Brazil v USA: Olympic women’s soccer final – live updates | Paris Olympic Games 2024

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The substitution issue: We’ve heard a lot about the USA being fatigued from a lack of lineup rotation throughout this tournament.

Here’s the problem …

They don’t have depth.

Jenna Nighswonger has looked overwhelmed by the occasion. Emma Hayes apparently doesn’t have faith in Jaedyn Shaw, who has not played a minute in France. Lynn Williams was ineffective in her last appearance.

Casey Krueger is a good veteran presence at outside back. Might we see her sooner than usual?

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Halftime: USA 0-0 Brazil

The USA are remarkably fortunate to have reached this point without going behind.

Substitution ideas:

– Rose Lavelle for either Albert or Coffey

– Emily Sonnett for Davidson

– The Naomi Girma who has played for the last couple of years in place of the Naomi Girma who’s playing today. Not to single her out, but she has been such a dominant force at center back in this tournament and for a good while leading up to it, and she’s struggling right now.

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45 min +5: Long ball ahead to Smith. She seems to be fouled, but she was offside first.

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45 min +3: Girma is having a game miles below her usual standard. She sagged away from Portilho there to allow the shot. It’s a world-class save by Naeher to keep it 0-0.

You have to like the USA’s odds if this goes to penalties.

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45 min +2: HUGE SAVE FOR NAEHER, point-blank from Portilho.

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45 min +1: Brazil have the ball deep.

Arsene Wenger is on hand.

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45 min: Swanson takes the kick, and Brazil immediately head it clear.

Foul near midfield on Albert. Brazil scream for a yellow card, but Olofsson again cuts off the conversation.

I was right – six minutes of stoppage time. Can the USA hold on?

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44 min: USA free kick near the sideline, nearly 40 yards out.

I think they’re due to score from one.

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43 min: The USA try to break free after the corner, but the ball is played off Smith for a Brazil throw-in.

I’ll anticipate 37 minutes of stoppage time. Well, maybe six – a few stoppages for medical attention and a long hydration break.

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42 min: Rodman wins the ball, but only briefly. Brazil keep it in play in the corner, and Girma has to reach a leg out to concede the corner.

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41 min: Vitoria Yaya wins the ball at midfield and unleashes a low-percentage long-range shot.

Davidson was injured earlier in the Games, and she might not be up for this. Will we see Emily Sonnett at halftime?

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39 min: The USA are dispossessed far too easily.

Brazil come forward, and Naeher tries to boot the ball out of play, aiming diagonally for the intersection of the center line and touch line, but Brazil intercept.

Gabi Portilho leaves Davidson chasing ghosts and then crosses. Emily Fox heads it away for a corner kick.

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38 min: Not sure how Sophia Smith got that foul called to her benefit.

Marta is warming up. We’ll surely see her in the second half. Nothing like bringing one of the best women’s soccer players ever off the bench.

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37 min: A non-dangerous shot/cross from the USA.

Brazil move forward, and the crowd have gone virtually silent for some reason. It was a boisterous atmosphere for quite a while.

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34 min: Sophia Smith works on the left flank and centers, but no one has kept up with the play.

Back pass to Lorena, and it’s dangerously weak. Swanson rushes forward to challenge. She runs into Lorena – didn’t seem too bad, but Lorena and the trainers decide to take their time before the game is allowed to continue.

Brazil can be accused of gamesmanship on occasion, but given the fact that they’ve rotated their lineup through the Games and the USA haven’t, you’d think time-wasting would benefit the USA.

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As usual, this break runs longer than the supposed one minute.

Peter Oh writes: “The Tom Cruise sighting will come in handy when the referee starts being accused of having her Eyes Wide Shut.”

We also saw Nicole Kidman somewhere at the Games – maybe gymnastics?

Jeffry D. England: “The inconsistency with immediate and delayed offsides calls is really awful.”

That was indeed a strange decision to raise the flag on Smith. We haven’t seen a replay, and the call may very well have been correct. But it was surely close enough to check had Smith raced forward and scored.

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30 min: Hydration break!

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29 min: We’re having an issue with … the ball. It’s changed out before the USA take another futile free kick.

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28 min: Long ball into the box for Ludmila, but she can’t get a head to it.

The USA’s outside backs are being completely overrun.

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27 min: Swanson does not try the olimpico this time. It’s nowhere near connecting with a player.

The Brazilian counterattack nearly catches Naeher well off her line. Maybe 20 yards away.

Brazil center, and Girma clears.

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26 min: CHANCE FOR THE USA! Mallory Swanson turns the corner on the counterattack! Saved, but the USA keep possession. Horan sends it over to Rodman, who earns another corner.

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Updated at 

25 min: Better defending from the USA here, with Davidson interposing her body to shield the ball long enough for Naeher to collect.

