Christine Sinclair Katie Maccabe Megan Connolly Bev Priestman Adriana Leon Britain Canada Ireland Nigeria curling UPS performer win comeback cup Christine Sinclair Katie Maccabe Megan Connolly Bev Priestman Adriana Leon Britain Canada Ireland Nigeria

Comeback win can ignite Canada's World Cup campaign, says Priestman

channelnewsasia.com

PERTH: Canada's ability to come back and beat Ireland 2-1 on Wednesday (Jul 26) could prove to be the pivotal moment for the Olympic champions in their Women's World Cup campaign, coach Bev Priestman said.Canada went behind to a stunning goal directly from a corner in the fourth minute, but rallied to equalise on the stroke of halftime before completing the turnaround early in the second half."I said at the end, 'It can be the making of us,'" Priestman told a press conference. "It's tough.

We wobbled in the first half, our bravery wasn't there and I felt we played a little bit scared."I reminded them that we're Olympic champions and that we've got to take a step forward and be brave and get after this, and it's not going to be easy.

The character, the quality, the experience that came about in the second half, that's the type of performance that we need."Canada looked nothing like Olympic champions in their 0-0 draw with Nigeria and for the first half on Wednesday.

When Ireland captain Katie McCabe curled in a brilliant corner kick early on, Canada's chances felt as funereal as the sodden weather at Perth Rectangular Stadium.But an own goal by Ireland midfielder Megan Connolly evened things up just before halftime, then Adriana Leon scored in the 53rd minute, and the seventh-ranked Canadians thoroughly dominated until the final whistle."When we play brave, we can be unstoppable," Priestman added. "I think it took it took a rocket in the first half and halftime to really make us believe that and I think when this team plays with bravery and belief, we can do what we did in that the second half."The British coach also made some key changes at halftime, bringing on 40-year-old Christine Sinclair and Sophie Schmidt, who have

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MELBOURNE: Hayley Raso scored a first half brace and Mary Fowler struck after the break as Australia crushed Canada 4-0 on Monday (Jul 31) to storm into the last 16 of the Women's World Cup and send the Olympic champions spinning out of the tournament.
Monday marked the end of the road for the Canadian team at the  Women's World Cup. Australia's Matildas came out blazing, not waltzing, and solidified their qualification to the next round. Along with Australia, Nigeria's Super Falcons also move on with the Canadians in third place in Group B. 
MELBOURNE, Australia : Canada's Olympic champions are heading home from the Women's World Cup stunned and heartbroken - and still without a medal in the tournament from eight appearances.
Hayley Raso scored a first half brace and Mary Fowler struck after the break as Australia crushed Canada 4-0 on Monday to storm into the last 16 of the Women's World Cup and send the Olympic champions spinning out of the tournament.
Co-hosts Australia have to beat Canada on Monday or risk an unthinkable exit from the Women's World Cup in the first round, while former champions Japan take on Spain with top spot in their group on the line. Australia are sweating on the fitness of star forward and captain Sam Kerr for the Group B game against Canada in Melbourne which starts at 1000 GMT and where only a win will guarantee them a place in the last 16. Kerr has missed the Matildas' two matches so far, in which they beat the Republic of Ireland 1-0 but then suffered a surprise 3-2 defeat against Nigeria.
Canada’s coach Bev Priestman attends a press conference in Melbourne on July 30, 2023, on the eve of the Women’s World Cup football match between Canada and Australia. (Photo by William WEST / AFP)

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