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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
Sport
Jonathan Howcroft

Australia 0-1 Sweden: Tokyo Olympics 2020 women’s football semi-final – as it happened

Fridolina Rolfo of Sweden scores their first goal
Australia’s Matildas take on Sweden for a place in the gold medal match of the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games. Follow live updates from Australia vs Sweden in the semi-final of the women’s football tournament at the Olympics. Photograph: Carl Recine/Reuters

Summary

That’ll do on here for now, thank you for your company. Keep your eyes peeled for plenty of reaction, as well as build-up and coverage of the medal matches.

There is, of course, much more Olympic action to gorge on, which you can find here:

“Not to take anything away from Australia, or indeed Canada, but Sweden have been the best team I’ve seen at these Olympics,” emails Kári Tulinius, and I reckon most observers would agree. “They seem to have a clear idea what to do every time they get the ball, and every player knows their role when they defend. Maybe this time Sweden will break their football final curse, at the umpteenth time of asking.”

This will be Sweden’s second Olympic final, to go with one runner-up finish in the World Cup, not to mention four further semis across both competitions. They’re due.

Australia should relish the bronze medal match with the USA. They have acquitted themselves admirably all tournament, and the mighty US have been under par, so this could be a golden (bronzen?) opportunity to catch them napping. Win or lose, full steam ahead 2023.

Sweden will start favourites for the gold medal against Canada, but they need to fix up the connection between their front four on tonight’s showing. There was a lack of cohesion all night, and aside from the fortunate goal, and Rolfö’s drive against the bart in the first half, they offered little, despite long spells of possession. Their defensive was sound though, and the midfield, anchored by captain Seger, very impressive.

Valiant from Australia. They dominated possession and territory for long spells against a very good Sweden, but were unable to find the breakthrough. That first-half disallowed goal from Kerr will be scrutinised like the Zapruder footage in the coming days, but there’s nothing that can be done about it now.

A series of long diagonals and teasing crosses put Sweden under pressure late on, but there were never enough yellow shirts in the box to make it count.

Full-time: Australia 0-1 Sweden

Sweden move on to face Canada for the gold medal. Australia will take on USA for bronze.

Red card! Australia (Carpenter 90+5)

Late late late counterattack from Sweden. Hurtig hurtling towards goal. Carpenter drags her back. Clear red card. One of Australia’s best out of the bronze medal match.

90+4 mins: The Matildas have run out of steam. Gustavsson is begging for one final effort.

90+3 mins: Brilliant run from Rolfö to get to the byline, she draws Micah to her, the goal is open - and Blackstenius shanks wide! That was the sealer on a plate!

90+2 mins: Sweden have the ball where they want it, deep in Australian territory.

90+1 mins: Five minutes added time.

89 mins: Poor turnover from Sweden invites Catley to burst forward, but she is knackered, and her attempt to feed Kerr falls well short. Jakobsson then dribbles the other way, EvE concedes a foul, and Sweden can wind down the clock in a dangerous position.

88 mins: Time running out for Australia. The ball in from the right finds nobody. Then the one from the left is only to blue shirts. It’s unsophisticated right now from the Aussies.

87 mins: The game is stretched now, but Sweden can’t take advantage of a three-on-three near Australia’s box. The Matildas respond in a flash, Cooney-Cross hoisting another long diagonal into the penalty area for Kerr to contest. The skipper causes havoc but the ball lands Sweden’s way and Gielnik can’t feed on the scraps.

86 mins: Sweden enjoy a rare moment in attack, but they don’t seem to know whether to stick or twist and Australia smuggle the turnover and break. Sweden deal with it and Jakobsson is soon in space down the right ready to delivery towards the penalty spot, only for the magnificent Carpenter to execute another brilliant last ditch block.

Updated

84 mins: ... or Kennedy. But the big centre-half miscues high wide and not very handsome.

Gielnik replaces Raso.

83 mins: Cooney-Cross to Fowler; the youngster steps inside one with a glorious first touch, around another, and she’s down. Fowler really catches the eye. This is a shooting chance for Catley, 25 metres out.

