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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Kevin Baxter

Women's World Cup: US isn't sweating short break before playing France

PARIS _ The U.S. national team took a two-hour bus trip from Reims to Paris on Tuesday, giving the players only two days on the field to prepare for their Women's World Cup quarterfinal with France on Friday.

They followed a similar schedule between group play and the round of 16, riding from Le Havre on the English Channel to champagne country and arriving three days after Spain, their first knockout-stage opponent, reached Reims.

Those are the vagaries of a tournament schedule in which everything is supposed to be equal, but few things truly are.

"Yeah, it seems at times a big discrepancy," said U.S. coach Jill Ellis, whose team was the last to play in the group stage. "When you enter a tournament and (you're) the last team to play, there's going to be certain differences in the windows.

"At this point, it is what it is."

And what it is, is uneven.

In a tournament where teams will have to play seven games in a month to reach the final, rest and recovery are all important.

And for the U.S., the oldest team in the Women's World Cup with a roster that averages 29 years of age, that's vital.

That is especially true after the physical game played in saunalike conditions Monday against Spain.

Yet the U.S. will have only three rest days before its quarterfinal, one fewer than France. The hosts also had two more rest days between the group stage and the knockout rounds than the U.S.

Germany will have six days before its round-of-16 game and quarterfinal, two more days than its opponent, Sweden.

And while Ellis didn't see the World Cup schedule until December, she has been planning for it for years. After the 2015 World Cup, Ellis helped U.S. Soccer set up the SheBelieves Cup and the Tournament of Nations, U.S.-based invitational events involving countries ranked in the top 10. Teams generally had no more than two days' rest between games.

"We're very used to a three-day rhythm. It's what we've done in certain tournaments specifically for this purpose," she said. "We can't control what our opponent has. So everything is about us."

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