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Win Or Go Home: U.S. Takes On Spain In Women's World Cup

U.S. forward Megan Rapinoe throws the ball from the touch line during last week's World Cup match against Sweden.
Damien Meyer
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AFP/Getty Images
U.S. forward Megan Rapinoe throws the ball from the touch line during last week's World Cup match against Sweden.

The U.S. has shown few weaknesses in its march through the Women's World Cup in France. But now the competition gets harder and the stakes are higher in the knockout round of the monthlong tournament. The first U.S. test comes Monday against Spain in the round of 16 (kickoff is noon ET and broadcast on FS1 and Telemundo).

The Spaniards have never been to a Women's World Cup before. In the group stage, they opened with a victory against South Africa, a defeat by Germany and a scoreless draw with China. None of that matters in the knockout round. The winner plays on and the loser goes home.

"I feel good where we are in terms of the collective understanding of our team," said U.S. head coach Jill Ellis at Sunday's prematch news conference. "Obviously Spain's a great opponent."

Spain is not the United States, though. In the three games the U.S. has played so far, it set records for most goals scored (18) and the biggest goal differential while shutting out each of its opponents (Thailand, Chile and Sweden).

Perhaps the three biggest questions are these:

  • How is star forward Alex Morgan? She was tackled in the last game against Sweden and didn't return for the second half. "Alex is fine," Ellis said.
  • What about midfielder Julie Ertz who anchors the defense? She didn't play against Sweden because of what U.S. Soccer called a "minor hip contusion." Ellis said she's fine, too.
  • Has the U.S team had enough rest? The Americans last played on Thursday (three full days of rest). While Spain last played a week ago (six days of rest).
  • "At this point, it is what it is," Ellis told reporters. But she's not concerned about it. "I think we're very used to a three-day rhythm. It's what we've done in certain tournaments. Specifically for this purpose of having a consistent rhythm in what we do. And we can't control obviously what our opponent has."

    There has been little that has slowed the U.S. in its romp through the World Cup competition thus far. Ellis has played different lineups in each game and her players don't seem bothered by it. "The strength of this team is that we have a lot of strengths," said midfielder Rose Lavelle. "We're really deep, and we don't rely on one person to get the job done. And I think that gives us a lot of confidence moving forward."

    The U.S. is ranked No. 1 in the world and the defending 2015 WWC champions. But it has little history with Spain. The two teams have played only once before, and that was in January (a game the U.S. won 1-0). The U.S. coaching staff and the players say they're taking nothing for granted and focusing on just one game at a time. But they'd be forgiven if they looked ahead just a little bit. The winner of this contest takes on host country France in the quarterfinals on Friday.

    First, the U.S. has to get by Spain to make the matchup that has been talked about all tournament long.

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    As NPR's Southern Bureau chief, Russell Lewis covers issues and people of the Southeast for NPR — from Florida to Virginia to Texas, including West Virginia, Kentucky, and Oklahoma. His work brings context and dimension to issues ranging from immigration, transportation, and oil and gas drilling for NPR listeners across the nation and around the world.