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MATCH REPORT: LIVERPOOL LADIES 3 ARSENAL LADIES 5
MATCH REPORT: DONCASTER BELLES 1 LIVERPOOL LADIES 3
THREE MAGNIFICENT STRIKES ensured Liverpool Ladies returned to winning ways in Doncaster, effectively relegating the winless Belles as the Reds returned to Merseyside with a 3-1 victory.
Doncaster took an early lead when Rhiannon Roberts nodded a set piece into the back of the net. However two audacious strikes from Caroline Weir put Liverpool ahead at the break and Tash Harding sealed the win with a sublime hit of her own in the second half.
After suffering a knock during the warm up at Birmingham, Mandy van den Berg returned to the back line alongside Satara Murray, Gemma Bonner and Sophie Ingle – with Siobhan Chamberlain in goal.
Ashley Hodson also came into the starting eleven to lead the line with Shanice van de Sanden and Natasha Harding either side of her; Laura Coombs, Katie Zelem and Caroline Weir completing the line up in midfield.
Liverpool struggled during the opening stages to get a grasp on the game, this despite Harding creating the first chance of the tie following lovely link up play between Coombs and van den Berg. Harding flew down the left wing to cross towards Hodson but stand-in Belles goalkeeper Anna Moorhouse beat her to the ball.
The Reds conceded a set piece with Zelem well-positioned on the edge of the box to bat the first away before Rebecca Rayner sent a great opportunity wide of the mark after slipping through the defence to chase a loose ball.
Rayner was looking lively for the home side and sent another effort over the crossbar shortly later, the youth player teed up by former LFC midfielder Katrin Omarsdottir.
Just eleven minutes in Liverpool were forced into a substitution, Coombs unable to continue after a collision with Emily Simpkins and replaced by Kate Longhurst.
Liverpool were having some luck down the left through van den Berg pressing high up the pitch and getting the ball into the box, from one such move the ball was cleared only as far as Zelem who struck wide from distance.
Doncaster took the lead when a harsh free kick was given against van den Berg out wide, the resulting set piece swung in by Simpkins and headed past Chamberlain by Roberts.
Simpkins then went for goal herself from another free kick, a move straight from the training ground with Omarsdottir and Carla Humphrey appearing to argue about who was to take it before Simpkins sent a shot wide.
Spurred on by the Doncaster goal, Liverpool began to settle into a rhythm and soon found themselves on top; van den Berg hitting another excellent ball that almost fell for van de Sanden and Hodson only for Moorhouse to be aware of the danger and off her line to collect.
A tight offside decision was given against the Reds when Harding when one-on-one with Moorhouse, Zelem had slipped the winger through only for the assistant referee to flag for offside.
This preceded a period of domination by Liverpool, at one point the ball bouncing around the Doncaster box with each of van de Sanden, Harding, Hodson and Weir denied by the plucky Belles defence.
Liverpool displayed patient build up play despite trailing, each failed attack would end back with Bonner and the ball once more played forward through the great link up play of Longhurst and Zelem.
Zelem has an eye for a great pass and sprayed one wide here for van de Sanden to chase, the winger getting behind the left back to flash the ball into the box – Hodson there but closed down and Doncaster able to clear.
The Reds patience was eventually rewarded with a superb brace from Weir.
Her first coming after Zelem clipped the ball around Omarsdottir to find the Scottish international in space, Leandra Little arrived a second too late to close her down and Weir scooped the ball under Moorhouse to put Liverpool level.
Then, on the brink of half time, the Reds were in the lead – Ingle this time providing Weir with the ball and Weir turning to fire an even more impressive and unstoppable strike past the ‘keeper with her left foot.
Liverpool went in at half time with a deserved lead.
Out for the second half quick out the blocks with van de Sanden racing down the right and cutting the ball back to Zelem, the midfielder hit the ball sweetly from 20 yards but straight at Moorhouse.
