World Cup Roundup – Groups G and H

Qatar is engaging in the hypocrisy of inviting the world to their country then getting mad when the world brings its culture along. FIFA don’t care because they’ve already been paid.

In my blog post yesterday I called for more high drama, and while today wasn’t as dramatic as yesterday, our drama reservoirs are nowhere near empty.

Group G

Winners – Brazil

Runners Up – Switzerland

Eliminated – Cameroon, Serbia

Brazil came into their match against Cameroon knowing they were already through to the next round, which is perhaps a partial explanation of their 1-0 loss to Cameroon today. While they bossed possession and chances for the most part, they really struggled in the final third. The absence of all-world forward Neymar was noticeable. I do think Brazil boast plenty of attacking talent and they should have won this match without him, but their inability to breakdown a usually below-average Cameroonian defense is a concern for them in the next match if Neymar is unavailable again.

Even though the west African side is going out today, they can hang their hats on a very solid performance today against one of the favorites to win the tournament. Striker Vincent Aboubakar was on hand in stoppage time to head home the winner, after which he was promptly sent off due to removing his shirt in celebration and receiving a second yellow. Some people called this a boneheaded move by Aboubakar as he knew he was on a yellow already and removing the shirt after a goal is an automatic yellow card by rule. But given the late stage of things and the result in the other match, I suppose his actions are understandable. He likely knew Cameroon were going out, so he figured he’d exit with a bit of panache. Can’t say as I blame him. If you’re going to go out, go out with style!


Serbia vs. Switzerland was the thriller in this group, with five total goals scored and a 3-2 final result in favor of the Swiss. The Swiss knew they could potentially get away with a tie to secure progression, while Serbia needed a win and help from Cameroon. There was also an element of rivalry about this match, as two Swiss players (midfielders Xherdan Shaqiri and Granit Xhaka) are ethnically Albanian, and there is a long and very messy history of sectarian conflict between Serbs and Albanians that still exists to this day. The animosity shown towards Xhaka in particular was apparent. To be clear, I am not taking sides on this particular conflict, I just find the idea of an ethnic/cultural rivalry spilling over into football fascinating.

The first half of this match was madness! Shaqiri struck first for the Swiss on 20 minutes, but in-form Serbia forward Aleksandr Mitrovic got an equalizer just six minutes later. The Serbs then took a vital lead on 35 minutes thanks to striker Dusan Vlahovic. The pendulum swung back the other way though just before halftime, when Swiss striker Breel Embolo leveled the score once again. After 45 minutes the match was finely poised, and given that neither side was defending all that well, we appeared to be in store for more goals.

There was only one more goal scored though, though it came off the back of a very well-worked team goal from the Swiss. Midfielder Remo Freuler finished off the neat move by wrong-footing Serb keeper Vanja Milinkovic-Savic for 3-2. I thought the Serbs would respond immediately to going behind, and while they did throw men forward to try and find an equalizer, the Swiss stabilized themselves at the back a bit and held on for the rest of the half. Serbia tried their damnedest to find a winner, with Mitrovic having most of the chances, but they could not find another goal.

The Swiss have progressed out of their group at four of the last five World Cups, and they have the talent to cause problems for any opposition they face. I wonder if their defending is consistently good enough for a deep run, though (here would be the place to make a Swiss cheese joke). Serbia can take pride in fighting until the end, but ultimately there will be disappointment as they probably had enough talent to get out of this group as well. But their defending was even worse than the Swiss defending today, so they will be going home.

Group H

Winners – Portugal

Runners Up – South Korea

Eliminated – Uruguay, Ghana

This group was the more dramatic one of the day, and it’s difficult to know where to start. The big upset was South Korea stunning Portugal 2-1. Portugal were already through going into this match, but they showed no signs of complacency early on as they had the lead from winger Ricardo Horta just 5 minutes into the match. It was a simple cutback cross from right back Diogo Dalot that opened up the Korean back line, and Horta was in the right place at the right time to fire home. Portugal looked good to go on and win the match, but were pegged back on 27 minutes after center back Kim Young-gwon swept home from close range. The ball was played in from a corner and took a deflection off a Portuguese defender before it fell to Kim, who was less than 5 yards from the goal.

