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KAMLOOPS, British Columbia -- Jared Davidson and Jordan Gustafson scored in an eight-second span in the second period and the Seattle Thunderbirds beat the host Kamloops Blazers 6-1 on Wednesday night to advance to the Memorial Cup semifinal.
The Western Hockey League champion Thunderbirds finished round-robin play 2-1, rebounding from a 3-1 loss to the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League champion Quebec Remparts (2-1) on Monday night.
Kamloops (1-2) and the Ontario Hockey League champion Peterborough Petes (1-2) will meet Thursday night, with the winner advancing to face Seattle in the semifinal game Friday night. The semifinal winner will play Quebec for the title Sunday, with Hall of Fame goalie Patrick Roy stepping aside as the coach of the Remparts after the tournament.
Davidson made it 2-1 on a power player at 6:39 of the second period, slipping a long wrist shot inside the far post. Gustafson quickly doubled the advantage after a Kamloops giveaway behind the net.
Kyle Crnkovic, Luke Prokop and Colton Dach scored in the third period. Crnkovic, Davidson, Dylan Guenther and Reid Schaefer each had two assists.
Lucas Ciona opened the scoring for Seattle early in the first. Ryan Hofer tied it midway through the period.
Thomas Milic made 30 saves for the Thunderbirds.
Seattle is trying to become the third U.S.-based franchise to win the event that was first played in 1919, following the WHL rival Portland Winterhawks (1983, 1998) and Spokane Chiefs (1998, 2008).
Also Quebec's general manager, Roy is seeking his second Memorial Cup after leading the Remparts to the 2006 title in Moncton, New Brunswick. He's turning over the coaching duties to fellow former NHL player Simon Gagne.
Players push back as Tour meets with USGA, R&A regarding golf ball
DUBLIN, Ohio – The building showdown between the game’s best players and the rules makers reached an inflection point Tuesday when both sides met to discuss the USGA and R&A’s proposed Model Local Rule (MLR) on golf balls.
The two associations proposed the new testing protocols for golf balls used in “elite competitions” in March, which, by some estimates, could lead to drives for top professionals that are 20 to 25 yards shorter.
On Tuesday afternoon, representatives from the USGA and R&A – including Mike Whan and Martin Slumbers, the chief executives of each association, respectively – met with the PGA Tour’s 16-member Player Advisory Council, the policy board and Tour executives, including commissioner Jay Monahan. According to various sources, the reception from players was predictably chilly.
The 2 ½-hour meeting included a 1-hour presentation from the USGA and R&A followed by a separate presentation from three equipment companies – Titleist, Callaway and Bridgestone. The consensus suggested any potential rollback would not be supported by players which would leave the Tour in an awkward position if the rule is adopted.
“I feel like that would be going against the grain strongly of what the sentiment is, and certainly off the back of yesterday, I think that would be surprising if that was just the thing that we did,” said Adam Scott, the chairman of the PAC, when asked if he thought the Tour would adopt the new rule. “I think there'd be some pushback on that from the membership.”
The current comment period runs through August and although the majority of Tour members, with the notable exception of Rory McIlroy, have been opposed to the new rule, it remains unclear if the circuit would follow the rules makers if they adopt the new standard.
“If they decide they are going to move forward then it comes back to us, the PGA Tour, to ultimately make a decision on whether we’d use the model of the local rule in competitions,” said Andy Pazder, the Tour’s chief tournaments and competitions officer. “It’s way too early for me to theorize if we’d take one position or another.”
Of particular interest to most players is some of the data the USGA and R&A are using to justify a rollback, which predates the Tour’s ShotLink program and was created to provide a better picture of distance gains at the highest level.
“Some things they’re looking at are a bit skewed or looking too much at the top end or outliers versus maybe averages and where things have been for the past 10 or 20 years where there really hasn’t been much movement or increases,” said Rickie Fowler, a member of the PAC. “The growth of distance [over the last 20 years] is fairly insignificant. I don’t see it as a spot where we need change or as big of a change that’s being proposed.”
Another area of concern for players is the proposed testing protocols that would use a clubhead speed of 127 mph. Cameron Champ leads the Tour this season in club head speed with a 126.47 mph average. The Tour average is 115.21 mph.
This is the second consecutive year members from the USGA and R&A met with players at the Memorial and Whan said Tuesday’s meeting led to even more in-depth conversations Wednesday at Muirfield Village, but he conceded the rollout has not been perfect.
“This process is really strange. You have to go to the podium and say what you’re doing and then spend the next six months going around talking to somebody. As I said to the players last night, ‘I’m sorry about this process,’” Whan said. “It’s fair to the manufacturers but sometimes it’s not fair to the players. [Tuesday’s meeting] was just a chance for us to make sure they understood what was driving our thinking and why.”
