Chinese players greet the audience after winning Denmark
3-2 in a Group D match at the 2007 FIFA Women's World Cup in Wuhan, capital of
central China's Hubei Province, yesterday. --Xinhua
Substitute Song Xiaoli firedan incredible long shot home in the 88th minute
to earn hosts China the crucial three points in the FIFA Women's World Cup Group
D opener against Denmark in Wuhan yesterday.
China head coach Marika Domanski-Lyfors said, "We did a very good job in the
midfield defence and our quick-pace attacks worked well today."
"And the whole team was in top form and high morale. We deserve the win,"
said Domanski-Lyfors, who led Sweden to the 2003 World Cup runners-up.
Enjoying a 2-0 lead but being tied 2-2 in last minutes, China finally edged
Denmark 3-2 to follow Brazil, who trounced New Zealand 5-0 earlier today, on the
Group D standings.
Denmark's coach Kenneth Heiner-Moller had said on Tuesday that the winner of
this match would be one leg into the knockout stage. However, the luck was not
on his side tonight.
The upset Heiner-Moller said after the match that he thought his team played
well but unfortunately they lost.
"I think a tie may be the most reasonable result," he said. Hisremarks were
supported by only one item in the statistics. The Danes got 55 percent against
45 percent for China in ball possession.
China boast head-to-head results of seven wins, three ties and one loss
against Denmark in world arena before tonight's clash, including a 2-2 draw in
1991 World Cup in China and 3-1 win in 1995 edition in Sweden.
In tonight's breath-taking duel, the stalwart Chinese girls launched waves of
attacks from the very beginning, making four shots (three on targets) and four
corner kicks against Denmark's 1-1 record in the first ten minutes.
When the match returned to a balance, Chinese midfielder Bi Yanearned a free
kick through her swift dribbling in the arc. Defender Li Jie looped a wonderful
curling shot which found the top right corner of the net.
Li Jie said after the match, "We have practised on spot kicks for quite some
time. We focus on it recently. And when Bi Yan created that free kick, I
recalled how I scored on such spot in the training."
Trailing 1-0, the Danes, who boast the advantage in stamina and physiques,
played more fiercely and the pace of the match turned from quicker to the
quickest.
A powerful long shot near the arc by Bi Yan lifted China to 2-0lead in the
50th minute. The ball hit a defender's leg and deflected into the Danes' net.
However, the Danes cut the deficit to one goal only after one minute when
striker Anne Dot Eggers Nielsen headed a left-wing cross into the Chinese goal.
In the remaining 40 minutes, both sides continued their tit-for-tat
confrontation. China missed two great chances to widen the gap, one on Ma
Xiaoxu's solo run from the left wing and the other on Bi Yan's long shot at the
same spot where she scored.
Ma Xiaoxu, China's new No. 10, shone last year with Golden Balland Golden
Shoe at FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup and the AFC Women's Player of the Year
award.
Despite no scoring, Ma was defined as the Player of the Match through her
quick-pace dribbling and never-say-die spirit on the pitch.
The Danes also squandered several scoring chances, but they cashed one in the
87th minute when midfielder Cathrine Paaske Sorensen jumped high to head a
right-wing cross home.
Li Jie said, "When the scoreboard turned to 2-2, every Chinese player did not
give up."
"We had promised our fans to never give up at any moment. We would fight to
the last second and we did it tonight," she noted.
As most of the fans thought of a regrettable tie, midfielder Song Xiaoli, who
replaced exhausted Qu Feifei in the 58th minute, rewrote the scoreboard in just
one minute to seal the win for China, who set a target of entering the top four
of the tournament on home soil.