But a draw wouldn’t be good enough for the Koreans. They needed a win today, although they found themselves penned-in their own half for much of the rest of the game. Portugal went close to a second goal several times, with striker Cristiano Ronaldo missing some clear opportunities to score. The Koreans got their next chances on 65 and 67 minutes, but were denied a goal thanks to saves from keeper Diogo Costa. They kept Portugal at arm’s-length over the next 20 minutes or so, and finally got their winner in stoppage time.

South Korea’s superstar forward Son Heung-min had been rather quiet by his high standards over the course of the group stage, but he wrote his name all over the headlines today by providing the game winning assist. The ball broke to him and he carried it up the pitch in space, eventually meeting three Portuguese defenders on the edge of the penalty area. He did well to hold on to the ball and control it while waiting for support, and once it arrived he played a neat pass to forward Hwang Hee-chan. Hwang took a touch to create space and then powered a shot home with his second touch. Great work from Son down the right, and a clutch finish from Hwang to see them through. South Korea’s supporters and players were beside themselves!

Son had to drag this team to victory today, and I feel he is going to have to do that again as the tournament progresses. As goes Son, as goes South Korea. He is their national hero right now though, and if he even gets just half a yard of space in the right area, he will punish the opposition. Portugal for their part will be disappointed to have conceded a late winner, although it must be said they could have finished it off several times today had they not been so wasteful in front of goal. The world saw today what Manchester United fans have seen all season; Ronaldo is simply not what he once was. Fortunately though the Portuguese have a strong squad around him, so I still think they will go far in this tournament.


With the South Korean’s win they secured second place, but that spot was very much up for grabs until their stoppage time winner.

Ghana thought they might take the lead in the opening 20 minutes of their match against Uruguay after being awarded a penalty, but keeper Sergio Rochet saved forward Andre Ayew’s rather tame effort to keep the match scoreless. Uruguay then finally got some goal-scoring thanks to attacking midfielder Giorgian de Arrascaeta, who netted twice in the span of six minutes in the first half. Striker Luis Suarez was heavily involved in the build-up to both goals, registering an assist on the second one.

But Uruguay knew they needed to score as many as possible, because if South Korea beat Portugal, both sides would be level on points. The two sides were all level on goal difference, but South Korea found the tiebreaker on goals scored with their late goal. The Uruguayans for their part kept attacking and attacking, but they could not find a third goal no matter what they tried. Ghana were creating the occasional half-chance here and there, but they never really looked like seriously threatening Rochet’s goal aside from the penalty. Their final ball was either lacking or their shots were going wide/high.

The Uruguayans were furious late on when they felt they should have a penalty after an alleged foul on striker Darwin Nunez in the box, but it wasn’t given to them. That led to some ugly scenes at full time, with the Uruguayan players surrounding the referee and appearing as if they were going to assault him. The referee did well to stand up to them, but it was a fairly classless display by a team that had no one but themselves to blame today. Had they played better earlier in the tournament, the penalty decision wouldn’t have mattered either way.

Ghana had one thing on their minds coming into this match: revenge. At the 2010 World Cup during the Round of 16, Suarez made himself public enemy number one in that country when he flagrantly used his hand to clear a Ghanaian goal-bound shot away. He was sent off for that, but the Ghanaians missed their penalty and Uruguay advanced. Although they did not beat Uruguay today, they did just enough to keep them from advancing and thus exacted some degree of revenge. To be fair, Suarez is a generally despicable person. I think he’s a racist, a cheat, a shithouser of the worst variety, and he generally has one of the most punch-able faces I have ever seen. He looks like a rat, to put it simply. It’s no wonder he’s viewed in Ghana by many as an incarnation of the Devil himself. But his tears on the bench after Uruguay went out will sustain me for several days, as this was probably his last World Cup. It’s always nice to see a villain get what’s coming to him.

And with that, the group stage is over! Congrats to everyone who progressed, commiserations to all who did not (except Suarez). The Round of 16 kicks off tomorrow, and there are no more draws at this point. We have to have a winner in all of these upcoming matches, which means the prospect of a penalty shootout is very much on the table. Who will advance to the quarterfinals, and who will be going home? We will soon find out!

Brazil vs. South Korea – Monday, December 5th – 7 AM PST

Portugal vs. Switzerland – Tuesday, December 6th – 11 AM PST

World Cup Roundup – Goals Galore!

