Entering the game the Netherlands were the heavy favorites over Italy. The Italians were deemed the Cinderella team of the tournament and were thought to be outmatched by Holland.
Neither Italy or the Netherlands have played in a quarterfinal at a Women’s World Cup so nerves were expected from both sides. But if the nerves were not enough they also had to try and play through the heat wave that is passing through France. Their game was set to kickoff at 3 pm local time when the heat is in its prime. The Netherlands said they tried to ask FIFA to move the game back to try and play at cooler temperatures. It was to no avail and the teams would have to manage the game with the fatigue the heat causes.
The Netherlands controlled the tempo for the majority of the game. They had multiple scoring chances, but were not clinical in the final third and Italy’s goalkeeper, Laura Giuliani, was not tested. Italy had their chances in the first half even though they came few and far between. But again no real test for the Netherlands goalkeeper, Sari van Veenendaal. No real chances mean no goals and a 0-0 tie at halftime.
The much needed rest and the recovery from the halftime break gave the Netherlands a surge of tempo in the second half. They had many different attacks in the early minutes of the half but once again just could not get anything in the back of the net. The Netherlands were even given free kick opportunities deep in their offensive half, but no goals to count for.
The constant pressure for the Netherlands would pay off as the game went on and so would their free kicks. The Netherlands were awarded a free kick on the left side of their attacking half. Free kick specialist, Sherida Spitse, stepped up to take the kick and played a beautifully weighted ball to Vivianne Miedema who effortlessly headed the ball into the goal.
The 1-0 lead ignited the Netherlands even more and just ten minutes after their first goal they added another in similar fashion.
Spitse once again stepped up to take a free kick in the offensive half, this time on the right side. She sent a driven ball into the box and Stefanie van der Gragt shot up out of the crowd of players and headed the ball above the outstretched goalkeeper.
Only ten minutes left to play and down 2-0 Italy could feel their historic run coming to an end. They would play the remaining minutes with the same pride and passion they have the entire tournament, but when the final whistle blew the Italians were eliminated. Hopefully this is not the last we see of the Italians and we do not have to wait another 20 years to see them at the Women’s World Cup.
The Dutch have used this World Cup to make a statement that they may be newer to the spotlight, but they are a team that will remain at the top. Earlier this week Lieke Martins, forward for the Netherlands, told FIFa that what their goal as a team was and it was that ‘We want to make history’ and they did just that. They will have to wait until the game between Sweden and Germany which starts at 12:30 pm ET on FS1. After the match Miedema said that she does not care who their next opponent is saying, “We’ll see tonight if it’s going to be Sweden or Germany, but I don’t care they’re both really good and we know that we can beat them.”