81 mins: Fowler again, this time flicking on for Raso down the right. Her cross fizzes across the six-yard line but Kerr is not on the end of it. Australia not giving up without a fight.

80 mins: Australia find Kerr with space to run and she drives to the edge of the box but loses her footing and Sweden clear. Fowler has made a difference since coming on.

79 mins: Lovely roll from Foord in the No 9 shirt, turning a wall pass into a run on goal, but the optimistic hit from range is weak.

78 mins: this time Catley’s delivery finds Kerr on the run at the near post but she can’t keep the header down and Sweden can take their time to clear.

77 mins: Lindahl has done just enough all night to a series of corners swung in her direction, getting just enough of a fist to clear to the edge of the box. They can’t retain possession though and Australia continue to dominate territory, Catley hustling for yet another corner.

76 mins: Sweden are struggling to clear their lines at the moment and the fourth or fifth poor turnover results in an Australian corner after another dangerous angled ball into the box is flicked behind. Sweden living dangerously.

75 mins: Sweden cough up possession in their own half, but Australia are slow in possession until the long diagonal ball lands at Catley’s feet just inside the box, and her left-footed rasper is palmed behind by Lindahl at her near post. Excellent driving contact from the Arsenal star.

72 mins: Sweden should do better. Rolfo was steaming down the left waiting for the pass into her stride from Blackstenius a la Carlos Alberto to Pele in 1970 - but the pass is poor and Carpenter makes a brilliant block.

Down the other end Fowler is very busy on the ball to engineer half a yard and whip a snapshot that scoots wide.

69 mins: Polkinghorne, Cooney-Cross, and Fowler all come on for Australia in a triple substitution. Yallop, Simon, and Logarzo make way.

68 mins: Sweden are structured very very well, dropping to deny Kerr space in behind but then pushing up when the ball is with Australia’s back three. They still look edgy dealing with crosses though, and another fine delivery from Yallop almost works in Raso’s favour. That approach certainly looks like Australia’s best route to goal, if they can only find enough possession and territory.

67 mins: Errors creeping into both teams as the heat, humidity and fatigue takes its toll. Asllani had a great chance to run at Australia’s defence but she can’t control Jakobsson’s pass.

66 mins: That doesn’t mean they can’t spring forward quickly, but not for the first time tonight Jakobsson fails to take the right option on the edge of the box.

65 mins: Australia get a grip on possession after a spell chasing the game, but Sweden are designed for game situations like this and are quick to adopt a low block with bodies behind the ball.

62 mins: Australia deal with the set piece, but again Logarzo is robbed in possession coming out of the back third. Angeldal tries to catch Micah off her line from 30m out, but her effort is off target. The Matildas are looking a tad unsteady.

62 mins: Another corner to Sweden following a tired exit from defence, Logarzo this time at fault. Might be time for Gustavsson to dip into his bench.

61 mins: Foord caught in possession and Sweden earn a corner. It’s a dangerous delivery but there’s a whistle for a Blackstenius block on Micah.

59 mins: A soft free-kick against Yallop changes the momentum and Sweden enjoy a sustained spell of pressure. Jakobsson can’t capitalise though, nor can Asllani and the move evaporates.

57 mins: Raso v Rolfö on Australia’s right has been the duel of the night and the Matilda flyer did well again to set up a crossing opportunity for Kerr to get on the end of, but she doesn’t make great connection. The pressure continues though and Sweden only just get a block in to a Van Egmond drive from the edge of the box, then a Yallop cross from the left. Better from Australia. Sweden don’t look assured when the Matildas up the tempo in the final third.

55 mins: Sweden are back on the ball like they were in that middle third of the opening half, passing the ball nicely between the lines. Australia are again restricted to long balls to the isolated Kerr.

52 mins: Sweden get clear down the right but Jakobsson’s cross is weak and Australia escape. Kennedy then feeds Yallop down the left who picks out Kerr in the box, but a corner is soon overturned with an offside flag. The Matildas need to retain their composure with this series of setbacks.

50 mins: A break in play while Lindahl has her right hand attended to. Chance for Australia to regroup. Gustavsson is up and clapping, urging his side on.