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23 min: Swanson again seems to be going for the olimpico, and Lorena has to leap to pluck the ball from the air. It was probably going too far past the far post, though.

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23 min: Coffey is knocked to the ground, but the referee rightly raises her hand to play advantage. USA earn another corner.

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21 min: Will we see VAR intervention here? Crystal Dunn tries to shut down Adriana and earns a goal kick, but Adriana is looking for a penalty. Replay shows Dunn made some contact with her back leg. But the VAR check passes. No foul

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20 min: Stern words from our Swedish referee to several Brazilian players after Swanson is roughed up in midfield.

Rodman is then whistled for a foul that seems … a little embellished? Maybe?

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18 min: Another good chance as Gabi Portilho easily beats Tierna Davidson and crosses just ahead of the onrushing Ludmila.

This is looking a lot more like the 2007 World Cup semifinal (Brazil 4-0) than the 2008 Olympic final (USA 1-0). Brazil are running rampant.

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17 min: Rodman gets a little grab-happy with Tarciane. Foul.

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Goooaaal … NO!

Or at least a VAR check.

Ludmila turns past Girma with stunning ease and blasts the ball into the net from an acute angle.

The flag and VAR bail out the US defense.

Naomi Girma has been the USA’s best player in this tournament. Shocking to see her beaten that easily.

Ludmila of Brazil sticks the ball in the net but is denied by he offside flag. Photograph: Benoît Tessier/Reuters
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15 min: Albert fouls Adriana by armbar. Wrong spot. She looks up in protest, but it was rather obvious.

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14 min: Naeher blasts the ball long, and the ball is flicked on to Smith. The flag goes up, which is a bit of a surprise given the instructions ARs have these days to wait and let VAR do their job for them.

A replay would be nice. That was close enough to take a look.

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12 min: The cameras find Tom Cruise in the crowd.

Mission impossible? Tom Cruise is in the house. Photograph: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images

Horan is fouled – that’s three fouls for Brazil to zero for the USA thus far.

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11 min: Rodman with an ankle-breaking move at midfield, and she’s free to play through to Smith, who once again earns a corner kick. That would’ve been one of the best assists we’ve seen from the US women.

Swanson places the corner kick on top of the net. Maybe trying an olimpico?

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Former USWNT forward Megan Rapinoe goes old school as she takes a picture from the stands. Photograph: Carl Recine/Getty Images
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10 min: The US corner only sparks a Brazilian counterattack. The USA scramble back.

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9 min: Mallory Swanson falls just outside the penalty area. No foul is given.

Swanson then swings out left and centers the ball to Smith, whose shot is blocked out of play for a corner. Much better from the USA here.

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8 min: Ludmila fouls Emily Fox, then points to her shoulder in an effort to claim it was a legal shoulder charge. Funny thing about the Laws of the Game – shoulder charges aren’t as protected as you might think.

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I have neglected to mention our officials today:

Referee: Tess Olofsson (Sweden)
VAR: Ivan Bebek (Croatia)

I feel like Bebek has been on every game in some capacity.

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6 min: Duda Sampaio brings the ball up the right flank with astonishing ease – where is Crystal Dunn? The center backs and midfielders scramble the ball clear.

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6 min: Finally some offensive possession for the USA, though it ends with a tame shot on goal from Sophia Smith from the top of the penalty area.

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5 min: And the streak continues … the ball is played too far in front of Horan.

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4 min: Mallory Swanson is fouled – time to mention for the first time today the USA’s utter ineptitude on free kicks. I believe the stat NBC cites is one goal in four and a half years.

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2 min: SHOT ON GOAL for Brazil. For the first time, Girma is beaten in central defense, though the real problem here was that Crystal Dunn kept Ludmila onside. The USA are a bit fortunate that the shot from 15 yards is right at Naeher and easily saved.

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1 min: If you hate bunkers/low blocks, good news – Brazil are taking the fight forward.

Joe Pearson writes: “Since Rose was wearing a compression sleeve on her left leg last time out, I figure your second reason is more accurate.”

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A bit surprising that Kerolin’s absence wasn’t emphasized in the announcements of the starting lineups.

The USA have broken out some striking blue jerseys with red shorts.

We’re underway …

Brazil players and United States players line up during the national anthems ahead of their gold medal match. Photograph: Isabel Infantes/Reuters
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Updated at 

Medal count: If you are obsessed with the medal count, this is a very important game for the USA – at least, if you’re one of those people who would rather reward China for being unbeatable in two sports (diving, table tennis) that award 13 gold medals rather than being good across the board in a multitude of sports.

China have jumped out to a lead in the gold-medal tally. The USA have plenty of opportunities to get back in it, but they’ll have to take advantage of a lot of those. This game would be a good start.