Zelem also won a free kick in the opening minutes of the second half, Weir sending it in with her left foot and finding Zelem who headed wide.
Then Longhurst went on a bursting run all the way into the Belles box where she went down calling for a foul, her protests were waved away by the referee and Hodson’s shot was closed down.
It was all Liverpool and Doncaster were now the ones struggling to get a foothold, unable to cope with the Reds passing.
Following Hodson’s shot being blocked the ball was immediately won back by Zelem who tapped it to Weir, she turned to find Longhurst who in turn passed back to van den Berg – short, quick passes again going back to the defence until one of the back line could find an opening further upfield.
Liverpool’s greatest chance to put distance between themselves and the Belles came just four minutes into the second half, Ingle playing the ball forward, Harding dummying and van den Berg crossing to her Dutch international team mate van de Sanden. van de Sanden’s shot was blocked and the ball fell to Weir who knocked it back to Hodson who struck the post.
van de Sanden’s second half performance was excellent and the winger was unlucky not to be on the scoresheet herself after Harding cheekily nutmegged her marker to tee up van de Sanden but she was denied by Moorhouse.
The Reds soon found the back of the net again, a loose ball falling to Harding outside the area and Doncaster slow to react as Harding lifted the ball around several players and over the line to put Liverpool 3-1 up.
Despite the slow start Liverpool played some of the best football they’ve played this season towards the end of the first half and during the majority of the second, a well-earned three points going into the season’s final game – and what could be a fight for third – against Arsenal Ladies on November 6th,
LIVERPOOL LADIES: Chamberlain, Murray, Bonner (C), Ingle, van den Berg, Coombs (Longhurst), Zelem, Weir, van de Sanden, Harding (Green), Hodson
PLAYER OF THE MATCH: Caroline Weir
X-REDS: Derby Day in Freezing Fylde
REPORT: BIRMINGHAM CITY LADIES 2 LIVERPOOL LADIES 1
It was a frustrating afternoon all round for Liverpool Ladies as their eight game unbeaten Women’s Super League run came to an end away at Birmingham City.
The Reds had gone behind shortly into the second half when former defender Corina Schroder scored a goal on her debut. Katie Zelem then levelled the score from the penalty spot before Kerys Harrop headed past Siobhan Chamberlain to seal the Birmingham win.
Liverpool were forced into a late line up change as Mandy van den Berg took a knock during the warm up and was replaced by Martha Harris, the full back making her first appearance since late April following injury.
Harris was joined in defence by an otherwise unchanged back line of Satara Murray, Gemma Bonner and Sophie Ingle with Chamberlain in goal.
Ahead of them Zelem, Laura Coombs and Rosie White made up the midfield while Caroline Weir, Emma Lundh and Shanice van de Sanden led the attack.
The game was a scrappy affair, Birmingham always a tough side to play against with their direct style and Liverpool found it tough to break the Blues down.
Clear cut chances were few and far between during the first half, Birmingham with a series of corners that were well defended by Liverpool and England youth international Chloe Peplow seeing a
When the Reds found space to play around Birmingham, the fast counter attacking football that we’ve grown accustomed to over the course of the season was on display; Murray slipping a ball through to the chasing van de Sanden yet Blues goalkeeper Sophie Baggaley was quick off her mark to stop the attack.
Then, following a corner, Zelem prodded the ball to Weir who in turn looked up to pick out van de Sanden, the winger clipping a placed pass towards Lundh and the number 9 meeting the ball in the middle but Baggaley again was off her line to block the shot.
Liverpool enjoyed a brief period on top and looked certain to break the deadlock midway through the half, Murray showing excellent desire chasing what had looked to be hopeless loose ball yet winning the Reds a throw near the corner flag; White linking up with Murray from the throw in but unable to find Coombs with her cross.
After that White had a low drive deflected an inch wide of the post, Coombs swinging the resulting corner into the middle of the 6-yard box and Baggaley stretching to tip the set piece onto the crossbar.