48 mins: Hugely disappointing for Australia. Dreadful luck for Micah who ended up stranded by the deflected shot, the atrocious bounce, the ricochet off the bar in Sweden’s favour... a horror few seconds from the Matildas.

Do they have it in them to fight back?

GOAL! Australia 0-1 Sweden (Rolfö 46)

What on earth happened there? A deflected shot from outside the box spun wickedly off the wet turf forcing Micah to backpedal and tip onto the bar. Australia’s defence couldn’t clear and Rolfö was the fox in the box to hook home very adroitly.

Updated

46 mins: Here we go, two teams 45 minutes away from a guaranteed medal...

The teams are back out for the second half. Can Australia maintain their momentum? Can Sweden reestablish their control in midfield? Can someone - anyone - win this in 90 minutes to prevent a midnight finish?

Here’s my half-time Olympic rev-up tune. Turn it up loud.

I saw Surferosa on their UK tour in around 2006 at the Leeds Cockpit. Good times.

Adam Kline-Schoder has joined in over the email, and he deserves a half-time analyst’s bonus.

“Although this match has thus far been a bit of a slow burner, it is still intriguing because of the moments of individual quality on display. Rolfö’s and Kennedy’s efforts were lovely, and Kerr’s finish on the volley... well, taking a looping ball over the shoulder and redirecting it past a goalkeeper of Lindahl’s quality takes some doing, even if it was pulled back for a (as you say, slightly questionable) foul.

I think Australia gained their dominance towards the end of the half by putting one and sometimes two more players in the midfield; Sweden outnumbered them in the middle earlier on and that tactical tweak by the Matildas has worked a treat. That said, Sweden are still plenty dangerous on the break, so the Australians would be wise not to push too many women too high too quickly and create chasms between the lines.

Here’s hoping said slow burner catches fire properly in the second half! Enjoy the match.”

Great stuff, thanks Adam.

Half-time: Australia 0-0 Sweden

A frenetic opening 15 minutes, followed by a quarter of an hour minutes of Swedish dominance, ending with one sixth of the game on Australia’s terms. A very entertaining goalless half of football.

Sam Kerr
Sam Kerr volleys home, but it’s disallowed. Photograph: Carl Recine/Reuters

Updated

45+3 mins: Australia still pushing for the opener. Foord shows great strength to work a half-yard but she can’t find Kerr with the through-ball. The pressure is unrelenting though and Raso is busy on the right to earn a corner. Catley’s delivery is typically excellent and Lindahl can only manage a weak punch as far as Yallop on the edge of the box - and she connects with a half-volley thunderbastard! But it flies over the bar.

45 mins: Australia do not want the half-time whistle. Superb switch from Van Egmond opens play down the left. The ball in from Yallop to Kerr is dangerous and the flick from the striker is only fractionally off target. Sweden are rocking.

43 mins: Another cross - this time from a Catley free-kick on the right - and Kerr finishes on the volley first time! But, oh. The referee’s whistle trilled just as Kerr pulled the trigger. She had spotted an interference off the ball in the melee of bodies near the penalty spot. That will be a major talking point at half-time.

42 mins: Repeat corners for Australia with Kennedy and Kerr’s movement causing havoc in the Sweden defence. A third cross follows, and the Swedes look rattled. The Matildas are ramping up the pressure as the rain begins to tumble in Yokohama.

40 mins: OOOOOOOhhhhhh! Kennedy goes for goal - right-footed, over the wall, curling away from Lindahl - and the Sweden keeper is forced into a smart save to tip the shot over. Excellent strike.

40 mins: More excellent hard work to recycle a second ball near Sweden’s box is backed up by some neat passing to allow Simon a half-turn that ends in a trip. Free-kick to Australia from 22 metres out...

38 mins: Kerr does so much hard running, and yet another thankless sprint into the channel almost pays dividends. The Chelsea striker gets to the ball ahead of Lindahl, but she’s pushed out near the corner flag so is unable to fashion a shooting opportunity. The ball infield is intercepted. Australia have really grown in the last ten minutes or so.

