England, the reigning European champion, aims to go to the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup quarterfinals. They’ll reach this stage of the World Cup for the third time in a row if they defeat Colombia. They have yet to lose in these championships and have only given up one goal, a penalty kick goal. Colombia, who is in the quarterfinals for the first time, is known for their aggressive play. Although England are the favorites to advance, the match may be a tight and bruising affair.
England narrowly defeated Nigeria in the previous round to escape a shocking defeat. To advance to the round of 16, they must defeat Colombia on Saturday, so they must be at their best. Nonetheless, they should have returned to their best on Saturday, as they slam into Colombia for a spot in the last four at Stadium Australia.
England are on the cusp of arriving at a third progressive Women’s World Cup semi-final, however, they should first beat a Colombia side that has been one of the competition’s surprise packages.
A year on from winning Euro 2022, the Lionesses are having a totally different involvement with Australia. Laboured performances against Haiti and Denmark in the group stage were followed by a destruction of China, before being defeated by Nigeria in the last 16 however some way or another slipped through.
England positively have competition skill added to their belt and, at the present moment, it is carrying them.
Colombia have proactively outperformed their past best at a World Cup competition by simply being in the last eight. They have further developed each time they have contended on this stage, going out in the group stage on their 2011 debut and arriving at the last 16 in 2015.
Their success against Germany in the group stage, including an extraordinary goal from teenage superstar Linda Caicedo, automatically makes them a likely risk.
England and Colombia will clash in the last quarterfinal undertaking at the 2023 FIFA World Cup on Saturday when they take on one another at Stadium Australia in Sydney.
The Lionesses some way or another figured out how to survive an extremely challenging Nigeria challenge in the round of 16 conflict on Tuesday, regardless of a huge setback as a Lauren James red card kate in the regular time.
The European champions clutched penalties and in the end, dispatched the Africans as no goals were scored in the 120 minutes of play on the event.
Sarina Wiegman’s soldiers will be without the best player for such a long way in the competition as James is suspended. The merchandise is the arrival of Keira Walsh to the starting XI as she appears to have completely recuperated from an injury that got her far from the pitch.
England are large top picks as per the bookies and we really do anticipate that they should justify the tag against the South American sensation.
Colombia have kept in touch with one of the most noteworthy stories by arriving at the World Cup quarterfinal for the first time in their history.
They’ve done so by beating Germany and South Korea in the group stage. Nevertheless, they offered several subpar performances in the past two trips (a 0-1 defeat to Morocco in the group stage and a 1-0 win over Jamaica in the last 16 rounds) and we accept their fantasy process has concluded here.
England find themselves in the last eight of the FIFA Women’s World Cup notwithstanding apparently just placing in one great performance up until this point. It has been sufficient, however, regardless of whether they needed to depend on penalties to move beyond Nigeria in the round of 16.
They will obviously be without one of the stars of the competition in Lauren James however after her red card for stepping on Michelle Alozie in the last round, and her two-game ban will keep her out until the final – if England make it that far. It is without a doubt a blow, with just France’s Kadidiatou Diani (4 goals, 3 assists) having been engaged with additional goals than James (3 goals, 3 assists) at the current year’s competition.
Sarina Wiegman’s side face Colombia next, who have arrived at the quarter-final of the Women’s World Cup for the first time and will turn out to be only the second South American side to arrive at the final four if they can win this one, after Brazil in 1999 and 2007.
As a matter of fact, 75% of Colombia’s overall successes at the Women’s World Cup have come for the current year. Before this competition, they had won only one of their seven games in the competition (2011 and 2015 – D2 L4).
Catalina Usme scored the triumphant goal against Jamaica in the last 16, making her the altogether top goalscorer for Colombia in Women’s World Cup history with three. Usme has endeavored (66) and finished (38) a greater number of passes finishing off with the final third than some other Colombian player in the competition this year, so is probably going to be a risk England should pay special attention to.
Without James’ impact, the Lionesses will likewise have to sort out a route to goal. England’s inability to score against Nigeria finished their record run of 16 games with something like one goal in the Women’s World Cup. Notwithstanding, they have never failed to score in back-to-back games in the competition.
It ought to be an elaborately intriguing challenge. England have had 71 separate sequences of 10+ passes at the current year’s WWC, more than some other side preceding the quarter-finals; though Colombia’s total of seven such successions is the most minimal of the leftover sides in the competition, regardless of having more possession than their rivals in three of their four games up to this point.
England, the current European champions, got to the Quarter-Finals by dominating each of the three matches in the Group and later by winning against Nigeria in the 1/8 Finals after a penalty shootout. Against Nigeria, they were the weighty top picks, yet the overall impression is that Nigeria were a superior team, particularly in additional time. In any case, as a more experienced team, England figured out how to progress to the next stage. With 3.4 odds, the Lioness are the essential contender to come out on top for the World Cup championship, as per bookmakers.
England progressed to the quarterfinals of the Women’s World Cup after a tense penalty shootout triumph over Nigeria in the round of 16, notwithstanding being diminished to 10 players following Lauren James’ late red card. James’ suspension might actually leave England in a troublesome position until the end of the competition.
England come into this Women’s World Cup quarter-final having won each of the four of their matches. That incorporates the penalty shootout that was expected to beat Nigeria in the last 16. England weren’t that amazing against the Nigerians and have to rediscover the form that they showed while beating China 6-1. The Lionesses are unbeaten in their last six matches and their defence is playing great. Those six games have seen only one goal conceded and that was the penalty that China scored against them in the group stages. England are positioned fourth in the world and that is 21 spots over their South American adversaries. A success over Colombia will bring them into a semi-final against one or the other Australia or France.
