Philadelphia, PA (Sports Network) - From
our engrossed positions in front of the tele', (IN OUR
OPINIONS), the best and worst of the 2003 Women's World Cup
2003.
WORST SUBSTITUTE DECISIONS -- A number-10
with only 195 minutes played?? Oh where, oh where has Aly Wagner
gone?? U.S. head coach April Heinrichs may know where she is,
and Shannon MacMillan and Tiffeny Milbrett. The American boss
should have utilized her bench players more and still appears to
always be one sub away from winning a major championship.
Despite MacMillan's fitness level and Milbrett's exhaustion,
both proved spark plugs whenever they entered play. Aly Wagner
the next Mia Hamm?? Not if Heinrichs has anything to say.
BEST SUB DECISION -- Germany's Nia Kuenzer
in the second half of the final match against Sweden. She came,
she scored, goal, match, Cup.
PLAYERS THRUST INTO THE SPOTLIGHT:
Following a 4-1 defeat to Germany in their opening game,
Canadian back-up Taryn Swiatek displaced Karina LeBlanc as the
North Americans' number-one while leading Canada to a surprising
fourth-place finish. U.S. defender Catherine Reddick, who
stepped up after Brandi Chastain went down with a broken foot.
Solid at the back, her deft free-kicks even managed to garner a
pair of goals. Not too bad for the only collegian on the States'
side.
WORST NON-CALL: The soccer gods had other
plans than the collective majority would have hoped during the
United States' semifinal clash with Germany. The Americans'
cause could have been helped, however, with a call on German
'keeper Silke Rottenberg. The 'keeper upended U.S. striker Abby
Wambach in the penalty area in the 34th minute.
WORST CALL THAT SHOULDN'T HAVE BEEN:
Romanian referee's decision to award Germany a free-kick just
outside the area that resulted in the match and World
Cup-winning goal. Sweden claimed a match official admitted that
Romanian official Cristina Ionescu failed in awarding a
free-kick which set up Germany's golden-goal winner in the 98th
minute.
BEST GOAL: Hands down, Nia Kuenzer's
98th-minute header that won the World Cup for Germany.
BEST FANS: Perhaps in a bit of a biased
statement, the winner is...the U.S. supporters -- who weathered
agonizing defeat but still managed to return in droves and cheer
on Team U-S-A in the third-place match -- a 3-1 victory over
Canada.
BEST STATEMENT MADE: The fans in the
stands who waved around 8 x 11 copies of
SAVE-THE-WUSA!!!...they're right -- bring back the league.
BEST DEBUTANTE TEAM: The French. The
first-timers even managed a win over South Korea and a draw
against eventual quarterfinalist Brazil before their dream ended
with a 2-0 defeat at the hand of 1995 champion Norway. Bravo!!!
Love that Marinette Pichon. She's a gamer.
BEST DEBUTANTE PLAYER -- Abby Wambach. The
ever-imposing Wambach left everything on the field (including a
few opponents that are probably still peeling themselves off the
pitch) en route to a three-goal performance and a place in the
hearts of all blue-collar soccer fans everywhere. Props also go
out to Canadian Kara Lang. Only 16, she capped off an impressive
Cup run with a fearless run at the U.S. back-line...kudos and
highlights for years to come.
WAVES GOOD-BYE TO: We will no doubt shed a
tear in 2007 when the playing field is without Germany's Maren
Meinert and Bettina Wiegmann, China's Sun Wen and the United
States's Julie Foudy, Brandi Chastain, Joy Fawcett and perhaps
Kristine Lilly. But Mia Hamm will be missed the most. She has
won our respect, aside from her all-world 144 goals in 245
international appearances. But also for the real, humble,
self-made woman-athlete that she is.
MOST ENTERTAINING MATCH: The final. It had
all the ingredients that a grand finale should have at this
level. Great attacking, better defending and stellar
goalkeeping. What's better?? -- An overtime golden-goal by a
lesser-known sub who won the World Cup with her head, literally.
MOST ENTERTAINING TEAM: It was hard to pin
this one down and despite a supporters vote to Germany on FIFA's
World Cup web site, we're going to have to choose runner-ups
Sweden. Not because we felt terrible over their final loss or
chose this as a consolation prize, but because we believe they
did so much with relatively little.
BIGGEST DISAPPOINTMENT: China. Finalists
in 1999, the Asians had an offensive blackout (three goals in
four matches), and were ousted from the competition in the
quarterfinals by Canada. Captain Sun Wen ultimately retired and
the Chinese Federation felt the need to issue a statement
documenting the team's demise.
BIGGEST SURPRISE: Canada. They were
winless prior to USA 2003 and ranked 12th out of the 16-team
field. Upended heavily-favored China in the quarterfinals.
Enough said.
BEST COACH: Canada's Even Pellerud. He
took the Canadian team, winless at USA 1999 and ranked 12th at
USA 2003, to semifinals and brink of finals. No coincidence that
this proven winner led Norway to the World Cup championship at
Sweden 1995.
COMEBACK PLAYERS: Norway's Hege Riise and
U.S.'s Shannon MacMillan. Both players returned from
debilitating knee injuries. MacMillan came back just four months
after hers to play 42 minutes, while Riise -- Norway's fabled
team leader -- played 36.
GRACIOUS HOSTS: The United States put
together a world-class tournament in less than four months that
averaged 20,000 fans per match amid a very crowded fall sports
line-up. Kudos to U.S. Soccer and to the U.S. women in general.
No matter the arena or level of competition, we love to watch
'em play!!!
BEST COMMERCIAL: Hollywood or the White
House?? U.S. captain Julie Foudy would success no matter what
career road she chooses next, but we always seem to get a good
laugh over the team's courtroom commercial, starring Foudy in
the witness chair. These girls have personality as well as mad
skills.
OVERRATED PLAYER: Mercy Akide -- Nigeria,
Despite stiff "Group of Death" competition, Marvelous Mercy
didn't find the net in the tournament in three games and neither
did her teammates
UNDERRATED PLAYER: Christine Sinclair --
Canada, Hooper and Lang may have grabbed the headlines, but
Sinclair scored three times in the tourney including the
go-ahead finish in the team's quarterfinal clincher over Japan .