FIFA is still terrible. Qatar is still terrible. This tournament should not be happening in a place with social laws that would be antiquated even 100 years ago. The pitch invader at the Portugal match today carrying a rainbow flag and championing women’s rights has more integrity in his pinky toe than every member of FIFA combined.

That being said, we finally got some high-scoring matches today, and it’s about bloody time! There have been far too many 0-0 draws at this tournament, but today we had 14 goals scored across 4 matches!

Portugal vs. Uruguay

This was the big headline matchup of the day, and while the score line was a decisive 2-0 to the Portuguese, it was a very tense match throughout. It was goal-less at halftime with Portugal dominating possession, but Uruguay midfielder Rodrigo Bentancur came closest when his long run with the ball was snuffed out by Portuguese keeper Diogo Costa just before Betancur could shoot. The Uruguayans were also defending well, and they kept the opposition out for the first 45 minutes.

Portugal went ahead however on 54 minutes when a high-arcing cross from midfielder Bruno Fernandes nestled into the bottom corner of keeper Sergio Rochet’s net. Striker Cristiano Ronaldo was running onto the cross and leapt into the air to try and get a touch on it, and while he clearly missed the ball it fooled Rochet enough as to where he didn’t run out to collect the cross. Without Ronaldo’s run and leap I think Rochet makes the save, but Ronaldo did not get a touch on the ball in spite of animatedly claiming that he did. Bruno’s goal, but it doesn’t go in without Ronaldo leaping for it.

The Uruguayans responded by bringing on additional attacking threats, and striker Maxi Gomez was unlucky to hit the post from just outside as the box as the South Americans pushed for an equalizer. Costa was beaten, and maybe an inch to the left sees this match levelled. But the majority of Uruguay’s attacking threats were nullified repeatedly throughout this match. Much like the Portuguese in the first half, they simply couldn’t create that one clear chance they needed. Every shot was blocked, and every final pass was cleared by the resilient Pepe at center back and the rest of Portugal’s back line.

They got their second via the penalty spot, although for me it was never a penalty for hand ball in a million years. The Uruguayan defender was sliding across the ground to make a challenge on Bruno, and when Bruno passed it away it the defender’s hand while his hand was on the ground and trailing slightly behind him. 100% accidental for me, but that’s not the rule anymore. The referee adjudged the defender’s hand to be in an “unnatural position” (whatever that means) and the penalty stood. Bruno stepped up to the spot and sent Rochet the wrong way for 2-0. Bruno now has 2 goals and 2 assists in this tournament and is really showing how valuable he is to this team.

Credit to Portugal for defending well today, but I am disappointed with the Uruguayans, particularly up front. This is a squad that boasts the likes of Darwin Nunez, Luis Suarez, and Edinson Cavani. All of those strikers are world-class or world-class adjacent, and as a result I expected a lot more from them in terms of goal-scoring not only today but in their previous match as well. They sit bottom of Group H on 1 point, and will need to beat an impressive Ghana side outright to progress.

Congrats to Portugal on securing advancement to the Round of 16. They’ve done just enough in both matches to earn 3 points, with Bruno being the star of the show so far. A draw against South Korea in the final guarantees first place in the group.

Brazil vs. Switzerland

This was the only match with a single goal scored today, and it was by the Brazilians who held on to win 1-0. While they were the better side for most of this match, the Swiss definitely had their chances to get a surprise goal. Their build-up play via counter-attacks was very good, but they couldn’t find the key vital pass.

The Brazilians thought they went ahead early on in the second half via winger Vinicius Jr., who’s finessed shot found the far right corner past keeper Yann Sommer. VAR checked the goal and it was determined that Vinicius was marginally – and a very thin one at that – offside when the ball was played to him. It was close, but that’s often how these matches go at this level.

Brazil finally did their goal on 83 minutes, and it was from an unlikely source. Some neat build-up play on the left wing saw the ball played to midfielder Casemiro in the penalty area, and he struck a sublime curling effort into the far corner of Sommer’s goal. The finish was similar to that of Vinicius earlier, but this time there was no question of offside. A great goal from a man described by teammate and superstar striker Neymar as “the best midfielder in the world.” A lofty title, but given that he has an argument to be titled as such, I am very happy that Casemiro plays for Manchester United!

