Jess Carter Millie Bright Alex Greenwood Germany Denmark Spain Colombia Usa Australia Canada China Nigeria county Greenwood county Carter Football Jess Carter Millie Bright Alex Greenwood Germany Denmark Spain Colombia Usa Australia Canada China Nigeria county Greenwood county Carter

Colombia playing for all the Americas against England - coach

channelnewsasia.com

SYDNEY : Colombia will use its status as the last nation of the Americas at the Women's World Cup as motivation to beat England in Saturday's quarter-final, coach Nelson Abadia said.All other teams from Latin America, as well as the United States and Canada, were eliminated by the round-of-16, leaving 25th-ranked Colombia an unlikely survivor amongst the European and Asian powers in the last eight."To be representing the whole of the Americas at the moment is important," Abadia told reporters on Friday."Because of everything that happens around this national team - to have all this positive energy not only from Colombia but from the whole continent - is beneficial."Colombia head into their first World Cup quarter-final at Sydney's Stadium Australia as underdogs against England but the South Americans have already proved themselves against quality European opposition in their 2-1 upset of Germany in the group stage.Forward Mayra Ramirez said European champions England were favourites but it was "11 against 11" on the field."Colombia has shown that we have talent and that we have sacrificed on the pitch.

We hope for a positive result," she added.Colombia were asked about England switching formation to three at the back after losing Keira Walsh to injury against Denmark.Jess Carter and Alex Greenwood were on either side of Millie Bright for England's 6-1 win over China and the round-of-16 victory on penalties against Nigeria.Ramirez said the formation was no novelty for Colombia's players, with some familiar with it from playing club football in Spain."It's going to be difficult for us but we know how to attack them," she said."We can do a little bit of damage and this is what we're going to be trying to do during the

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SYDNEY: History will be made at the Women's World Cup on Sunday (Aug 20) when England and Spain clash in the final in Sydney, with both bidding to win the tournament for the first time.
SYDNEY : England coach Sarina Wiegman named an unchanged side for the Women's World Cup final at Stadium Australia on Sunday while Spain added 19-year-old forward Salma Paralluelo to the lineup.
History will be made at the Women's World Cup on Sunday when England and Spain clash in the final in Sydney with both bidding to win the tournament for the first time. The game kicks off at 1000 GMT in front of an anticipated sell-out crowd of about 75,000 at Stadium Australia. It will be the final act of a tournament full of shocks which began one month ago and started with 32 teams, making it the biggest Women's World Cup ever. Now they are down to the last two and it's a final too close to call. Neither team has ever got this far before. The two sides last met at the European Championship last summer, when hosts England squeezed into the semi-finals 2-1 in extra time and went on to lift the trophy.
Skipper Millie Bright said that England will need to play "the game of our lives" to beat Spain in Sunday's Women's World Cup final. When the Lionesses kick off at Stadium Australia in Sydney they will attempt to do what no England side, men or women, has managed since 1966 -- win the World Cup. Bright said the European champions must treat it as just another game, but admitted there was no escaping the enormity of the occasion for the country, the team and the players. Like Spain, England are into the final for the first time. "We know how passionate our nation is back home and how much they want us to win," Bright said on Saturday.

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