Australia beats France in penalty shootout to enter semifinals of Women’s World Cup 2023

There was little to choose between the two teams on a tense night in Brisbane, with the quarterfinal ending 0-0 after 120 minutes of stalemate.

Published : Aug 12, 2023 15:43 IST , BRISBANE - 3 MINS READ

Australian players celebrate after defeating France in the penalty shootout to enter the semifinals of the Women’s World Cup 2023. 
Australian players celebrate after defeating France in the penalty shootout to enter the semifinals of the Women’s World Cup 2023.  | Photo Credit: GETTY IMAGES
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Australian players celebrate after defeating France in the penalty shootout to enter the semifinals of the Women’s World Cup 2023.  | Photo Credit: GETTY IMAGES

Co-host Australia beat France 7-6 in a thrilling penalty shoot-out to reach the semifinals of the Women’s World Cup for the first time in its history on a night of drama in Brisbane on Saturday.

Australia now goes to Sydney on Wednesday to face the winner of the final last-eight tie between England and Colombia.

Australia vs France sees the longest penalty shootout in FIFA Women’s World Cup history

Cortnee Vine scored the winning penalty to end a remarkable shoot-out that saw both teams take 10 spot-kicks, the quarterfinal having ended 0-0 after 120 nerve-shredding minutes.

Vine held her nerve to send the crowd into raptures and keep the Matildas’ dream of winning the World Cup on home soil alive.

Australia goalkeeper Mackenzie Arnold missed a chance to win the shoot-out when her kick hit the post, but then saved twice from Kenza Dali after the VAR spotted she had both feet off her line the first time.

Vicki Becho missed France’s 10th penalty, and it was left to Vine to take Australia through by beating France’s substitute goalkeeper Solene Durand, who had been sent on especially for the shoot-out.

It was an agonising way for France to go out after a tense encounter watched by a sell-out crowd of 49,461.

Les Bleues had been hoping to get to the semifinals for just the second time, following its defeat in the last four in 2011, but instead go home.

Australia’s victory was achieved despite Sam Kerr again being left on the bench at kick-off, with the talismanic Matildas captain, now fit after a calf injury, coming on early in the second half and going on to convert her penalty in the shoot-out.

Kerr comes off bench

Matildas coach Tony Gustavsson stuck with the same team that started against Denmark in the last 16, while France brought the fit-again Maelle Lakrar back into their defence.

Lakrar really should have given France an early lead to silence the hostile crowd, but the 23-year-old somehow succeeded in diverting an Eugenie Le Sommer shot over the bar with the goal gaping.

That was a let-off for the host, who was then grateful to Arnold for tipping a Le Sommer effort behind and for stopping a stinging Lakrar attempt following a corner.

It looked like the occasion was getting to Australia, but it began to threaten in the final minutes of the first half.

It was desperately unlucky not to go ahead in the 41st minute when French defensive hesitancy allowed Emily van Egmond to tee up Mary Fowler for what seemed like a certain goal.

But Elisa De Almeida, shifted out to right-back for this game, raced in to produce a miraculous block with her thigh.

French goalkeeper Pauline Peyraud-Magnin then had to come out to clear in front of Fowler, as it somehow remained goalless at the interval.

Kerr emerged 10 minutes into the second half, replacing Van Egmond to the delight of the crowd, and her introduction provided such a lift that Australia very nearly went ahead moments later.

Hayley Raso tried her luck with a rasping drive from outside the box, but Peyraud-Magnin saved and the Juventus goalkeeper topped that with a brilliant block to deny Fowler from point-blank range on the hour mark.

That appeared to pierce some of Australia’s momentum, and the tension increased as the clock ticked down, making extra time almost an inevitability.

France thought it had the breakthrough 10 minutes into the extra period when Ellie Carpenter turned the ball into her own net, but Australia was rescued when the Chilean referee blew for a foul.

Arnold saved superbly from Becho, before France replaced Peyraud-Magnin with Durand as penalties loomed.

Durand, the spot-kick-saving specialist denied both Steph Catley and Clare Hunt in the shoot-out, but it was not enough for France.

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