England defender Alex Greenwood is assured the Lionesses will rediscover its scoring contact rapidly on the Women’s World Cup, because the European champion has gone greater than three video games with out scoring a aim from open play.
The Lionesses beat Haiti 1-0 in its opening match on Saturday, however its lone aim was a penalty from Georgia Stanway. The missed alternatives prompted coach Sarina Wiegman to say her gamers are missing “ruthlessness”.
“I’ve seen the girls every day in training, so it’s not a concern for me,” Greenwood mentioned on Wednesday. “I think the games (without goals) have come in a small space of time and I think we’ve proved in the past that we can score goals, we’ve got players all over the pitch who can score goals.”
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“In football, you go through little spells where you might not score as many goals as you’d like, but the chances are created and I think that’s the most important thing.”
England, who subsequent face Denmark on Friday at Sydney Football Stadium, grabbed an astonishing 80 targets – and conceded none – in World Cup qualifying.
Ella Toone scored England’s final aim in open play within the Women’s Finalissima towards Brazil on April 6. Its final multi-goal sport was a 6-1 win over Belgium within the Arnold Clark Cup in February.
“We’ve got to put the ball in the back of the net when we have those chances and I think we will,” Greenwood mentioned. “We’ve got enough players and enough quality on this team to create the chances and to put the ball in the back of the net.”
Denmark edged China 1-0 of their match opener, with Amalie Vangsgaard scoring within the ninetieth minute. Bayern Munich and former Chelsea midfielder Pernille Harder is essential to Denmark’s play and Greenwood was cautious of the menace she posed.
“What she’s achieved in the game has been outstanding. I think I’ve been very much aware of it playing against Chelsea, I remember the problems she causes,” the 29-year-old mentioned.
“Likewise, they’ve got some really good individuals all over the pitch. I think for us it’s about nullifying their threats, her being one of them and we’ll have a game plan to do that.”
On Sunday, the Lionesses moved into their base camp within the seaside city of Terrigal, about 100 kilometres north of Sydney, the place they’ll keep for the rest of the match, save a brief flight to their ultimate group sport in Adelaide.
“We wanted them to feel Australia,” Kay Cossington, the FA ladies’s technical director instructed reporters. “That’s important. They need that outside opportunity.”
Greenwood mentioned gamers have been spending their downtime within the native espresso store, strolling the seashore, colouring, and doing jigsaw puzzles within the workforce video games room.
“It’s a relaxed camp. The staff make it very relaxed… the players feel relaxed so there’s no concern there,” she added.