The game lulled slightly before once more sparking into life before half time, Coombs unleashing an effort from distance that was punched away by Baggaley and Kirsty Linnett spurned a golden opportunity for Birmingham at the far post following a Freda Ayisi cross.
In the early stages of the second half the Reds defence came under pressure, a series of neat passes amongst the back four calmly getting rid of the danger.
However it soon returned in the form of Schroder, the German was making her Birmingham debut after a long injury lay off and poked a pass from Linnett over the line with her left foot to put the Blues 1-0 ahead.
The lead was short lived as Tash Harding came from the bench to replace Lundh and was immediately running at the Birmingham defence, beating two players to cut inside and get the ball to White – the New Zealander brought down inside the box to earn a penalty which Zelem confidently stepped up to take and scored.
Unfortunately for Liverpool this reprieve was also temporary as Birmingham retook the lead shortly afterwards, Kerys Harrop rising to nod Jess Carter’s long throw past Chamberlain and into the back of the net.
Liverpool had a couple of more chances to take a share of the points before the 90 minutes was up, Bonner narrowly heading a corner wide and van de Sanden also fizzing a drive wide of the mark.
Still, Birmingham held onto their lead to take all three points and into next week’s Continental Cup final against newly crowned league champions Manchester City on the back of a win.
LIVERPOOL LADIES Chamberlain, Murray, Bonner (C), Ingle, Harris, Coombs, Zelem, White (Longhurst), van de Sanden, Lundh (Harding), Weir (Hodson)
PLAYER OF THE MATCH Martha Harris
International Reds – September 2016
It’s been a long three weeks since Liverpool Ladies were last in action, the Reds beat Reading Women on September 1st courtesy of super sub Katie Zelem’s superb 85th minute winning goal.
A number of Reds have been away on international duty during the break between FA Women’s Super League games; Zelem selected for England u20s duty and heading to Los Angeles, Mandy van den Berg and Shanice van de Sanden also crossed the Atlantic for the Netherlands friendly with the United States in Alanta.
Whilst a quartet of Brits have been competing in the final round of Euro 2016 qualifiers – Tash Harding and Sophie Ingle with Wales, Caroline Weir making history with Scotland and Siobhan Chamberlain keeping a familiar clean sheet with England.
Mandy van den Berg led a talented Netherlands side out in Atlanta for the Euro 2017 hosts friendly with the United States.
There were several familiar faces amongst the starting line up with the Arsenal trio of Sari van Veenendaal, Dominque Janssen and Danielle van de Donk and of course Shanice van de Sanden.
It would be van de Sanden that opened the scoring in what was an excellent first half of football – van den Berg’s clearance at the edge of the 18-yard box nodded on into the path of the speedy winger. van de Sanden added Meghan Klingenberg to her list of left backs she’s beaten this year to charge forward and smash the ball past Alyssa Naeher to put the Netherlands ahead.
The US had an equaliser before half time when Liverpool supporter Carli Lloyd found the back of the net and took the lead shortly into the second half in a controversial manner, van den Berg looked to have been fouled by Tobin Heath as she converted Christen Press’ cross past her own goalkeeper but the referee appeared not to have seen this and let the goal stand.
Allie Long rounded off the scoring on the night, making the score 3-1 USA in front of over 15,000 supporters.
Katie Zelem was selected by Mo Marley to represent England after an impressive season so far with Liverpool, the young midfielder has scored 4 goals so far in 2016 in a red shirt – the latest a wonderful left footed hit against Reading.
England u20s played Brazil, USA and South Korea in the NTC Invitational Tournament, emerging as overall winners with 2 wins and 1 draw.
Zelem started and played the full 90 minutes in each of the wins over Brazil and USA, Aston Villa’s Sarah Mayling struck an 89th minute winner against the Brazilians and England also beat USA by the same scoreline.
Coral Haines of Birmingham netted the winner against the Americans, with Zelem involved in the build up:
England had already wrapped the tournament up before the final game against South Korea, Zelem coming off the bench in the 62nd minute but the young Lionesses were held to a goalless draw.