Although it remains unclear what the Tour would do if the new rule is adopted, there is a scenario where the circuit decides to not adopt the local rule while at least two of the four majors, the U.S. Open and Open Championship, would be played with the rolled-back ball.
“Ultimately, the players will end up deciding whether they want to mess around for two weeks with another ball,” Scott said. “I really believe there's a lot at stake here. The way the testing has been done as for the future, that's hard to understand when we're not there. We're setting rules for future generations, which is how it's been explained. Because that's where they're going.”
Rory McIlroy says Brooks Koepka only LIV player deserving of Ryder Cup
DUBLIN, Ohio – Arguably the loudest endorsement for Brooks Koepka to be on this year’s U.S. Ryder Cup team came from the American side’s biggest opponent in the biennial matches.
“I certainly think Brooks deserves to be on the United States team,” Rory McIlroy said Wednesday at the Memorial. “I think with how he's played, I mean, he's second in the U.S. standings, only played two counting events. I don't know if there's anyone else on the LIV roster that would make the team on merit and how they're playing. But Brooks is definitely a guy that I think deserves to be on the U.S. team.”
Koepka, who was suspended last year by the PGA Tour for joining LIV Golf and violating the circuit’s conflicting-event release policy, won the PGA Championship two weeks ago and finished runner-up at the Masters to move to second on the U.S. Ryder Cup points list. Although he could still fall out of the top 6 automatic qualifiers when the team is set in August, it seems likely he’ll be a member of captain Zach Johnson’s team in Rome.
McIlroy, however, was not at all supportive of any LIV Golf members playing on this year’s European Ryder Cup team.
“I have different feelings about the European team and the other side and sort of how that has all transpired. I don't think any of those guys should be a part of the European team,” McIlroy said.
Many of the top Europeans who joined LIV Golf – including Ian Poulter, Sergio Garcia and Lee Westwood – have resigned their membership on the DP World Tour, which is required to play for Europe at the Ryder Cup. Those players had been fined by the European tour for violating its conflicting-event release rules when they joined LIV Golf.
Florida beats Georgia Tech 3-1 to win 5th NCAA men’s golf championship
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Florida put itself in difficult positions all season, none more dire than its deep hole against Florida State in the national semifinals.
The experienced Gators consistently found ways to dig their way out and it helped them when things got tight Wednesday in the championship match.
Individual NCAA champion Fred Biondi beat Hiroshi Tai, 1 up, with a par on the 18th hole and Florida won its fifth men’s national golf title with a 3-1 victory over Georgia Tech at Grayhawk Golf Club.
“These guys are extremely tough and that’s what champions are,” Florida coach J.C. Deacon said. “They find a way to stay positive and to stay in the moment and keep doing the right things.”
Florida appeared to headed toward defeat against Florida State on Tuesday in the semifinals, only to rally for a 3-2 victory.
Florida’s Yuxin Lin won the championship opener, 4 and 3, over Christo Lamprecht, but the remaining matches went down to the wire in the strongest wind of the week.
John DuBois closed out Connor Howe, 1 up, to put Florida up 2-0. Georgia Tech’s Bartley Forrester then beat Matthew Kress on the second extra hole after blowing a 2-up lead with two holes left.
Biondi had a 1-up lead after a conceded birdie on the par-4 17th, then Tai’s second shot from the left rough on 18 plugged in the greenside bunker. He hit to about 10 feet, but Biondi two-putted from 35 feet to become the first player to win individual and team championships in the same season since Oregon’s Aaron Wise in 2016.
“This means way more,” Biondi said. “I promised you when I first got to school that I would work as hard as I could and try to bring a ring or two, and we did it.”
Florida’s Ricky Castillo led Ross Steelman, 1 up, on 18 when Biondi secured the Gators’ first national title since 2001. Georgia Tech’s bid for a first national championship fell just short, leading to a fifth national runner-up finish — first in match play.
“There’s not a better group of student-athletes in college, I know that for sure,” Georgia Tech coach Bruce Heppler said. “They did a lot of good stuff and will keep coming back again.”
After losing an early 2-up lead, DuBois won his match on 18 with a par after Howe hit his second shot well left of the green and pitched off the green.
Forrester appeared to be in control of his match, going 2 up after his tee shot on 16 hit the flagstick and dropped to 2 feet for a conceded birdie. Kress stayed alive when Forrester three-putted from 25 feet on 17, then sent the match to extra holes by hitting it to a foot on the long par-4 18th.
After matching pars on No. 10, Kress hit his tee shot on 18 left into the desert and was forced to take a drop. He took a double bogey and Forrester won it with a two-putt bogey.
