1-0 at Wembley.

    Windass’ diving header from the penalty spot in the 123rd minute of the playoff match put the Owls 1-0 up over its promotion rival, who were down to 10 men.

    The goal, scored with six seconds of extra time to play, further cemented the Windass name into English football’s playoff folklore, after his father, Dean, scored a late winner at Wembley that earnt Hull City promotion to the Premier League 15 years ago.

    Get all the latest football news, highlights and analysis delivered straight to your inbox with Fox Sports Sportmail. Sign up now!

    Barnsley was playing with ten men for more than 70 minutes after Adam Phillips was controversially sent off early in the second half. In the 49th minute, Phillips lunged in on Lee Gregory and copped a straight red card from referee Tim Robinson.

    Five minutes later, Barnsley came agonisingly to a goal when Liam Kitching cleverly diverted a shot onto the Wednesday crossbar.

    A stunning extra-time goal from Wednesday substitute Will Vaulks, where his first-time shot flew into the top corner, was disallowed when assistant referee Akil Howson raised his flag for offside.

    But the 44,000 Wednesday fans celebrated in style when Windass replicated his father’s heroics in the dying moments of the match, ensuring the Owls returned to the Championship after a two-year hiatus.

    Sheffield Wednesday players celebrate. Photo by Richard Heathcote/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

    “It’s the stuff dreams are made of,” Sheffield Wednesday boss Darren Moore said.

    “You couldn‘t write it. It finished a titanic game that ebbed and flowed both ways.

    “This is a special moment for me because it means so many people in Sheffield are happy and positive. When a football club does well you see the knock-on it has in the city, in the community.

    “It goes to show that the impossible can be achieved. It‘s a fairytale story.”

    Wednesday finished the regular League One season third on 96 points, the highest total in EFL history that did not lead to automatic promotion.

    The Owls lost 4-0 in the first leg of their semi-final against Peterborough, but miraculously fought back the following week to book their spot in the playoff against Barnsley. Monday’s victory, which Wednesday skipper Barry Bannan called “the best moment of my life”, wrapped up one the most dramatic paths to promotion in the league’s history.

    Wednesday accompanies Plymouth and Ipswich into England‘s second tier.

    Darren Moore, manager of Sheffield Wednesday. Photo by Richard Heathcote/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images
    Sheffield Wednesday fans celebrate. Photo by Richard Heathcote/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

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  • ‘I keep lifting these trophies’: Sam Kerr scores twice as Chelsea wins fourth straight title

    ‘I keep lifting these trophies’: Sam Kerr scores twice as Chelsea wins fourth straight title

    Chelsea secured a fourth consecutive Women’s Super League title after a 3-0 win at Reading on Saturday held off Manchester United’s fight to win the English top flight for the first time.

    Australia’s Sam Kerr scored twice, while Guro Reiten was also on target, to secure the victory the Blues needed and which relegated Reading in the process.

    Victory completed a league and FA Cup double for Chelsea after they beat United 1-0 at Wembley earlier this month.

    And they came close to a treble after missing out narrowly to Barcelona in the Champions League semi-finals.

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    Heartbreak & ecstasy: Luton are PROMOTED | 00:43

    But Chelsea’s reign of domestic dominance has been seriously challenged this season as United, Arsenal and Manchester City pushed them in a four-way title race until the final weeks of the season.

    The champions, though, showed their quality when it mattered most with a seven-game winning run to finish the league season.

    Fittingly, it was Chelsea’s two star performers this season in Kerr and Reiten who took centre stage to seal the title.

    “We’ve played so many games, you have to go again every third or fourth day,” said Reiten.

    “But we keep doing it again and again, digging deep, finding that special moment to win games and, yeah, we’re good!”

    The two combined for the opening goal after just 18 minutes when Kerr headed in Retien’s cross.

    The Norwegian midfielder then slotted through the legs of goalkeeper Grace Moloney to make it 2-0 before half-time.

    Kerr was crowned the football writers’ women’s player of the year this week and struck her 29th goal of the campaign in all competitions two minutes from time by tapping home at the second attempt.

    “If I‘m scoring goals, people will say it’s not about stats, and if I’m not scoring, it’s about the stats,” Kerr told Sky Sports after the game when questioned about criticism she copped this season.

    “I just do whatever, I keep lifting these trophies, and I don’t really care what people say about me honestly.

    “I’m in the greatest team in England. I’m happy, the team’s happy. It’s not about me, it’s about the team.”

    Ange to Celtic fans: ‘We never stop!’ | 01:12

    United won 1-0 at Liverpool thanks to Lucia Garcia’s goal but finished two points adrift of Emma Hayes’ women.

    The Red Devils women’s side was only formed five years ago and they will play in the Champions League next season for the first time.

    “I think we’ve maxed out on our potential in terms of running with Chelsea to the wire. It’s nice that it’s close but we know we’ve got some way to go,” said United and England goalkeeper Mary Earps.

    “I’m hungry for success. I want to go and win the Champions League now!”

    Arsenal claimed the third and final place in next season’s Champions League ahead of City on goal difference despite losing 2-0 at home to Aston Villa.

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