Siobhan Chamberlain donned the England no.1 shirt for the final home Euro 2017 qualifier at Notts County’s Meadow Lane Stadium against Estonia, although the Reds stopper had little to do over the course of the 90 minutes.
Arsenal’s Danielle Carter marked her second cap with a second hat trick while Jill Scott and Karen Carney also found the back of the net as England cruised to a 5-0 win.
For the following game Chamberlain was amongst the substitutes as England finished their qualifying campaign with a 2-0 victory in Belgium, Nikita Parris and Carney with the goals.
Caroline Weir and Scotland made history during the international break by qualifying for their first major tournament.
Portugal – a side containing former Red and double title winning midfielder Amanda Da Costa – beat Finland on Friday meaning that the Fins could not finish higher than Scotland and confirming their place at next summer’s Euros in the Netherlands.
This meant that Scotland travelled to Iceland for their final qualifier having already qualified.
Three years earlier Weir had made her international debut in Iceland and in the build up to the game a good article went up on the Scottish FA’s website that is well worth a read here: Weir set to return to where it all started.
Here’s what Weir had to say on her time at Liverpool so far:
“Liverpool is a huge club and I’m delighted to be playing there at the moment,” she said.
“It’s a good set-up and we’re seen as equal to the men so we get to do some stuff with the first team too.
“Liverpool itself is quite a small place so you learn pretty quickly what the club means to the city.
“At the moment we’re sitting fourth in the league with three games to go.
“Our manager brought in some new players so we’ve built over the course of the season. It’ll be interesting to see where we end up.”
Scotland went on to finish their qualifying campaign on a high as Jane Ross struck twice to secure a 2-1 win.
Wales fell short of qualifying for Euro 2017 despite a strong finish to their campaign, a 3-0 over Israel with goal from Helen Ward (2) and Charlie Estcourt on Thursday preceded a good performance against Austria in a 0-0 draw this evening.
Sophie Ingle captained the Welsh side in both games while Tash Harding also started both games alongside her Liverpool team mate.
The two were singled out for praise by commentators during the draw and you can read highlights from the Reds duos performances below:
Full report: Strong performance from Wales as Austria qualify
“There was a moment of controversy on 13 minutes when Austrian goalkeeper Zinsberger handled the ball outside the area when under pressure from Natasha Harding, and Greek referee Eleni Lampadariou punished the offence with a yellow card.
Zinsbereger was tested from the resulting free-kick by Jess Fishlock, but with Wales visibly lifted, it was Harding that came close to opening the scoring after 28 minutes but she failed to find the target from a ball fired across the area with one of the best of the few first-half chances.”
“Despite the lack of goals, there was no shortage of entertainment as both sides went in search of the advantage late in the game, but Wales survived a late scare with captain Sophie Ingle again displaying all her defensive qualities to deny the visitors from leaving with maximum points.”
Full report: Wales dominate their way to victory over Israel
“On 33 minutes the lead was doubled when Helen Ward scored her second of the game after latching onto a ball from Rachel Rowe. Wales continued to dominate, and Nadia Lawrence headed over from a Natasha Harding cross as the opening half came to a close, but it remained 2-0 as Wales took a comfortable advantage into the break.”
“It would prove to be another dominant half from Wales, and on 59 minutes Estcourt extended their lead after some excellent work from Natasha Harding in the Israeli area with a fine finish.
Wales were good value for their lead and should have increased their advantage on 85 minutes when Harding was fouled in the area by Michal Ravitz.
Despite being booked previously, Ravitz escaped further punishment, but Jess Fishlock was denied by Shamir as the goalkeeper guessed the right way to deny Wales a fourth goal.”
Liverpool Ladies return to FAWSL action this Sunday away at Birmingham City in a 2pm kick off at Solihull Moors FC.