Lin took advantage of Lamprecht’s wild drives and made the turn 4 up after a birdie on No. 8. A couple of bogeys by Lin allowed Lamprecht to cut the lead to 2 up, but Lin curled in a birdie putt to win the 14th after hitting his tee shot into the left rough.
Lin closed it out by getting up and down for par from a tough spot right of the 15th green after Lamprecht’s three-putt bogey.
Steelman struggled early, but erased a 2-down deficit with pars on Nos. 9 and 11. He then took his first lead of the match with a birdie on No. 12.
Castillo had a chance to win the 15th, but his putt slid by the hole and the fiery senior kicked his ball into the desert. He tied it on 16 when Steelman hit well short of the par-3 and took a bogey.
Steelman hit his tee shot way right into the desert on No. 17 and ended up taking a drop on the 14th tee, leading to a bogey that put Castillo 1 up before the championship was decided ahead of them.
“Matches were tight all the way through the end and they made some birdies on 17 and we didn’t,” Heppler said. “That was really the difference.”
The Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) on Wednesday said it has filed a protest with world governing body FIFA after defender Robert Renan was racially abused following a U20 World Cup match.
Insults were directed at Renan as he left the pitch at the Ciudad de la Plata stadium in Argentina where Brazil beat Tunisia 4-1 in the tournament's Round of 16, CBF said.
- Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, more (U.S.)
The player, who was sent off after 45 minutes, was then subjected to racism on social media. After the match, Renan shared on Instagram screenshots of racist messages he received.
"The profiles [of racist social media users] have already been filed by CBF and will be sent to the local courts and FIFA with the request for punishment," CBF said.
"CBF vehemently condemns any kind of discriminatory action in football and will no longer tolerate such cases in the sport," it said.
The federation added it is the first football body to adopt in its regulations the possibility of sanctioning a club in cases of racism.
On Friday, CBF announced that Brazil will play friendly matches against Guinea and Senegal as part of a campaign in support of forward Vinicius Jr, who has been racially abused while playing for Real Madrid in the Spanish league this season.
Belgium midfielder Youri Tielemans announced Wednesday he will be leaving Leicester City following the club's relegation from the Premier League.
The 26-year-old Tielemans, who joined from Monaco on loan in 2019 before signing a permanent deal, holds a special place in Leicester's history after scoring the winning goal in the 2021 FA Cup final against Chelsea.
- Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, more (U.S.)
He is out of contract this summer and will not be staying around to help Leicester return to the top division after their relegation, which came seven years after the team won the Premier League.
"From the first day I set foot on this ground, your warmth and passion embraced me," Tielemans said in a video on Instagram. "Victory and triumph, love, hope and even defeat, we've shared many special moments together.
"This is not a goodbye," he added, "but a heartfelt farewell."
It could mark the start of an exodus of top players from Leicester, with James Maddison and Harvey Barnes also expected to leave.
Manchester City are in talks to sign Mateo Kovacic from Chelsea, sources have told ESPN.
ESPN reported in February that the Croatian midfielder was one of several players likely to be made available as Chelsea plan a summer firesale to trim their bloated squad and new manager Mauricio Pochettino will not stand in the way of his departure.
- Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, more (U.S.)
The 29-year-old has one year remaining on his contract and there have not been any meaningful conversations over an extension.
Although no fee has yet been agreed, sources suggest Kovacic has been given permission to discuss terms with City. Chelsea are thought to be willing to sell for a fee in the region of £35 million.
City boss Pep Guardiola is keen to bolster his midfield options ahead of next season.
It remains to be seen if Ilkay Gundogan commits himself to City with his contract due to expire at the end of June -- Barcelona and Arsenal are among the interested clubs should he decide to leave -- but Kovacic would be a useful replacement given his experience with Chelsea, Real Madrid and Inter Milan.
Kovacic joined Chelsea from Madrid in 2018 -- initially on loan before the move was made permanent a year later for £40m -- and has made 221 appearances in total, winning the Champions League, Europa League, Club World Cup and UEFA Super Cup.
AS Roma manager Jose Mourinho said he was uncertain about his future at the club following their 4-1 penalty shootout defeat in the Europa League final against Sevilla on Wednesday.
The defeat meant Roma failed to qualify for next season's Champions League and prompted questions about whether the 60-year-old would remain in the Italian capital, having been linked with Paris Saint-Germain.
- Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, more (U.S.)
"I have to fight for these lads and therefore not say objectively that I will remain," Mourinho, whose side was tied 1-1 with Sevilla after extra time, told Sky Sports Italia. "I spoke to the club in December when I had that approach from the Portuguese national team.
"I have not had any contact with anyone else since then. I have a year left on my contract and this is the situation."
It was Mourinho's first defeat in a European final, but he said he was proud of his team's performance and acknowledged that the season had taken its toll.