If Brazil win this, I doubt anyone will put this game in any context of medal counts. Brazil are easily the best team in the history of women’s soccer that have never claimed either of the grand prizes – the World Cup or the Olympics. They were runners-up in 2004, 2007 and 2008. Since then, the best they’ve managed is fourth in 2016.

Brazilian fans honor the legend, Marta. Photograph: Andrew Boyers/Reuters
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Brazil lineup

Again – NWSL MVP Kerolin is not in the lineup or on the bench.

Goalkeeper: Lorena (Gremio)

Defense (left to right): Tarciane (Houston/USA), Lauren (Madrid CFF/ESP), Thais (UDG Tenerife/ESP)

Midfield (left to right, supposedly): Yasmim (Corinthians), Duda Sampaio (Corinthians), Vitoria Yaya (Corinthians), captain Adriana (Orlando/USA)

Forwards: Ludmila (Chicago), Jhennifer (Corinthians), Gabi Portilho (Corinthians)

Wow – that’s a lot of players from one club.

Lauren was originally listed as an alternate.

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US lineup

Rose Lavelle is on the bench.

Repeat – Rose Lavelle, one of the best playmakers the US team have ever had, is on the bench. Korbin Albert and Sam Coffey have shared time in the No. 6 role. Today, they’re both starting.

Is that a lack of confidence on the part of Emma Hayes? Or does Hayes figure that Lavelle, whose injury history reads like a Shakespearean tragedy, isn’t fit to go 120 minutes, and she’d rather insert Lavelle in the 60th?

Everything else is expected.

Goalkeeper: Alyssa Naeher (Chicago)

Defense (left to right): Crystal Dunn (Gotham FC), Tierna Davidson (Gotham FC), Naomi Girma (San Diego), Emily Fox (Arsenal/ENG)

Midfield (roles to be determined): Korbin Albert (PSG/FRA), Sam Coffey (Portland), captain Lindsey Horan (Lyon/FRA)

Forwards: Sophia Smith (Portland), Mallory Swanson (Chicago), Trinity Rodman (Washington)

Lining up for the Gold Medal Match in Paris, our XI 🇺🇸#USWNT x @Visa

— U.S. Women’s National Soccer Team (@USWNT) August 10, 2024

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Preamble

In 2008, at the women’s soccer Olympic final, I sat down in the press tribune next to one of my colleagues and pronounced that the USA had no chance of winning.

How could they? They were facing a Brazilian team that had run them off the field in the 2007 World Cup. Abby Wambach had broken her leg and missed the Olympics. Brazil was finally going to get its first world or Olympic championship.

But the defense held up, Carli Lloyd put a speculative shot into the goal in extra time, and the USA had gold once again.

This time, the USA should be favored. Brazil didn’t get out of its group in last year’s World Cup after a 0-0 draw with Jamaica. The USA beat this team 1-0 in the Gold Cup final in March while tinkering with lineups under an interim coach. Brazil barely got through the group stage in these Olympics.

Last week, Marta’s career seemed doomed to end with the ignominy of a red card. Now it could end with an elusive championship – though she’s listed on the bench in the just-released lineups. Kerolin, the 2023 NWSL MVP, isn’t listed on the lineup at all.

But is Brazil the team of destiny this time? They’ve beaten France and Spain. The US attack has been inefficient in the knockout rounds.

Is it time for payback – and a long-awaited gold medal for one of the best players women’s soccer has ever seen?

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Beau will be here shortly, in the meantime here’s Karen Carney on today’s game:

At the beginning of the Olympics few expected Emma Hayes to take the USA all the way to the final in Paris, months after starting her job as the coach of a struggling women’s national team – but she has made an immediate impact.

My former manager at Chelsea will take on Brazil – and one of my all-time heroes, Marta – in Saturday’s gold-medal match. I am privileged that I will witness in person Hayes’s quest to become an Olympic champion. Some doubted what she could achieve in such a short time but when I booked my seat months ago, in the back of my mind I thought Hayes and the USA would be in the final. I suspected they would come up against Spain, only for Brazil to dispatch the world champions comprehensively in the semi-finals, showing how dangerous the South Americans are.

I am sure Hayes would have accepted getting to learn about her group of young and exciting players but she always backs herself to get to a final and has quickly brought confidence to a group who are enjoying their football after turbulent times. Winning is obviously very helpful but creating the right environment has always been one of Hayes’s strengths.

Hayes has worked in the States and with plenty of Americans so she is not a complete outsider and knows what makes individuals tick. Alongside her is the American Denise Reddy, her assistant in her last four years at Chelsea, so they have a good understanding of what they want to create, which has helped accelerate the process.

You can read the full article below:

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