Shaw sent off as Reggae Girlz hold wasteful France to stalemate for first-ever World Cup point

By David Shilovsky / Expert

A resolute Jamaica outfit has held France to a 0-0 draw at Allianz Stadium, the Reggae Girlz’ first-ever competition point at a World Cup.

The wasteful Les Bleus were on top for large stretches of the contest but could not capitalise on their huge possession advantage and 13 attempts on goal that gave Rebecca Spencer plenty of work to do in the Jamaica goal.

It is a valuable point for the Reggae Girlz, but it wasn’t all good news as striker Khadija Shaw was sent for an early shower in injury time when she was booked for the second time after a bad challenge.

For Herve Renard’s France outfit it was two points dropped after their wasteful attack could not break down Spencer. An important clash with Brazil looms next Saturday, where a defeat would spell disaster for Les Bleus.

Continuing the theme of favourites starting slowly in the opening few days of the World Cup, France were sluggish in the early stages, clearly ahead in the possession column but making little use of all that ball.

There was early concern for both coaches after a head clash between Shaw and Ellie Carpenter’s club teammate Wendie Renard, but after a significant delay both women were able to continue.

As expected Les Bleus were in complete control of possession early on, moving the ball at ease with Jamaica sitting deep.

The earlier downpour in Sydney made for a very slick surface, with players struggling at times to keep their footing.

On the back of an excellent overlapping run fullback Maelle Lakrar found herself in space in the penalty area but overhit her cross badly, putting an end to an excellent passage of play from Les Bleus.

The Reggae Girlz were managing to make inroads, transitioning well when winning possession from their high energy defending but lacking quality in the final third.

For all their possession France, too, were unable to create much of substance, with Renard cutting an unimpressed figure in the technical area as the contest remained scoreless after 25 minutes.

Shaw was quite isolated up front, being swarmed by defenders whenever Jamaica found their striker.

A quick transition led to an opening for Kadidiatou Diani, but Spencer was able to parry the strike out for a corner.

Presented with another opportunity to deliver a cross, Lakrar’s cut-back again could only find a Jamaican shirt.

Five minutes of injury time was added on to the first half, continuing another trend in this tournament as well as last year’s men’s World Cup.

An Amel Majri cross/shot gave Spencer some trouble but she was able to lay a glove on it.

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Diani then controlled a ball with an exquisite first touch, before firing off a deflected side-footed effort that flashed past the post for another Les Bleus corner.

That was all from a busy yet anti-climactic first half in Sydney that featured three yellow cards – the most of any first 45 minutes in the tournament so far – as the mercury dropped and the wet weather returned.

The second stanza began much as the first ended, with France continuing to pile on the pressure.

The Reggae Girlz looked tired from all the defending they were forced to do, unable to keep hold of the ball when they managed to win it back. There was an air of inevitability about a France goal, having already won 13 set-pieces with multiple in dangerous areas.

Chance after chance was going begging for Renard’s side as they had only managed to send three attempts on target to trouble Spencer.

Renard had seen enough, withdrawing Majri and Clara Mateo in favour of Kenza Dali and Vicki Becho in hopes of breaking the deadlock.

Diani, despite being among France’s best and spared from being replaced, was responsible for a few of those – the latest a free header inside the six-yard area that again missed the target.

(Photo by Mark Metcalfe – FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)

It was all one-way traffic with Spencer given increasingly more to do but not being seriously tested between the sticks.

Rain started to absolutely teem down, sending some of the near sell-out crowd scrambling for cover as Les Bleus toiled away in search of that elusive goal that had once seemed inevitable.

As the clock ticked down France came even closer, this time Diani’s header cannoning back off the crossbar. It did not appear to be the forward’s night, working extremely hard but coming up empty at each time of asking in the penalty area.

Trouble came for Jamaica in the 92nd minute, with Shaw sent off for a second bookable offence after a bad challenge. The star forward will miss Jamaica’s second group game against Panama in Perth.

There was time for one more chance, with Dali’s off-balance strike not enough to breach Spencer’s clean sheet.

The full-time whistle provoked a wall of noise from the Jamaican faithful as the Reggae Girlz held on for a famous point.

For Les Bleus, a huge clash with Brazil at Suncorp Stadium that could decide who tops the group beckons on Saturday.