"We're physically exhausted, mentally drained, feeling dead because we believe it's an unjust defeat with numerous debatable incidents," the former Chelsea and Manchester United manager said. "We are dead tired, but proud. I always say you can lose a football match, but never your dignity or professionalism...
"I lost this one, but I return home prouder than ever this time. The lads gave absolutely everything this season."
Mourinho also criticised referee Anthony Taylor, adding that the Englishman showed too many yellow cards.
"It was an intense, masculine, vibrant game with a referee who seemed Spanish. It was yellow, yellow, yellow all the time," he said. "We are accustomed to the influence of referees in our games, it's nothing new, but I didn't expect it in a European final."
The top 10 most memorable moments in Women's World Cup history
We are now officially 50 days away from the 2023 Women's World Cup and this is poised to be the biggest edition ever. The competition will expand to 32 teams, its biggest number yet, and the growth of women's soccer around the world means we also have more viable title contenders than ever before. The U.S. has won the previous two tournaments, but it feels like the timing is right for a first-time champion, like England, France, Sweden or even hosts Australia.
This means that the 2023 tournament has all the makings to be a very memorable Women's World Cup this summer. So, on the occasion of 50 days out, it seems fitting to look back at the most memorable moments in Women's World Cup history so far.
You'll notice that this list features the U.S. women's national team a lot. There are good reasons for that -- with four wins, the U.S. has claimed half of all Women's World Cup trophies ever offered and has featured prominently over the years. But the author of this list also wrote a book about the history of the U.S. women's national team called "The National Team," so this list may look different than what you'd find elsewhere around the world.
With that caveat out of the way, here we go!
10. The USWNT wins the first-ever Women's World Cup (1991)
To say that FIFA initially had low expectations for the Women's World Cup is putting it mildly. The first Women's World Cup wasn't even called that at the time -- FIFA was too worried about cheapening the "World Cup" brand, so they actually dubbed it the "1st FIFA World Championship for Women's Football for the M&M's Cup." Rolls off the tongue, doesn't it?
As if that wasn't enough, FIFA made the games 80 minutes instead of 90 minutes -- another hint of what FIFA thought about women playing soccer. There were no big broadcast deals in place, either -- when the U.S. eventually won the tournament, pretty much no one in the United States could actually watch it live because it wasn't on television and the internet wasn't a thing yet.
But hey, the tournament happened, and we can now watch clips that FIFA posts on YouTube (with electronic dance music playing over them, for some reason). FIFA now retroactively calls it the first Women's World Cup, and although not many people can say they remember experiencing it live, it's still memorable and worth inclusion here.
9. Disastrous VAR experiment turns tense in England-Cameroon clash (2019)
When FIFA decided to introduce VAR (video-assisted refereeing) to the Women's World Cup for the first time four years ago, many people applauded it. VAR had been used at the men's tournament the year prior, and the technology is intended to make the game more fair.
There was one problem: FIFA made the decision to implement VAR only three months before the tournament, and the referees who would be officiating the tournament didn't have much time to use the new technology in real games beforehand. That was on top of changes FIFA made to the soccer's rules only days before the tournament started.
The result? Referee decisions that were exceedingly harsh at best and utterly confusing at worst, which at times distracted from the actual competition. Referees had access to video replays, but didn't receive enough training or practice, and so they began applying new standards to the game that players had never seen.
There were so many instances where VAR determined goalkeepers left their lines too early on penalties that FIFA's rule-making body issued new guidance halfway through the tournament that VAR shouldn't be used during penalty shootouts. It didn't help Scotland though, who were sent home after a controversial VAR-prompted penalty retake.
MORE VAR DRAMA! ?
VAR awards another penalty retake and Argentina tie the game to end Scotland's #FIFAWWC campaign! pic.twitter.com/ojniD2UaOz
— FOX Soccer (@FOXSoccer) June 19, 2019
The growing pains of adding VAR became most apparent in England's round-of-16 match against a Cameroon side that nearly walked off during the game. First, England had Ellen White's goal ruled offside due to Nikita Parris being in a clear offside position, but VAR overturned the call, ruling that Parris wasn't involved in the play, which incensed Cameroon players. Then Cameroon's Ajara Nchout scored a goal that initially stood only for VAR to overturn it, judging her offside by the slimmest of margins -- hardly a "clear and obvious" error.
Cameroon players, who could see the VAR replays on the video board in the stadium and gestured toward it, protested and at times refused to return to playing, delaying the game. At points, it almost looked like they were going to quit and manager Alain Djeumfa had to console his players.
The match did eventually finish with England winning 3-0, but in the aftermath the Cameroonian team reportedly suggested the referee had wanted England to win, while the British team was outraged by Cameroon's reactions. England manager Phil Neville admonished his opponents, opening his post-match press conference: "I sat through 90 minutes of football there and felt ashamed. I'm proud of my own players' performances and behavior under circumstances that I've never seen on a football field before."