Brazil also secured progression to the second round today, joining France and Portugal. They need only a draw against Cameroon to win the group. Switzerland are also in good position to progress, but they will need to beat Serbia in their final Group G match to guarantee a place in the Round of 16.

Cameroon vs. Serbia

Goal-fest! This thriller of a match ended 3-3, with the Cameroonians fighting back from 3-1 down in the second half to keep themselves alive at this tournament. Had they lost, they would have been eliminated. They showed real heart and team spirit today.

Cameroon took the lead on 29 minutes after a cross from a corner was bundled home by center back Jean-Charles Castelletto. Nothing fancy about it, but a goal nonetheless. Cameroon were pegged back in first half stoppage time however when a Serbian free kick was re-directed home via the head of center back Strahinja Pavlovic. Cameroon where then stunned again just 2 minutes later when they lost the ball in their own third, and midfielder Sergej Milinkovic-Savic finding space to power a low shot home from just outside the edge of the penalty area. Cameroon went from winning the match to facing a World Cup exit in the span of about 120 seconds!

To compound their misery, Serbia got their 3rd on 53 minutes from striker Aleksandr Mitrovic, who had been in scintillating form the whole game. He is probably Serbia’s best player in terms of talent, and a player like him needs to be on the score sheet. It was a simple finish from just inside the 6 yard box, and the Cameroon defense was nowhere to be seen. Poor marking, but a professional finish from Mitrovic nonetheless.

The match continued to provide twists though, as just 10 minutes later the Cameroonians got one back from substitute striker Vincent Aboubakar, who beat the offside trap before chipping a finish over Serbian keeper Vanja Milinkovic-Savic. Initially, the goal was ruled out for offside, but a VAR check determined that Aboubakar was onside when he received the ball. Fine margins, but the goal stood.

Cameroon smelled blood in the water and kept pushing for the equalizer, and it was a scant three minutes later that they got it. Aboubakar did well to again beat the offside trap which gave the Cameroonians a man over in attack, and he then simply crossed the ball in from the right along the ground. Forward Eric Choupa-Moting was up alongside him to slot home with Vanja completely taken out of the play. It was a fantastic turnaround for the Indomitable Lions from west Africa!

Serbia were the more dangerous team in the final 25 minutes, with Mitrovic going close several times. His positioning and runs into the box were causing them all kinds of problems, but he could not find a winning goal for his side. The points were shared on the day when the final whistle blew.

Both teams are still alive in this tournament, but they are on the outside looking in. Cameroon face the tough task of having to beat Brazil to progress, while Serbia need a win over Switzerland to guarantee any kind of progression. The Swiss only need a draw though, so it could be tough for Serbia to break them down. Mitrovic will need to have another day like today for them to go through.

South Korea vs. Ghana

This was another thriller with five total goals scored, and the Ghanaians won 3-2 at the final whistle.

The Koreans were the better side for the opening 20 minutes or so, but Black Stars center back Mohammad Salisu got things underway on 29 minutes when he bungled home after a mad scramble in the box resulting from a free kick. The Koreans simply didn’t clear their lines, and letting the ball bounce around in the box like they did is very dangerous. The second goal on 34 minutes was much better in terms of quality, with forward Jordan Ayew whipping a delicious aerial pass into the box that found the head of midfielder Mohammad Kudus. Kudus was facing away from goal when he made contact, but showed excellent awareness to head the ball up and over Korean keeper Kim Seung-gyu. Midfielder Thomas Partey was then unlucky to not get a third after he made contact with the ball at close range from a corner, but somehow the ball inexplicably went over the bar from barely a yard out!

The Koreans came out strong again in the opening part of the second half, and this time they capitalized on their possession and chances. Striker Cho Gue-sung pulled one back for his nation with a close range header on 58 minutes, although Ghana keeper Lawrence Ati-Zigi probably should have kept it out as the shot was low and very close to him. Still though, at 2-1, the Koreans had life. They got their equalizer just three minutes later, and again it was Cho on scene to drive home a powerful diving header. Crosses from the left had been Ghana’s weakness all match, and that trend continued with this goal. The marking in the box was fairly good from Ghana, but Cho just wanted the ball more. He outjumped his marker and absolutely buried the header. It was 2-2 and with barely an hour gone, both sides knew there was plenty of time to find a winner.

