Canada opens Tokyo 2020 Women’s Olympic Football Tournament with 1:1 draw against Japan
Canada Soccer’s Women’s National Team earned one point in their opening match of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games with a 1:1 draw with host Japan. Captain Christine Sinclair scored the opening goal in the 6′, her 187th career goal, in what marked her 300th international appearance for Canada. Japan’s Ma…
Canada Soccer’s Women’s National Team earned one point in their opening match of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games with a 1:1 draw with host Japan. Captain Christine Sinclair scored the opening goal in the 6′, her 187thcareer goal, in what marked her 300thinternational appearance for Canada. Japan’s Mana Iwabuchi scored the equalizer in the 84’.
Sinclair became just the fourth player in soccer history
to feature in 300 or more international “A” appearances, joining Americans
Kristine Lilly (354), Christie Pearce (311) and Carli Lloyd (306) in the
exclusive group.
“We took a point from playing the host nation which I
think is great. The team went to the very end to make sure we got that point.
The finishers came on and I think they changed the game, so credit to them,
said Bev Priestman, Head Coach of Canada Soccer’s Women’s National Team. “Chile
are not an easy team to beat. We’ve got to be clinical and have the right
mindset in our next game and we’ll absolutely come away with three points.”
Canada is the only nation in the world to reach the
podium at both London 2012 and Rio 2016 in women’s football. The team is hoping
to make history by getting back on the podium for a third consecutive time.
Canada will next face Chile on 24 July at 16.30 local
(03.30 ET / 00.30 PT), before wrapping up the group phase against Great Britain
in Kashima on 27 July at 20.00 local (07.00 ET / 04.00 PT). From 12 nations in
three groups, the top-eight nations advance to the Olympic Quarterfinals from
which winners then advance to the Semifinals and then a chance to win a medal. The
Women’s Olympic Football Tournament runs 21 July through 6 August 2021, with
this year’s gold medal match at Tokyo’s Olympic Stadium.
“It was great to get ahead early, and I thought we played
well to start the game. It’s a shame we couldn’t hold on to the three points,
but we’ll take the point and move on,” said Christine Sinclair. “I thought
defensively we did well, they didn’t create many chances at all beside the goal
and the PK. We knew they’d posses the ball through large chunks of the game and
we’d hit them on the counter-attack, which we did. We have to recover well. The
truth is we’ve been on the podium after losing our first game so anything can
happen.”
Canada got off to a quick start. Ashley Lawrence played
Nichelle Prince down the right wing in the 5’. Prince pulled the ball back into
the box for Christine Sinclair who knocked the ball off the post and grabbed
her own rebound to fire home for Canada. Canada played well through the first
half with the lead, keeping the majority of possession. Prince continued to pose
problems for Canada popping up in the 30’ to pressure the Japanese backline.
Janine Beckie found space in the same wide areas as Prince, playing a ball all
the way through the Japanese 18-yard box in the 37’ after a well-orchestrated
switch of play across the backline.
Early in the second half, Canada’s goalkeeper Stephanie
Labbé came together in the box with second-half substitute Mina Tanaka, staying
down injured. While the medical staff treated Labbé, Referee Edina Alves made
her way to the VAR booth, and it was determined that Japan be given a PK for
the foul. Labbé, shaken, stayed in the game and made the vital penalty save in
the 54’ before being substituted off in the 58’ for Kailen Sheridan.
Canada created a few chances through the middle of the
second half with Prince continuing to find space and pulling the ball back into
the box in the 71’. Sinclair played Prince in just a minute later, but the ball
went over the bar.
In the 84’, Japan played a ball over the top and Mana
Iwabuchi split Shelina Zadorsky and Kadeisha Buchanan to fire home the half
volley past a diving Sheridan. Canada made late substitutions to work to get
the winner and Jessie Fleming and Lawrence continued to work to provide service
into the box. In a long injury time, Lawrence and Fleming combined out right,
with Fleming playing Lawrence down the wing. Lawrence’s ball into the box was
there for Leon in 90’ +3 but Japanese keeper Ikeda was able to bring the cross
down.
“I don’t ever want to see one of my teammates get hurt
and have to come off the field but at the end I know I’ve got her back and
she’s got mine,” said Kailen Sheridan. “I think we showed that we’re dominant
aerially and in defence. We need to be strong for 90 minutes. We showed a lot
of teams that they need to look out for us.”
Canada’s starting XI featured Stephanie Labbé in goal, Ashley Lawrence at right back, Shelina Zadorsky and Kadeisha Buchanan at centre back, Allysha Chapman at left back, and Desiree Scott, Jessie Fleming, Quinn, Janine Beckie, Christine Sinclair and Nichelle Prince from the midfield up through to the attack. Head Coach Bev Priestman replaced Labbé with Kailen Sheridan (58’), Quinn with Deanne Rose (73’) and Sinclair and Prince with Evelyne Viens and Adriana Leon (85’).
OLYMPIC MEDAL WINNERS & CONCACAF CHAMPIONS
Canada are two-time Olympic bronze medal winners (2012
and 2016) and two-time Concacaf champions (1998 and 2010). In all, Canada have
participated in seven consecutive editions of the FIFA Women’s World Cup™ (1995
to 2019) and three consecutive editions of the Women’s Olympic Football
Tournament (2008 to 2016). At Rio 2016, Canada Soccer’s Women’s National Team
were the first Canadian Olympic team to win back-to-back medals at a summer
Olympic Games in more than a century.
Canada Soccer’s Women’s National Youth Teams, meanwhile,
have won four Concacaf youth titles: the 2004 and 2008 Concacaf Women’s
Under-20 Championship, the 2010 Concacaf Women’s Under-17 Championship, and the
2014 Concacaf Girls’ Under-15 Championship. Canada have qualified for seven
editions of the FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup (including a silver medal at Canada
2002) and all six editions of the FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup (including a
fourth-place finish at Uruguay 2018).