At least going into this summer's tournament, referees will have had plenty of practice with VAR.
8. Kelly Smith's once-in-a-lifetime goal celebrations (2007)
The night before forward Kelly Smith was due to make her first-ever World Cup appearance in England's World Cup opener against Japan, she hatched a plan.
"The night before, I laid in my bed, closed my eyes, and imagined myself playing in the opening game against Japan, and I thought, if I do score, I'm going to take my boot off and kiss it because no one has ever done that before," Smith explained a few years ago. "...It was just an original celebration."
So that's what she did. In the 81st minute, she dribbled her way through a couple Japanese defenders and muscled one off to slip the ball into the net with her left foot, promptly removing her scoring cleat and kissing it several times. Two minutes later, Smith scored again, this time with her right foot, so she took both cleats off and kissed them both.
"The second goal celebration was not planned. I actually got into quite a bit of trouble after the game by my head coach Hope Powell," Smith recalled. "I got a slap on the wrist and was told to never do that celebration again, so that was a once-off and never happened again."
Smith scored twice more at the 2007 tournament, and her once-in-a-lifetime celebrations became synonymous with her illustrious career for the Lionesses. She retired in 2015 as England's all-time leading goal-scorer, until Ellen White surpassed her in 2021.
7. A golden goal decides the Women's World Cup a last, and only, time (2003)
There's something about the so-called "golden goal" that feels exceptionally cruel. The way it worked was that once a game moved into extra time, the first team to score won -- matches would end as soon as that ball crossed the line, depriving the losing team of a chance to wage a comeback.
In the 2003 Women's World Cup final, favorites Germany took on underdogs Sweden, who surprised everyone by scoring first on a well-placed Hanna Ljungberg shot just before halftime. Germany returned fire quickly after the break with a Maren Meinert shot, and neither side could find the breakthrough before the match moved into extra time.
With sudden death looming in the eighth minute of extra time, Renate Lingor stepped up for a free kick and defender Nia Künzer, a late substitute, was among the German players in the box. She rose up, somehow beat the defender man-marking her, and sent the ball soaring into the back of the net.
The goal looks far more convincing than it apparently felt, with Künzer telling FIFA years later: "I was confused at first and didn't know what had happened. I couldn't understand it because my header wasn't even that powerful. But two or three seconds later the first couple of teammates embraced me and then the penny dropped that we were world champions."
? #OnThisDay in 2003
?? @DFB_Frauen became #FIFAWWC champions, thanks to this golden goal scored by Nia Kunzer ✨ pic.twitter.com/8b3FAMVHvV
— FIFA Women's World Cup (@FIFAWWC) October 12, 2019
With that, Germany won their first Women's World Cup, cementing the team as a powerhouse in the sport after finishing as runners-up in the 1995 tournament. But for Künzer, she went down in history as the last player to score a golden goal in World Cup history, and the only player to score a golden goal in a World Cup final, men's or women's, as FIFA eliminated the rule in 2004.
6. Rapinoe takes on the World Cup field and the president of the United States -- and wins (2019)
This one is perhaps more of a series of moments more than a singular moment, but anyone looking back at the 2019 Women's World Cup will remember it as Megan Rapinoe's tournament.
In the days before the tournament even started, she had more attention on her than ever before after a months-old comment of hers went viral where she said she'd decline to go to Donald Trump's White House if the U.S. team won the World Cup again. Trump took to Twitter to publicly feud with her, and his supporters made her their enemy to root against, leading to Rapinoe being asked about the spat constantly by the media during the World Cup.
She apparently didn't let it affect her. In the USA's tournament opener, they beat Thailand, 13-0 -- the largest win in Women's World Cup history, a moment worthy of being on this list in and of itself -- with Rapinoe scoring once. In the round of 16, she coolly scored the USA's all-important first goal in a tight match against Spain, but it was against hosts France in the quarterfinal that Rapinoe would make her indelible mark on the 2019 tournament.
In just the fifth minute of a much-hyped, top-billed clash in Paris, Rapinoe scored directly off a free kick and debuted a goal celebration that quickly became iconic: She paused, feet together, arms up in a statue-esque pose, seemingly imitating something you'd see at the Louvre. In the second half, she scored again for what would be the eventual game-winner. In the final against the Netherlands, she scored first and did the statue pose again, which became the lasting image of the USA's World Cup win.
As Rapinoe told ESPN after the tournament, the celebration was directed at Trump and her detractors: "It wasn't my celebration, personally -- it wasn't just for me. It was that you and nobody will take our joy. You won't take our passion. You won't rob this from us. You won't take our happiness. We're going to stand up with a smile, with our full chest exposed and put it all out there. This is what we want the world to be. This is the kind of openness, vulnerability, passion, and unbridled joy we want in the world. I felt like I was doing it with everyone and for everyone."