36 mins: Australia have enjoyed territorial advantage for the past five or so minutes now, but Sweden look very dangerous when they get the ball down and play. Blackstenius again carries the ball deep into the Matildas’ defence, but can’t find an end product.

“As if their football was good enough to admire them - another first for Sweden - using recyclable cups for their water break rather than the usual dozens of plastic bottles.” Thanks for the email Charles Antaki.

34 mins: Raso has some rare space wide on the right and after some neat interplay she sends a cross over that Sweden don’t deal with effectively. The second ball is recycled well down the right before heading infield where nobody wants to take responsibility for the shot or killer pass. Eventually another cross comes in, this time from the left, and the moment passes.

32 mins: Another stoppage, this time for Ilestedt, who crumpled in a heap under pressure from Kerr who was contesting a hopeful ball into the channel. After a bit of treatment the No 13 is back on her feet.

30 mins: Australia have grown into the contest over the past few minutes, just as Sweden looked to be turning the screw. There’s still no cohesion going forward, but they are at least seeing more of the ball after a long spell of Swedish dominance. There’s a welcome break in play for both coaches while Raso is attended to after having her hand trodden on by Rolfo.

28 mins: Australia taking an age over a set-piece on halfway, lumping the ball into the box for Kennedy to contest, then hoisting the second ball for the Matildas defender to attack, only for a whistle to curtail the fun.

26 mins: Australia are feeding on scraps at the moment, and it will be so fatiguing in the heat and humidity playing catch-up football. A rare look at the ball soon turns into a cheap concession with a long diagonal too far in front of Simon.

24 mins: There’s Rolfo again! BOSH! The Barca star absolutely smashes the leather off the ball with her left boot from the edge of the box AND RATTLES THE CROSSBAR! The closest either side have come so far as Sweden, and Rolfo in particular, assert themselves.

23 mins: Another cross, this time from Rolfo, after some beautiful skill on the edge of the box, but a teasing left-footed curler is just out of Blackstenius’ reach.

22 mins: Not for the first time tonight a hurried Australian clearance leads to a turnover with Sweden responding in kind with a poor giveaway of their own. Greater composure by the Sweden front three and they’d have a few more chances. They almost find one through more conventional means but a dangerous ball across the six-yard box is sliced away from danger.

20 mins: Gustavsson on the touchline is urging Australia to break at speed down the right, but the passing isn’t crisp enough and play breaks down. Sweden are now looking to control the ball at a slower tempo with Seger growing into the match in midfield.

18 mins: Kennedy has an ambitious pop from long range, but it doesn’t trouble Lindahl. Both teams playing very hurriedly still.

16 mins: Good delivery from Catley but Kennedy can’t get her head on the corner and Sweden break fast. Blackstenius leads the charge and eventually shoots from the edge of the box, but it’s tame and Micah is barely drawn into a save.

14 mins: The game has yet to settle down. Foord takes advantage of broken play, earning a free-kick 35m out. The delivery bounces in the box and Foord is there again at the far post to hook the ball back across the face - but there’s no yellow shirt to profit. Nervy defending from Sweden, corner to Australia.

12 mins: Now they get down and play and cruise to the final third on the right, then win the second ball to approach the box again, but on both occasions Australia defend stoutly. The Matildas have been very well drilled defensively these Games, it’s been a rapid turnaround.

10 mins: Sweden have been a bit too eager to find Jakobsson running the channels. They seem crisp enough on the ball to play through the lines, but they’re lacking patience in the middle third in these early stages.

8 mins: Australia are so focussed on safety first there are no numbers ahead of the ball to break when the corner is overhit. The patience is eventually rewarded though with a neat move down the left and a sharp cross whipped over that Lindahl gets to just ahead of the leaping Kerr.

6 mins: Sweden are offering nothing in the way of a press, allowing Australia’s defence all the time in the world to pass it around harmlessly then pump the long diagonal. It’s a tempting strategy because it allows for space through midfield on the counter, which the Swedes take advantage of to free Jakobsson again down the right and from her cross Sweden are awarded the first corner of the night. The first delivery is cleared easily, but the second effort into the box needs a hurried clearance from Simon, conceding another corner.