Ghana struck back just seven minutes later, and it was well-worked goal finished off by Kudus. A low cross from the left was fired into South Korea’s penalty area, and the ball was deftly left to run by a Ghanaian attacker directly into the path of Kudus. His marker was too far away from him, and he re-directed the ball back across Kim Seung-Gyu’s goal and into the opposite corner. The shot was somewhat close to the keeper, but he couldn’t get down to the ground in time to stop it.

South Korea then dominated the final 20 minutes or so in desperate search of an equalizer, but a combination of last-ditch defending, poor finishing, and poor final balls kept the Koreans frustrated. After what seemed like an eternity of stoppage time for Ghana, the whistle blew and they were winners.

Ghana now find themselves second in Group H, which means they are in a good position to progress to the next round. Portugal have already claimed the other spot, which means that South Korea must now beat those same Portuguese to progress from this group. They are third with 1 point, tied with Uruguay but ahead on goal differential. Ghana need a win over a desperate Uruguay side to guarantee progression, but they could also progress with a draw and a South Korean loss.

The second round of group matches is now complete! Congratulations to Portugal, France, and Brazil for already securing qualification. Commiserations to Qatar and Canada for already being eliminated.

World Cup Roundup – Portugal Escape Ghana and a Goal of the Tournament Candidate

Qatar is still terrible. FIFA is still corrupt. This tournament should not be held there.

Uruguay vs. South Korea

This match ended 0-0, which is a good result for South Korea but disappointing for Uruguay. They have too much attacking talent to be scoring zero goals against a side like South Korea. All credit to the Koreans though for defending well the whole 90 minutes. Lots of attacking intent on display from both sides, but neither side could make a breakthrough.

Switzerland vs. Cameroon

Many people including myself had this pegged as a draw, but credit to the Swiss for grinding out a 1-0 win. Striker Breel Embolo got the one and only goal in this match just after half time, and it was via some very neat build-up play by the Swiss. Embolo slid home a cross from the right virtually unmarked though, and that cannot happen at a World Cup. Cameroon’s defense was nowhere to be seen. Even though it was a momentary lapse of concentration, even just a momentary lapse can cost you the game. It will be very difficult for Cameroon to get out of this group now.

Portugal vs. Ghana

This was probably the most entertaining match of the day, as it was a 5-goal thriller that ended with Portugal winning 3-2. The first half was a snoozer aside from a disallowed goal by striker Cristiano Ronaldo. Things really kicked off in the second half. Ronaldo, freshly released from Manchester United, became the first man to score at five different World Cups when he pushed Portugal ahead from the penalty spot on 66 minutes. The foul on him that led to the goal was dubious at best, but Ronaldo converted when called upon. Ghana found an equalizer on 73 minutes via Andre Ayew, but Portugal were back in front just 5 minutes later thanks to wunderkind Joao Felix. Midfielder Bruno Fernandes found his run with a lovely weighted pass down the right channel, and Felix hit the ball first time past the Ghanaian keeper.

Portugal got a third via another exciting young talent in winger Rafael Leao, who played in his first ever World Cup match today. Ghana gave the ball away in midfield and Portugal sprang into instant attack, with Bruno bringing the ball forward in space. He found Leao off to his left, who opened his hips and re-directed the ball into the far corner with one touch. A very quick and well-executed goal.

Portugal thought they were home and dry being up 3-1 on 80 minutes, but Ghana showed some backbone and got their second goal via winger Osman Bukari on 89 minutes. A long ball was played down the left wing and run onto by a Ghanaian winger, and after shaking off his marker the ball was crossed into the center. Bukari was mysteriously mostly unmarked, and he made no mistake with his header past keeper Diogo Costa.

Portugal almost conceded a third extremely late on. Costa had the ball in his hands in his own penalty area and put it down to kick it out, but failed to see Ghanaian striker Iñaki Williams standing behind him just inside the goal. Williams sprinted out and took the ball from Costa legally, but he slipped at the vital moment and could not get a shot away before the ball was cleared by the Portuguese defense. Costa very nearly cost his team the game with his lack of awareness, and Williams will be ruing that missed opportunity for years to come.

