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Colombia 'dreaming big' ahead of England quarter-final

channelnewsasia.com

MELBOURNE : Colombia are far from content with a fairytale run to their first Women's World Cup quarter-final, and see England as their next heavyweight victims following their take-down of Germany during the group phase.Riding a wave of raucous support from Colombian fans, the South Americans broke through Jamaica's defensive wall in a 1-0 victory in Melbourne on Tuesday to set up a ground-breaking clash against the European champions on Saturday.World number 25 Colombia are by far the lowest ranked among the quarter-finalists but captain Catalina Usme insists they can go all the way."We came here to play seven finals, we are prepared for this," Usme, who scored the winner against Jamaica, told reporters."We are dreaming big, we can do this.

I am extremely proud to be part of this team, both in our sporting play and our mentality," she added. "We will take on England head-to-head and give our all."Former finalists Brazil are usually the top South American team at the tournament but Colombia have stolen their thunder.Brazil, who beat Colombia in the final of last year's Copa America - the continental championship - have already gone home after being tipped out of the group phase by the Jamaicans.Colombia failed to qualify for the 2019 Women's World Cup in France but have been building for the current showpiece for years by investing in youth.The fruit of that investment was on show in the last-16 clash against Jamaica as coach Nelson Abadia picked 18-year-olds Linda Caicedo and Ana Maria Guzman in his starting 11.Real Madrid forward Caicedo may be the best young player in the women's game right now, while Guzman had a dream World Cup debut, setting up Usme's goal with a long cross that landed at the captain's feet in the

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Colombia put on a dazzling performance at the Women's World Cup in Australia, reaching the quarter-finals as the lowest-ranked team - but the one that played the best football, according to their own coach Nelson Abadia.
SYDNEY : Colombia's captivating run through the Women's World Cup ended with a 2-1 loss to England on Saturday but coach Nelson Abadia believes his squad's performance could create a seismic shift in women's soccer in the South American country.
Colombia captain Catalina Usme is "dreaming big" and coach Nelson Abadia wants to "make history" as the last team standing from the Americas plots the downfall of England in the Women's World Cup quarter-finals. The 25th-ranked South Americans have never made the last eight before but they are brimming with confidence after grinding down Jamaica 1-0 on Tuesday thanks to a goal from their skipper. They will now play England in Sydney on Saturday and are fearless, having beaten world number two Germany in the group stage.

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