5. Carli Lloyd's brazen hat trick in a World Cup final (2015)
Have you ever played a video game and set it to the easiest mode so you could score at will? That's pretty much what the 2015 Women's World Cup final looked like.
Carli Lloyd was already having a pretty good tournament by that point. After initially being limited as a co-defensive midfielder through the first four games, some yellow card suspensions and tactical changes from U.S. coach Jill Ellis freed Lloyd up in the later knockout rounds to play more as a roaming striker. By the time the U.S. reached the final against Japan, she was in fine form -- but no one could've expected what she'd do next.
In the third minute, the Americans earned a corner kick and set up for a set piece designed by then-U.S. assistant coach Tony Gustavsson (now Australia's head coach). Lloyd stood near the center circle, seemingly away from the play, and Megan Rapinoe sent her cross into the box: a low, skipping ball along the grass. Lloyd darted from the center circle to the near post where she tapped it in.
Two minutes later, almost the same thing happened: a corner kick and a low skipping ball, only this time Julie Ertz was in the ball's path and flicked it straight behind her with a back-heel. The ball went to Lloyd, who again fired it in.
But the pièce de résistance was Lloyd's third goal. Lloyd got the ball in the USA's half, flicked the ball around a Japanese defender toward the center line, and then launched the ball some 50 yards. Goalkeeper Ayumi Kaihori had been caught way out of goal, and Lloyd scored perhaps the most audacious goal ever seen in a World Cup final.
The match ended with the U.S. winning 5-2 and Lloyd scoring three goals, but she thought she could've scored one more. "I visualized playing in the World Cup final and visualized scoring four goals," Lloyd said afterward. Well, maybe scoring from the center line can count as two?
4. USWNT overcomes terrible refereeing with latest-ever equalizer (2011)
Non-Americans might roll their eyes at this being No. 4 on the list, but look: memorable moments are subjective, and this is definitely one of the weirdest matches in Women's World Cup history. Abby Wambach's thrilling equalizer -- the latest-ever goal in World Cup history, men's or women's -- in and of itself might sell you on this belonging at No. 4, but let's set the scene.
In this must-win knockout game between the U.S. and Brazil, the soccer gods seemed to be conspiring against the Americans. After the U.S. got off to a 1-0 start, U.S. defender Rachel Buehler was controversially red-carded after following a Marta run into the box where they both lunged at the ball and crashed to the ground together. Her nickname was "the Buehldozer," sure, but she had never received a red card in her life.
U.S. coach Pia Sundhage said in the book the "National Team" that she initially thought the red card was given to Marta for diving. Per the laws of the game at the time, such a red card was a double whammy: in addition to the U.S. losing a player, Brazil was also given a penalty kick.
Cristiane stepped up to the spot and U.S. goalkeeper Hope Solo guessed correctly, diving to her left to bat the shot away. As the Americans celebrated, though, the referee blew her whistle, judging that they had entered the penalty box before Cristiane struck it and ordered the kick to be retaken.
It was a shocking, harsh call. If any encroachment had occurred -- replays show it was very close -- it didn't change the course of what happened after Solo made the well-earned save. The Americans were furious, and Solo was yellow-carded for dissent. Marta stepped up for the retake, but Solo couldn't save two in a row.
Score leveled, the game went to extra time, and Brazil took the lead in the 92nd minute again through controversial circumstances: Marta's finish on the goal was sensational, facing away from goal and somehow flicking it inside the far post, but the assist came from an offside position, which the referees missed.
As everything seemed to conspire against the Americans, they got more desperate, throwing numbers forward trying to make something -- anything -- happen. In the 122nd minute, Megan Rapinoe launched a ball from just beyond the halfway line into the box. Abby Wambach rose into the air at the same time as Brazil goalkeeper Andréia, but Wambach's head got to the ball before Andréia's hands.
10 #FIFAWWC goals.
— FIFA Women's World Cup (@FIFAWWC) May 5, 2019
Today we introduce @AbbyWambach for @USWNT ?? against @CBF_Futebol ?? in 2011.
Is this the #GreatestGoal? pic.twitter.com/1grR2t9zAi
"Oh, can you believe this?!" ESPN announcer Ian Darke shouted at the top of his lungs to American viewers through their TV sets. "Abby Wambach has saved the USA's life in this World Cup!" Chills. The match went to penalties and the USA advanced to the semifinals. This game was only a quarterfinal, but it was partly responsible for the USWNT's resurgence in popular culture.