Portugal are good in attack but their defense is suspect, and it’s the same for Ghana. It will be interesting to see how these teams do against the potent attack of the two other teams in the group.

Brazil vs. Serbia

This was the last match of the day, and while the action was somewhat tepid for awhile things eventually got going for the Brazilians, who won 2-0.

Serbia defended really well in the first half and while it was clear that Brazil looked to be the more dangerous team, they couldn’t find a way through. Star forward Neymar was being fouled and harassed every time he was on the ball, and the Brazilians looked very disjointed in attack overall. It just wasn’t quite coming off for them, and the longer it stayed at 0-0 the more it felt like Serbia might get a result from the match.

But striker Richarlison was on-hand to make sure that didn’t happen on 62 minutes, when he scored from close range off a rebounded save. Winger Vinicius Jr. powered a shot towards goal from the left hand side of the box, which keeper Vanja Milinković-Savić could only parry. Richarlison reacted quickest to the rebound and prodded it home for 1-0, sparking wild celebrations in the crowd and on the bench. It’s always a heart-stopping moment when the ball is loose off a rebound, and unluckily for the Serbs it fell almost straight to the opposition.

Richarlison was just getting warmed up though. He got Brazil’s second through a spectacular effort on 73 minutes that sealed the points. He received a cross from the left hand side along the ground, and used his left foot to hit the ball into the air. He turned on a dime with his right leg rising into the air, and he hit the ball on a very sweet volley low and away from Vanja. It was a beautiful display of athleticism from Richarlison and it’s probably the goal of the tournament so far.

Serbia did not really create many chances in response, and by the end it was Brazil more likely to get a 3rd goal than for Serbia to get their first. It was frustrating for Brazil for about an hour, but if Richarlison is going to play like this for the rest of the tournament, Brazil have to be among the favorites to win the tournament. Their team is incredibly deep and also hungry. Brazil have won the World Cup a record five times, but paradoxically have not won it for 20 years. This team has the depth and talent to end that dry spell.

Lionesses Into the Quarterfinals After a Highly Controversial Win Over Cameroon

It’s unfortunate when more time is spent analyzing the refereeing and Video Assistant Referee decisions than time spent analyzing the actual match, but unfortunately that is exactly what needs to be done to understand the chaos of what happened today.

England won 3-0 thanks to goals from Stephanie Houghton and Ellen White in the first half, followed by a lovely set-piece in the second half that saw Alex Greenwood get her first World Cup goal. But again, simply commenting on the goals only tells about 10% of the story.

From the get-go, it appeared the tactical strategy from Cameroon was to play aggressively and get in the face of the England players when Cameroon was out of possession. They clearly wanted to play physically to see if they could disrupt England’s mentality and possession-based style of play. However, there is a fine line between playing aggressively/physically and playing dirty. Cameroon strayed too often into the realm of playing dirty. To compound matters, the referee failed to stamp her authority on the game and let Cameroon get away with such tactics.

One such example was early on when Cameroonian defender Yvonne Leuko was booked for an elbow (or perhaps more of a slap) to the face of England winger Nikita Parris. For some, including me, that should have been a red card. Leuko did get a yellow but I felt she got off easy on that one. Another incident that the ref (and VAR) missed completely was when defender Augustine Ejangue appeared to deliberately spit on the arm of England winger Toni Duggan. Duggan pointed it out to the ref, but again nothing happened.

England’s first goal came from an indirect free-kick inside the box, a rare but nonetheless interesting set of circumstances. The ref (correctly this time) adjudged a Cameroonian defender to have intentionally passed the ball back to the keeper inside the box, which the keeper then picked up with her hands. This is a big no-no in football ever since the early 1990s when the back-pass rule was implemented. The rule is designed to keep teams from playing ultra-defensively by just passing the ball back to the keeper so the keeper can waste time by picking it up. You can head or chest the ball back to a keeper with the keeper being allowed to pick it up still, but if the ball is played back to the keeper with either foot in the box and the keeper picks it up, that’s an indirect free-kick.

The ball was touched into the path of Houghton by Toni Duggan, and Houghton stepped up with a curling shot around the wall of Cameroonian players standing on the goal line to make it 1-0 to England. There was minimal controversy for a little while after that, as England were content to play possession and build-up the occasional half chance.