Colombia shocked everybody by emerging from Group H. They figured out how to dominate the first two matches versus South Korea and a highly-favored Germany, which was ultimately sufficient to get them in front of the rest of the competition in the Group, notwithstanding losing 1:0 to Morocco in the last group match. Luckily, they got to play against Jamaica in the 1/8 finals, which was impartially the most vulnerable group left. By beating Jamaica, Colombia got the first World Cup Quarter-Finals in their history.
Colombia is coming off a 1-0 win over Jamaica in their past Women’s World Cup match. In that game, Colombia had 50% possession and managed 11 shots on goal, with three of them on target. Catalina Usme scored the solitary goal for Colombia in the 51st minute.
Colombia are in the quarter-finals for the first time. In their two past Women’s World Cup finals appearances, their best was getting to the last 16 in 2015. It’s gone much better this time for the Coffee Growers who completed top of Group H. They had prevailed over South Korea and Germany however lost their final group match against Morocco.
The last 16 saw them facing Jamaica and they figured out how to win that 1-0 because of a USME goal six minutes into the second half. They’re extreme tacklers as was displayed in their friendly against Ireland that was deserted. They didn’t satisfy their nickname ‘The Powderpuff Girls’ in that fixture. Colombia had one misfortune in their last seven finished games however before misfortunes to France and Italy showed they might battle against England.
This will be only the second time these two have confronted one another, with the past meeting likewise happening at the Women’s World Cup eight years ago.
England won that Group F conflict in June 2015, beating Colombia 2-1 in Montreal because of a Karen Carney opener and a penalty from Fara Williams, with Lady Andrade pulling one back in second-half stoppage time.
This weekend’s conflict will be the second time that England and Colombia have met on the international stage. The last meeting came at the 2015 World Cup, with England handling a 2-1 win in the group stage.
When is the kickoff? Saturday 12 August, 11:30 (BST), 20:30 (local), 06:30 (EST)
Where is the match being played? Stadium Australia, Sydney
What time does TV coverage start in the UK? 10:45 (BST)
Referee? Ekaterina Koroleva (USA)
VAR? Carol Anne Chenard (CAN)
England have needed to manage a large number of setbacks yet are still, pretty much, tracking down ways of winning and progressing through the rounds. The message of the camp’s remaining parts is that results are truly significant and the possibility that the Lionesses are winning without playing great recommends there is a lot to come out when they reliably take care of business.
Without James, there will without a doubt be an alternate concentration, yet Wiegman ought to have adequate quality players to hide the faults temporarily.
Colombia could feel more good back in the role of underdogs. It is telling that they beat Germany, yet thusly lost to an inferior Morocco team. They additionally didn’t exactly appear to know how to move toward the Jamaica game against an adversary glad to pause for a minute and retain pressure. This time, the onus won’t be on them to take the game to England, so counter-attacking will be vital.
On paper, this is the most ideal quarter-final tie that England might have requested from the leftover teams. In any case, they have proactively learned on various events this summer that there could be as of now not any simple rides in the Women’s World Cup.
The Lionesses can charge well in this game even without their star player. With Colombia battling to discover some momentum on the offensive end, the English team can shoot a few goals in the South American net.
England have conceded just a solitary goal in the last five matches, including four at this competition. Colombia, on the opposite side, battled a lot to make chances in their past two games.
The English team should play better compared to what they did against Nigeria. That wasn’t the most ideal performance, particularly when contrasted with how they played against China. They might well again change their formation and need to play without the suspended Lauren James. Colombia are conquerable however and have previously lost to Morocco in the group stages as well as friendly defeats by France and Italy.
Lauren James will be an immense miss for England on Saturday, and her absence was felt in the final third against Nigeria in the past round. Colombia has been phenomenal at the two closures of the field, and the huge shock at this stage of the competition could come in this standoff, as we will favor the South American country.
Alex Greenwood, Bethany England, Chloe Kelly, Ella Toone, Georgia Stanway, Hannah Hampton, Jordan Nobbs, Keira Walsh, Laura Coombs, Lauren James, Lauren Hemp, Lotte Wubben-Moy, Lucy Bronze, Mary Earps, Millie Bright, Niamh Charles, Rachel Daly, Esme Morgan, Jess Carter, Katie Zelem, Ellie Roebuck, Katie Robinson, Alessia Russo.
Ana Maria Guzmán, Ángela Barón, Carolina Arias, Catalina Pérez, Catalina Usme, Daniela Montoya, Diana Ospina, Daniela Árias, Daniela Caracas, Elexa Bahr, Jorelyn Carabalí, Ivonne Chacón, Linda Caicedo, Lady Andrade, Leicy Santos, Lorena Bedoya, Manuela Vanegas, Maria Camila Reyes, Marcela Restrepo, Mayra Ramírez, Mónica Ramos, Natalia Giraldo, Sandra Sepúlveda
England will be without top scorer Lauren James who’s suspended in the wake of being shipped off against Nigeria. Chloe Kelly is tipped to be her supplant Rachel Daly in a more attacking role. Keira Walsh made her return from injury in the last 16 and is again liable to highlight. Colombia will be supported by the arrival of Manuela Vanegas. The defender was suspended for their success over Jamaica in the last 16.
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