3. A bizarre coaching decision, a masterclass from Marta, and a USWNT exile (2007)
It may be difficult to remember a time when the U.S. women's national team wasn't riding high as the reigning World Cup champion, but there have been some rocky tournaments for the Americans -- none rockier than the 2007 edition.
Things started to unravel for the U.S. before their semifinal against Brazil even started. Head coach Greg Ryan bizarrely opted to bench starting goalkeeper Hope Solo in favor of backup Briana Scurry, based in part of Scurry's excellent historical track record against the Brazil team. The only problem was Scurry hadn't played for the U.S. in three months, while Solo was well-drilled and match-sharp.
Within 20 minutes of the game, a miscommunication along the U.S. back line led to an own goal, putting Brazil in control. From there, Marta scored twice and a red card reduced the U.S. to 10 players as the Brazilians eventually won 4-0 in the USA's largest loss in Women's World Cup history. "It's fair to say that was one of our worst games in the history of the program," former U.S. winger Heather O'Reilly said in the book "The National Team."
As bad as it was for the U.S., Brazil was having a blast. Marta danced on the ball and ruthlessly toyed with the American back line -- it was a sight to behold from one of the game's all-time greatest players. Marta had played in the 2003 World Cup, but she announced herself to the world in this one, eventually winning the tournament's Golden Ball and Golden Boot for her sensational performances, including against the United States.
Hope Solo's post-game interview after the USWNT lost the 2007 World Cup semifinal to Brazil, which was posted on ESPN's website, sparked controversy.
But the most memorable part happened immediately after the game. As the players walked through the unavoidable mixed zone filled with media, a reporter asked Solo how she felt about not playing. Solo was blunt in her assessment: "It was the wrong decision, and I think anyone who knows anything about the game knows that. There's no doubt in my mind I would have made those saves." She added: "It doesn't matter what somebody did in an Olympic gold-medal game three years ago."
Before the modern day, where a video clip "going viral" is something that seems to happen every day, the clip of Solo's comment on ESPN's website really spread like wildfire -- and it especially spread throughout the U.S. squad. Solo was effectively kicked off the team after most of her teammates ostracized her for crossing the line of publicly criticizing a teammate. She eventually was brought back in the fold and Ryan was fired but, well, you could write a whole book about what happened there, or at least a couple chapters -- ahem.
2. After devastating earthquake and tsunami, Japan triumphs (2011)
There are plenty of moments from the Women's World Cup that are memorable on sporting merits, but this one transcends sports entirely.
In 2011, Japan was hit with a devastating earthquake and tsunami that led to a death toll estimated to be as high as 20,000. The earthquake was one of the most powerful ever recorded in human history, and the ensuing tsunami displaced hundreds of thousands of people from their homes and led to the nuclear disaster at the power plant in Fukushima.
When the Japanese women's national team, nicknamed Nadeshiko, embarked on the Women's World Cup only three months later, expectations weren't very high. After all, Japan had only gotten as far as the group stage in the previous three Women's World Cups and weren't remotely considered favorites going into it.
But Japan surprised everyone with their slick tiki-taka ball movement and possession, and their organized, disciplined style of play made them difficult to break down. Back in Japan, people rallied around the team, finding respite and taking pride in the performances of the Nadeshiko. During the tournament, Japan coach Norio Sasaki even showed images of the devastation back home to players during team meetings to remind them that they were playing for more than themselves.
In the final, Japan came up against a determined U.S. side that dominated early on with Alex Morgan scoring first in her debut World Cup. It went back and forth until Homare Sawa scored a thrilling last-gasp equalizer in extra time -- an audacious effort with the outside of her foot. Japan prevailed on penalty kicks, and the players unfurled a sign in English that read: "To our friends around the world -- thank you for your support." Japan became the first team from Asia to win a World Cup, men's or women's.
Japan goalkeeper Ayumi Kaihori later said: "We played that tournament not only for ourselves. We felt we had not only the support of Japan, but also the whole world."
1. Brandi Chastain's kick seen 'round the world and her famous sports bra (1999)
Could the top moment on this list really be anything else?
In front of a record crowd of more than 90,000 fans at the Rose Bowl in California, Brandi Chastain scored the deciding penalty kick to lift the U.S. over China in the 1999 Women's World Cup. Chastain's goal celebration -- swinging her shirt around her head in her sports bra, as her teammates rushed her -- remains iconic. It is the moment the U.S. women's national team was ushered into the mainstream of pop culture and, in turn, the Women's World Cup earned a massive boost as well.
In truth, the 1999 final may not have made this list on sporting merits. The game ended 0-0 after full time and extra time -- it was mostly a slog until the penalty kick shootout. But the 1999 tournament had already sparked a huge turning point for the Women's World Cup as an event. FIFA initially expected small crowds and wanted to put the games in small stadiums, but U.S. organizers had a bigger, more optimistic vision for the tournament and pushed for huge NFL stadiums as host venues. Americans responded -- a Women's World Cup attendance record had already been set by the opening game, and the buzz kept growing as the tournament continued.