We weren’t done though, not by a long shot. The next bit of controversy came when Lucy Bronze found White unmarked on the edge of the 18 yard box, and White showed good composure by calmly slotting the ball home. However, the goal was disallowed after the lineswoman determined White to be offside when she received the ball. VAR then injected itself into the situation and it was determined that White was indeed onside when she got the ball. The goal was awarded and Cameroon were furious.

Their behavior after the second goal and throughout the rest of the match marred the whole spectacle. They were livid with the referee and the VAR system, and they showed it through yelling, screaming, and tears. They also huddled up near the center-circle and appeared to not want to restart the match despite the ref asking them to do so. One of the most egregious offenders here and later on was Cameroon’s captain on the day, Gabrielle Onguene. That’s not the last time you’ll see her name in this post.

I honestly don’t know what Cameroon were complaining about with the second goal. The VAR system, despite it’s obvious flaws, got the decision right. White was onside and her goal should have stood. It was a fairly clear decision and the right one, so these impudent protests were unfounded. Coupled with the fact that Cameroon had largely gotten away with misconduct earlier in the match, I felt their protests were verging on the nonsensical.

Cameroon protested even further when they had a goal disallowed for offside early in the second half. Again I understand being pissed off at poor refereeing, but VAR is there to make sure the decision is correct. You can’t be mad at unedited video footage! What happened was that a poor clearance from England keeper Karen Bardsley led to the skipper Onguene winning the ball in a dangerous position, and the deadly striker Anjara Nchout was on hand to finish into the top corner of the net after the ball was played to her. This incident was a much closer call than the goal White scored for England, but again it did appear that Onguene was in an ever-so-slightly offside position when she first touched the ball. The goal was disallowed and the Cameroonians were once again led by Onguene in protests.

England’s third goal was controversy-free, thank god. It was a well-worked set piece where the ball was played along the ground by Duggan into the path of Greenwood, and the Manchester United captain slotted home her first World Cup goal. At 3-0 you felt the match was over, and from a competitive standpoint it probably was.

But, Cameroon were sadly not done with their shit-housery shenanigans. Houghton was chasing a fairly meaningless ball out of bounds towards the end, only to be strongly fouled by substitute Alexandra Takounda with a studs-up challenge to Houghton’s ankle/calf. Again, I have seen players sent off for this kind of challenge and even some less-egregious conduct. Takounda should have been off the pitch and the Cameroonians should have been down to 10 players after that. But, due the ref seeming to be concerned about further protests from Cameroon, only gave Takounda a yellow.

Onguene then decided she was upset with Houghton due to her being down and injured, and she took it upon herself to let her discontent be known with the referee and England’s players. Frankly, it was stunning that she had the gall to be upset with Houghton despite huge TV screens in the arena clearing showing a foul. Again, I have no idea what Onguene was upset about. Cameroon only had themselves to blame and their remonstrations to the ref really cast them in a bad light.

England manager Phil Neville rightly applauded the mental toughness and focus of England during this match. Not a single English player ever retaliated against the Cameroonians, despite their ridiculous protests. It would have been easy in the heat of the moment to lose one’s cool, but they did not. Neville also called out the Cameroonians on their shitty attitude and poor display in his post-match interview. He said it was a poor advertisement for women’s football and he was exactly right. I understand being the victim of a terrible call, but the proper response is not to sulk, act petulant, or play dirty. These are professional footballers who need to act like professionals, and that was not the case today.

Due to all the nonsense that happened during this match, it’s hard to analyze where England are from a competitive standpoint. You can give them 10/10 for their mentality, but there were a lot of issues in defense today and chances created that would have been finished by a team like Norway, USA, or Germany. If the Lionesses are serious about winning this tournament, these defensive lapses simply cannot happen. On the other hand, England can hang their hat on two well-worked set pieces and a clinical finish from open play. They still need to play a complete game. Woman of the Match is a tough call but I think it should go to Duggan or Parris, both of whom were consistently good throughout.

As I have said, England have yet to play their best match at this tournament. They will need to be at their best though to defeat Norway, who will be easily their toughest opposition thus far. Even without Ada Hederberg, they are still a very good side capable of challenging any other team.

