Bittersweet finale to incredible tournament for Aussie fans as England schooled by masters of the dark arts

By Texi / Roar Rookie

Spain and England put on a show on Sunday night for the World Cup final that put their semi-final victories into perspective.

These were the two best teams in the competition, they didn’t look out on their feet as Australia and Sweden had done in their third-place play-off match a day earlier and the football on show was fast, concise and full of intent.

The action matched the occasion, and the result saw the best team on the night victorious. Salma Paralluelo was simply outstanding as the spearhead of the Spanish attack, and the England defence had their hands full containing her dazzling skills and those of her teammates.

Reaction from the England followers during and after the game was general uproar at the way the Spanish players dived and conned, and there were moans about their time-wasting tactics and the way they slowed the game down to get the maximum from every stoppage. That’s game management at its finest.

The neutral fans, and indeed a large contingent of Australian fans at Stadium Australia, would definitely not lose any sleep seeing England get a taste of the medicine they happily dispensed in the semi-final only four nights previously. The crowd was pro-England, the songs chosen to accompany the spectacle had an English persuasion. In fact, it could be even argued that Spain had the rough end of the stick from the officials too, which makes their victory even more remarkable.

There was a selection of moments, other than the goalmouth action and the chances, that made this an entertaining spectacle for the 75,000 in attendance.

 (Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images)

When Lucy Bronze brought down Olga Carmona early in the game, Lauren Hemp decided to stand over the ball. Carmona went to play the free-kick quickly into the shins of Hemp and give the referee something to think about, but she simply opened her legs, letting the ball through, which put Spain into a tricky situation at the back and England almost scored.

We then had a pitch invader, who quickly raced onto the field from a corner of the stadium, casting off his loose clothing and evading security until he did a someone anti-climactic dive onto the field. He was all in black, his t-shirt reading ‘Stop Putler’, a mash-up of Russian president Vladimir Putin and the German dictator Adolf Hitler.

He was manhandled away from view by an entourage of burly security guards, and once down one of the tunnels, one security guard could be seen trying to wrestle his arm into a different position to make the arrest. Not long after, Spain took the lead with a cleverly crafted goal and a sweet finish from Carmona from the left.

Lauren James copped some boos when she appeared for the second half, an interesting sub-plot to the main story, joining Spanish coach Jorge Vilda as the pantomime villain.

Teresa Abelleira tried to score direct from a corner with an audacious outside-of-the-foot shot that skewed behind. The referee must have seen something that no one else saw when booking Hemp, who lunged in to try and intercept a back pass, and caught neither ball nor player, but in the main the officials were trying their best to keep the game flowing.

When Keira Walsh stuck out an arm as Spain were threatening to score, referee Tori Penso was right on the spot and waved it away, laughing and almost refusing to be drawn in by the VAR penalty check. Once she had been summonsed to the sideline to discuss the incident, it was clear that she was not impressed, and after two minutes of deliberation, way too long to constitute an on-field footballing decision of any kind, she reluctantly signalled the penalty.

(Photo by Andy Cheung/Getty Images)

The England players did everything in their powers to disrupt the penalty, and when Mary Earps guessed right to smother Jenni Hermoso’s penalty, the whole stadium saw that she was off her line. Except the VAR and the officials, who waved play on much to the bemusement of the neutral fan, who had become accustomed to the retake and curtailment of excitement that stepping off the line usually brings.

Chloe Kelly wowed the crowd with her close control, Paralluelo was booked for a collision with Alex Greenwood that seemed harsh in real time until the replay showed a knee to the head, and the huge delay allowed the crowd to indulge in a spectacular Mexican wave that was perfectly timed and executed to bring Stadium Australia to a crescendo.

When Hermoso came back on to the field after treatment for having studs raked across her legs, an England substitution occurred simultaneously at the halfway line, Hermoso’s number being held aloft, causing confusion with the referee, who ushered Hermoso off the field again. It was pure comedy now.

Paralluelo was fortunate not to get a second yellow for kicking the ball away over the advertising hoardings, Spain were denied a second goal by the foot of Earps, and the final 13 minutes of additional time were incredibly exciting.

Greenwood, patched up with a huge bandage around her head, played a long ball to no one to the frustration of her teammates. A phantom whistle in the crowd signalled the final whistle a minute in advance, but there was still a late corner to deal with, the England keeper coming forward to join the search for a dramatic equaliser. When goalkeeper Cata Coll grabbed the corner and fell to the ground with ball tucked in her arms, it was only a moment before the whistle had gone and the Spanish celebrations could begin.

As World Cup finals go, this one was an absolute classic. England played the part of wounded animal in their tenacious fight for an equalising goal, with a partisan crowd behind them, while Spain made counter attack their best form of defence and could have been out of sight at the end of the game.

For the Australians in the crowd, the overwhelming majority of the football fans at the stadium, this was bittersweet. To lose to the eventual champions would be a badge of honour, but to see England frustrated in the same way that the Matildas had to endure on Wednesday night was perhaps the karma that we all needed to bring closure to the tournament. What a World Cup this has been, drama and excitement right up until the very last moment of the last game. And it all happened here in our own backyard.