Players on the U.S. women's national team were, for the first time ever, becoming household names, and winning the World Cup would've sealed it. Chastain's kick did that, but then when she ripped off her jersey, she created an image that would be seen around the world and forever linked to the Women's World Cup. As Chastain explained in "The National Team," that moment became a phenomenon and followed her around for years -- Chastain couldn't do anything else in her career without being asked about it.
"Never before had a women's sporting event garnered that many fans in one location or around the world watching," Chastain said in the book. "So, it makes sense that would be a lead question or a follow‑up question. I always reminded myself: That question allows me the opportunity to walk through the door, answer the question, and then give more information about women's soccer than I had ever been offered before."
And here we are, still talking about it. The growth and success of the Women's World Cup owes a lot to this moment, and its legacy continues.
Chris Cooke, Colin Ingram cut loose to leave Middlesex down and out on their outground
Glamorgan 238 for 3 (Cooke 113*, Ingram 92*) beat Middlesex 209 for 5 (Cracknell 77, Eskinazi 59) by 29 runs
Glamorgan set their highest T20 score, 238 for 3, as they pulverised 72 from the last three overs on the same ground where Middlesex - with Gloucestershire the grateful opposition - had failed to get nine from the last two on the same pitch: a stark comparison that might well have entered Eskinazi's consciousness on the journey home.
John Simpson, Middlesex's experienced wicketkeeper, and one of the two senior players at the crease as Middlesex failed to beat Gloucestershire, had been dropped for this game. Ryan Higgins, the other culprit, might have wished he had been too as his wayward four overs disappeared for 62. The all-rounder's much-heralded return home from Gloucestershire has been followed by good Championship returns but is yet to bear fruit in the Blast.
Ingram already has four T20 hundreds; this was Cooke's first and, 37 now, he celebrated the achievement as only a player who feels the shadows lengthening on his career can. Helm, Middlesex's most potent T20 bowler, began the last over with Cooke still 12 short, but he deposited two full-length balls, the first one a slower ball, over deep midwicket with the sort of repetitive clean hitting that had characterised an out-of-control partnership of 187 in 79 balls.
"It's the first time I've played here, so hopefully I can come back as it's a great place to bat," Cooke said. "We had 180 as a par score which wouldn't have been enough. I'd like to think I've hit the ball close to as good as that before, but I didn't really have a T20 hundred in my career on my radar, with me batting at five or six, so it's amazing to get it."
Middlesex would have had to achieve a record score batting second to overhaul Glamorgan's total - the highest is Sussex's 233 for 6 last summer, and even they lost at Chelmsford - but Eskinazi and James Cracknell provided a platform with a stand of 146 in 12 overs before both fell reverse-sweeping. They needed one more innings of substance, but instead delivered a meek mish-mash of half-baked strokes as Glamorgan's bowlers proved far more resilient.
Cracknell, like so many white-ball speciasts in county cricket, deserves great credit for early-season success. Preparation time can be limited as the switch is made from the Championship format in which he takes no part. "It's been a really odd season," he conceded. "I've had one red-ball innings in the 2s so to go from that and be told you are opening the innings in the white-ball stuff with little practice and middle time has been strange. But I've been given the backing and this is the format I've had most success in so I'm feeling good."
The Blast is never more rural than the week or so when Middlesex temporarily abandon Lord's for the delights of Merchant Taylor's School and Radlett. It feels as if the tenants of a stately home have suddenly upped sticks and gone on a camping holiday, exchanging the silver service and an attentive butler for a soggy beefburger on a plastic plate.
The runs flow, so much so that it puts some tired county squares to shame, the settings are delightful and its all jolly nice, reminiscent of some of the outgrounds used when 40-over cricket saved county cricket from financial disaster half a century ago. It has its place, but it would be counter-intuitive, at best, to argue that it is what the Blast needs if it is to retain its status as a global T20 tournament worthy of attention.
Playing at Lord's gives Middlesex an air of privilege, but they are more in tune with the average millennial in that it's hard to see how they will ever afford their own home. Whenever they play at Lord's, MCC get £16,000 as the cost of staging the game and 30% of whatever proceeds remain. Play on an outground and a convivial crowd of a few thousand is not about to transform the finances unless a hedge fund manager gets tipsy in the bar after the game and agrees a sponsorship deal. They have to cut their cloth to suit - appropriate enough on the cricket ground of a school founded by a group of craftsmen tailors. Those tailors might have warned that going out of fashion is a very dangerous thing.
David Hopps writes on county cricket for ESPNcricinfo @davidkhopps