4 mins: Sweden have settled the quicker on the ball, looking for short vertical passes through the lines to the feet of Asllani and Blackstenius, offset by the alternate ball into the channels for Jakobsson.

Asllani has the first shot on target of the night, rasping in a drive that Micah gets behind with a minor fumble. Australia yet to string an attacking phase together.

2 mins: A sloppy start from both teams with turnovers aplenty in midfield. Nerves clearly expected considering the stakes.

Kick-off!

Canada await in the Olympic final, who will they face?

Referee Melissa Borjas is from Honduras.

The teams are out in Yokohama for the national anthems. Sweden top to toe in their change strip of Prussian blue, Australia all in highlighter pen yellow.

I feel like I’ve made it abundantly clear already that Sweden are the real deal, and deserve to start as strong favourites tonight, but in case it needs laying on even thicker: Australia have never beaten Sweden in a competitive match. And Sweden have already knocked the Matildas out at the quarter-final stage of the 2004 Olympics and the 2011 Women’s World Cup.

But... Matildas boss Tony Gustavsson is Swedish and will know his opponents tonight better than any coach who has faced the Swedes in these Games.

Tony Gustavsson
Hey, Tony! Photograph: Molly Darlington/Reuters

In a mighty turn-up for the books, the winner of tonight’s semi-final face a gold medal match against Canada, who downed the mighty USA 1-0 in the first semi, courtesy of a Jessie Fleming penalty.

Sweden are unbeaten in 10 matches in 2021 (eight wins, two draws). Only twice have they conceded more than one goal in a game, but they have scored three or more on six occasions. One of those draws was a 0-0 with Australia in June. One of those high-scoring wins was against Australia in the group phase.

Suzanne Wrack has been impressed with Tony Gustavsson’s impact as Matildas coach.

What has he done since he arrived? “Everyone is starting to be on the same page and see the same picture,” Gustavsson said. “We try to build the team out of the player’s strengths and not just out of ‘Tony’s tactics’. It’s not just my tactics, it’s about building the tactics around the key players in the key positions and trying to get the most out of them.

Samantha Lewis has been tracking the development of this group of Matildas, and their never-say-die spirit, for years.

Sweden XI

Sweden are unchanged from their quarterfinal triumph over Japan.

1. Lindahl
4. Glas
6. Eriksson
9. Asllani
10. Jakobsson
11. Blackstenius
13. Ilestedt
14. Bjorn
16. Angeldal
17. Seger (c)
18. Rolfo

Sweden
Sweden are looking to continue their superb Olympics form against Australia. Photograph: Koji Aoki/AFLO/REX/Shutterstock

Australia XI

Despite plenty of talk around fatigue in the Australian camp and the possibility of a number of changes, Tony Gustavsson has made just the one: Chloe Logarzo is in for Aivi Luik.

Preamble

Hello everybody and welcome to live coverage of Australia v Sweden for a place in the final of the Olympic Games. Kick-off in Yokohama is 8pm local time (9pm AEST).

What a night in prospect. The biggest match in the history of the Matildas. 90 minutes away from a guaranteed gold or silver medal. Years of development and progression on the international stage coming to fruition, and the perfect springboard for 2023 when Australia will co-host the World Cup with New Zealand. This is their moment.

But it will take a supreme effort to accept the opportunity presented to them. Sweden will go in strong favourites after impressing throughout this tournament, a four-game winning streak that includes a 4-2 victory over the Matildas in the group phase just over a week ago.

And who knows how Australia will be feeling physically after surviving a gruelling 120-minute epic with Great Britain on Friday. That result, indebted as it was to goalkeeper Teagan Micah, took a lot of the group, and they will do well to back up so soon afterwards.

I shall return shortly with line-ups and the opinions of Guardian geniuses more knowledgeable than I. If you want to add your voice to the conversation, feel free to shoot me an email or tweet @JPHowcroft.

The Australian Women's Football Team
Straya Photograph: Atsushi Tomura/Getty Images
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