The Crowd Says:

2023-08-22T11:34:35+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Thanks Texi, When the Matildas made the semi-final, naive 4-yearly world cup fans like myself dreamed of the impossible. But after successive losses & the dominant manhandling of England by Spain, it was obvious that 4th was always going to be the best Matildas position. All the talk about Tony Gustavsson better using his subs is just that, talk. Interestingly, the SMH will print an article tomorrow (Wednesday) about the kms run by many women in this world cup. It looks as if Caitlin Food & Steph Catley both ran close to 2 marathons. But they won't be the only ones. In any case, the Matildas were, being brutally honest, the 4th best of the semi-finalists. That's the brutal truth. To win the next world cup, we're going to need another Sam Kerr-like to join her & Mary Fowler in attack; we're going to need another Caitlin Foord-like to join her, Hayley Rosso & Kyra Cooney-Cross in the midfield; & we're going to need another tough nut Steph Catley-like to join her in defence. And when I talk of Foord-like & Catley-like players, I mean before the semis, by which time both these girls had hit the proverbial brick wall. Nevertheless the Matildas were magnificent, winning the hearts of Australians throughout the country with their plucky display.

2023-08-21T06:38:55+00:00

Kangas

Roar Rookie


Justice for what. England were better than the Matildas in every facet of the semi final. We all prefer to think Australia were angels on the field , gorry raso and a few others have made tactical fouls during this tournament. I’d still rather be Lucy bronze in the final despite losing , and a be a 3 time winner of women’s champions league and euros winner .

2023-08-21T06:34:34+00:00

Kangas

Roar Rookie


You make some good points but it’s too simplistic to say England play without skill and Spain without strength. It’s the combination of these and a host of other factors which determine a game . I was happy Spain won , but if Spain played England 10 times I think they would win 5 each . It’s also worth remembering that neither team was close to full strength last night as both had very important players not available for the tournament through late season injuries and other issues. England have been developing far more skilled players the last 10 years which has seen them win under age 20s or 19s age group tournaments and seen their women win the euros and men’s team euro finalists and wc semis. Just recently Spain big club Real Madrid spent the house on an English kid called Jude Bellingham.young English Skilled Players like Saka and grealish are coming through regularly now , so I’d say England are certainly on the right pathway.

2023-08-21T05:54:15+00:00

pete4

Roar Rookie


I read 7 of the starting 11 players for Spain play for Barcelona anyway so lots of cohesion there. How VAR missed the penalty retake who knows :laughing:

AUTHOR

2023-08-21T04:43:47+00:00

Texi

Roar Rookie


I'd also forgotten about the moment Earps took a free kick in additional time fully 20 yards further up the field from where the infringement was. Referee just didn't seem to care. Yet, the officials were so picky about where the throw-ins happened from. This was such a good game, I think I needto watch the full replay to see what else I missed.

2023-08-21T03:48:58+00:00

pacman

Roar Rookie


A contest between skill (Spain) and strength (England), and it was pleasing to see the former win out. Skill on its own, of course, is not sufficient, but the Spaniards were as equally determined as their opponents. Spain were far more skilful, including their passing game. In fact, I thought they made England look 2nd rate, and the scoreline could have reflected this if not for the stellar performance of Mary Earps in the England goal. For mine, Colombia and Japan were also high performers in the skills stakes. as displayed in particular by Japan waking Spain up 4-0 in their Group match. Upon reflection, I believe our coaching authorities should prioritise skill training, and also learn how, in women's football, Spain has achieved world champion status at U/17, U/20, and now at the open level. They are obviously doing something that no other nation is doing, and it starts long before players reach U/17 levels.

2023-08-21T03:47:19+00:00

chris1

Roar Rookie


It was Karma looking at Lucy Bronze screaming at the ref for "justice" and the England bench up in arms over the time wasting etc.

AUTHOR

2023-08-21T03:31:09+00:00

Texi

Roar Rookie


Yes. They were so relaxed in possession too. If this is their team without a host of superstars who refused to play for the national team under Jorge Vilda, imagine how good they would have been with all those players. And that penalty save; I wonder why that wasn’t called back for a retake? Special World Cup final rules? They took so long to work out whether it was a penalty in the first place, how could they have collectively missed it?

2023-08-21T02:51:16+00:00

pete4

Roar Rookie


Tactically I thought Spain got it right. They played a high press and England had no answer (exactly what our Matildas could have done against them :crying:)

AUTHOR

2023-08-21T01:48:04+00:00

Texi

Roar Rookie


This could be the catalyst for a lot of people to enter the addictive realm of football tourism. We'll not get it back here in a lifetime, but the world is our oyster. Imagine doing a World Cup, following the Matildas or the Socceroos, in another country. It's bloody amazing!

2023-08-21T00:51:45+00:00

Kangas

Roar Rookie


Nice recap of an absolutely brilliant tournament. FIFA should bring the women’s World Cup back to Australia in 8 years. I’m a bit sad it’s over. I totally enjoyed that final, and even the Sweden win over Australia was fantastic , just to see how good the Swedes are .

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