England vs. Norway in the quarterfinals on Thursday! Germany and France are the other two teams that have qualified as well. USWNT take on Spain tomorrow!

Lionesses and USA Both Win Their Respective Groups

It’s been a jam-packed few days of football in the Women’s World Cup, with the final round of group matches being played. The Round of 16 is now entirely set, with both England and the US Women’s Team moving on to the next round as group winners. Winning the group is essential at the World Cup because it usually sets you up with an easier or more favorable second round match-up.

England edged out Japan 2-0 thanks to goals in both halves from striker Ellen White. The Lionesses played very well in the first half and dominated possession, but were lucky to not be pegged back level after a dangerous Japanese free-kick was pushed onto the cross bar by England keeper Karen Bardsley. It was a world-class save and really one of the first tests for Bardsley this tournament. She proved she is capable of stepping her game up, as did the entire team. It was probably nice for them to exact at least a little bit of revenge against Japan after they knocked England out in the semifinals of the 2015 World Cup.

3 wins from 3 matches and winning the group is all anyone can ask of manager Phil Neville. In the end, that’s really all that matters. But, it does feel like England still do have room to improve in the attacking third. The defense and goalkeeping are there, and the midfield is excellently run by Jill Scott, but the forwards have been guilty of some poor passing in attack and wastefulness in front of goal at times. Another problem is that England’s players on the whole seem to do well in the first half, but then they tend to fade in the second. That hasn’t hurt them so far since their opposition hasn’t been strong and Japan were themselves somehow even more wasteful in front of goal, but England need to keep a consistent level of energy throughout the span of a match against tougher opposition. I still feel that this talented team has yet to play its best game in this tournament. Maybe White, Nikita Parris, Jodie Taylor, and Fran Kirby can finally get the goals flowing.

England play Cameroon in their Round of 16 fixture on June 23.

The Americans won 2-0 as well over Sweden today, although their 2-0 win was much different than England’s. You can never evaluate a game based on the scoreline alone for that reason. England fought and scrapped for their two goals and had to survive their fair sure of scary moments, but the Americans were more or less in control from the get-go. Sweden was supposed to be the toughest opposition they faced so far, and while they were vastly better than Thailand and Chile, you never felt like the Swedes were going to score. Alex Morgan and Carli Lloyd usually grab the headlines for their prowess in attack, but in this match the US defense showed it’s class.

I was once again impressed with center-back Becky Sauerbrunn’s positioning and tackling. She always seems to be in the right place at the right time, making the crucial interception or tackle. A player that I hadn’t noticed before but was even more impressed by was right-back Crystal Dunn. Her athleticism and excellent one-on-one defending skills were on full display, and she essentially shut down Sweden’s left attacking side on her own.

There was no dispute about USA’s first goal, a corner poked home from close range by midfielder Lindsey Horan in the opening minutes. However, the 2nd goal was marred by an offside controversy that triggered a VAR review. It appeared to most, including me, that Lloyd was in an offside position when the ball was played into the box by Megan Rapinoe. The Swedish centre back ran to cover her, and ended up touching the ball first. In the process she knocked it across the face of goal into the path of Tobin Heath. Heath took a shot that deflected off Swedish defender Jonna Andersson from a tight angle and into the net.

The USA deserved the goal given their dominance of the game, but by all accounts it should not have stood. Lloyd didn’t touch the ball when it was played to her in an offside position, but she drew a defender away from Heath and forced her to clear the ball away. At that point, the lineswoman’s flag should have gone up and the play whistled dead before Heath even got her shot off. VAR also should have caught the offside and they did do a review, but the ref somehow determined that the goal should stand. For me, if a player in an offside position is interfering with play, offside should be called even if the player doesn’t touch the ball. Either the rule is wrong, or the ref interpreted the rule incorrectly. It is my hope that the referees and FIFA officials get together soon and discuss how to sort out all the rules changes and VAR issues being presented at this tournament.

USA will play Spain in their Round of 16 fixture on June 24 at noon ET.

Full Round of 16 fixtures:

Germany vs. Nigeria

Australia vs. Norway

England vs. Cameroon

France vs. Brazil

USA vs. Spain

Canada vs. Sweden

Italy vs. China

Netherlands vs. Japan