The Crowd Says:

2023-07-25T03:06:41+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


Wow - what a game. Plenty of people and even more passion. Great atmosphere and great game - perhaps 20000 people here. How good is it seeing the world game here at home.

AUTHOR

2023-07-25T00:14:36+00:00

David Shilovsky

Expert


Blue skies here at the SFS. Should be a good one.

AUTHOR

2023-07-25T00:14:05+00:00

David Shilovsky

Expert


That's my bad, I'd seen that number and a few empty seats at other games and extrapolated. As usual, NoMates has no idea.

2023-07-24T22:13:39+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


I didn’t mean to repeat myself - getting a bit older. BTW, did I tell you that the WWC of football…

2023-07-24T22:11:26+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


The Women’s World Cup of football has already sold twice as many tickets as the women’s rugby union World Cup in a rugby union nation. That indicates NZ has embraced it.

2023-07-24T22:09:55+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


I’m at that game as well. I wouldn’t be surprised if we’re pleasantly surprised. A midday game on a workday should draw Sheffield Shield cricket crowds only, but I’m guessing 15000. I hope there’s more. You’re right about media. I haven’t read newspapers for a long time and my kids (now adults) have never read the paper. I only watch the Channel 10 news, when I can, because they support football - my kids don’t watch the news, but they are certainly aware of what’s happening in our WORLD. And as someone else wrote - the ABC is doing a great job with the WWC.

2023-07-24T22:02:58+00:00

chris1

Roar Rookie


Grem that's the point though. The media that the younger generations consume are full of WWC stories. And as you pointed out, this is the best attended WWC ever. What other womens sport would get 30k plus on a weeknight against 2 non home teams? And 40k at the SFS the other night. Will be interesting to see what todays lunch time crowd will get in Sydney for S Korea v Colombia. Im taking a few hours off work to attend :)

2023-07-24T21:59:21+00:00

chris1

Roar Rookie


I disagree that they've been disappointing in NZ. The only poor crowd was the Dutch game. All the others (including Italy v Argies last night) were pretty full if not full. And crowds in Aus have been fantastic. And it will only get better as the competition intensifies.

2023-07-24T20:53:55+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


The Women’s Football World Cup has so far sold twice as many tickets in New Zealand as the Women’s rugby union World Cup. As rugby union is their number 1 sport, I think NZ has embraced the competition very well.

2023-07-24T20:11:03+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


Over 1.5 million tickets sold now. Average crowds of well over 30000 - this is the most successful WWC ever. It is the new benchmark. Now imagine the results with more media support.

AUTHOR

2023-07-24T15:08:29+00:00

David Shilovsky

Expert


I've been impressed with them. I'm not advocating them as the savouirs of Aus football, but they have really shaped up since the early days.

AUTHOR

2023-07-24T15:05:06+00:00

David Shilovsky

Expert


Granted, yes, the crowds across the ditch have been a bit disappointing. Can you at least acknowledge some of the fantastic scenes here at home?

2023-07-24T13:44:51+00:00

NoMates

Roar Rookie


And crowds in NZ? Same world cup.......

2023-07-24T10:35:26+00:00

pacman

Roar Rookie


One step forward! They should all know the rules!

2023-07-24T10:33:14+00:00

pacman

Roar Rookie


Same with me.

2023-07-24T08:47:12+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


Optus shows every game. That’s why I have it for a month.

AUTHOR

2023-07-24T08:21:43+00:00

David Shilovsky

Expert


Your doom and gloom shtick is digestible - just - but please don't invent things out of thin air. 39,000 people there last night for two countries with healthy but not huge expat populations.

AUTHOR

2023-07-24T08:19:59+00:00

David Shilovsky

Expert


Shaw was excellent, looking a bit like Foord the other night - all on her own.

2023-07-24T07:27:11+00:00

NoMates

Roar Rookie


You wouldnt even know a world cup is on with Optus only showing every other game on there service. So many games with no one watching, a bit like the crowds actually.

2023-07-24T07:11:04+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


It was a great game to be at last night. 39000 spectators was great. Jamaica did well to draw and they just held on towards the end. I was hoping they might jag a goal to really put the pressure on France, but their striker was often isolated when the ball came to her and the counter attack broke down. The future results in this group will be interesting.

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