Women's World Cup: Jill Ellis dismisses celebration criticism

"Goals are pretty hard to come by," says the USA head coach, defending her team's celebrations in a 13-0 annihilation of Thailand in its first match of the World Cup.

Published : Jun 16, 2019 15:07 IST

Jill Ellis talks to Carli Lloyd during U.S.'s contest against Thailand. Photo: AP
Jill Ellis talks to Carli Lloyd during U.S.'s contest against Thailand. Photo: AP
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Jill Ellis talks to Carli Lloyd during U.S.'s contest against Thailand. Photo: AP

Jill Ellis dismissed criticism the United States faced for goal celebrations in her team's first World Cup match against Thailand , describing it as part of the game.

USA was questioned for over-celebrating as the score reached 13-0, setting a record for either a men's or women's World Cup match, with former Canada international Kaylyn Kyle labelling it "disrespectful."

USA head coach Ellis, however, explained her team was not celebrating the goals as much as it was celebrating the players and the hard work that went into scoring on the World Cup stage. "Goals are pretty hard to come by in our sport and I think the meaning behind those goals, the people behind those goals — you got to celebrate that," Ellis told reporters ahead of Sunday's clash with Chile.

"That night was about celebrating people. I was most excited on the last goal we scored because that was Carli Lloyd. And I know all the history and all the background of that player to get to that moment and what that meant.

"So I think that's important to put the human element in this as well. It might seem a scoreline to you, but it’s also years and years of work and the pride I had in that moment — I didn't know the score. I wasn't celebrating the goal. I was celebrating Carli. I think that’s important."

 

USA celebrated five goals from Alex Morgan, who matched a feat accomplished only by Michelle Akers for most goals scored by a player in a single game. Rose Lavelle, Lindsey Horan and Sam Mewis also scored for the first time in a World Cup as they made their tournament debuts.

"You have to seize those moments," Ellis said. "I have seen a lot of goals in this tournament and there have been a lot of unique celebrations, exuberant celebrations.

"That is part of a World Cup. It brings you to that level because it's the pinnacle of our sport. I think it's great that women — not just our women, all women — get to celebrate in such an exuberant way with their own stamp as well."

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