Women's World Cup - Third Place Play Off
GermanyGermany0EnglandEngland1

Women's World Cup: Germany Women 0-1 England Women

By Alistair MagowanBBC Sport in Edmonton
  • England finish third in the Women's World Cup
  • Fara Williams scores her third penalty of World Cup
  • Germany are top of the world rankings
  • England had not beaten Germany in 20 attempts

Fara Williams's extra-time penalty ensured England beat Germany for the first time in 31 years to finish third at the Women's World Cup.

The performance was the second best by an England team following the 1966 win by the men's side and eclipsed the 1990 men's team, who finished fourth in Italy.

England collect their Women's World Cup bronze medals

The Lionesses had not beaten two-time World Cup winners Germany in 20 attempts but they more than matched their opponents and won the spot-kick in the second period of extra-time after substitute Lianne Sanderson was brought down by Tabea Kemme.

Williams, who is England's record cap holder and was homeless at one point in her England career, beat retiring German goalkeeper Nadine Angerer for her third penalty of the tournament.

It brought to a close a superb campaign for England, who finished as the top European nation and are now set to climb from sixth in the world rankings after a tournament during which they generated strong and well-deserved support at home.

However, they were thankful for a glaring miss from Bianca Schmidt four minutes from the end as they held on to their slender lead.

The result was tribute to the progress that England have made under Mark Sampson after the Welshman took over 18 months ago. It also put a positive spin on their campaign after the cruel 2-1 semi-final defeat following Laura Bassett's injury-time own goal against Japan.

The team are set to receive an additional £2,000 for winning the bronze medal, taking their World Cup bonus payments to £14,000.

Sampson's education as England head coach has now come full circle, following a 3-0 defeat by the eight-time European champions last November.

This time the 32-year-old Sampson chose to be more conservative in his tactical approach and it paid off as his team lined up with three centre-backs, which included Jo Potter alongside Steph Houghton and Bassett, who showed no hangover from her semi-final heartache.

But the formation allowed space in front of the defence and the European champions could have scored three times in the first 10 minutes, with tournament top scorer Celia Sasic wasting a great chance before the impressive Houghton cleared off the line.

England v Germany
Laura Bassett, who scored an own goal in the semi-final, played against Germany in the third-fourth play-off

During an open start to the game, Houghton had the best opening of the first half but mistimed her shot from seven yards. There was also a strong penalty appeal as Kemme appeared to block Potter's shot with her hand.

In her last World Cup game in charge, German coach Silvia Neid became frustrated with England's aggressive approach, but it ensured the match remained goalless at the break.

Awesome England deserve win - Mark Sampson

Having named an under-strength side, Neid brought on Melanie Leupolz to add more mettle to the German midfield and they began to create the better chances. Bardsley saved Sara Daebritz's header before Houghton blocked Lena Petermann's close-range shot.

But the introduction of Eniola Aluko, who had not played since England's second game against Mexico, swung the game back in England's favour and she laid on a pass to Jill Scott, who wasted a great opportunity with 13 minutes remaining.

The Lionesses were buoyed going into extra-time and their determination to not bow down to a world superpower of women's football helped create the penalty, which led to joyous scenes at the final whistle as a superb campaign ended on a high.

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Goal
Fara Williams scored her third goal of the Women's World Cup as England beat Germany to claim the bronze medal
Karen Bardsley
Karen Bardsley made an excellent save to deny Germany's Sara Daebritz
Mark Sampson
England boss Mark Sampson is thrown in the air in celebration by the England players

Line-ups

Germany

Formation 4-4-2

  • 1Angerer
  • 2Schmidt
  • 14Peter
  • 3Bartusiak
  • 22Kemme
  • 6Laudehr
  • 20GoeßlingSubstituted forPoppat 101'minutes
  • 7BehringerSubstituted forLeupolzat 45'minutes
  • 23Däbritz
  • 13SasicSubstituted forMittagat 73'minutes
  • 19Petermann

Substitutes

  • 4Maier
  • 5Krahn
  • 8Bremer
  • 9Lotzen
  • 10Marozsán
  • 11Mittag
  • 12Schult
  • 15Cramer
  • 16Leupolz
  • 17Henning
  • 18Popp
  • 21Benkarth

England

Formation 3-5-2

  • 1BardsleyBooked at 83mins
  • 5Houghton
  • 6BassettBooked at 92mins
  • 17Potter
  • 12Bronze
  • 8Scott
  • 4WilliamsSubstituted forStoneyat 112'minutes
  • 16ChapmanBooked at 77minsSubstituted forSandersonat 80'minutes
  • 14Greenwood
  • 23WhiteSubstituted forAlukoat 61'minutes
  • 10Carney

Substitutes

  • 2Scott
  • 3Rafferty
  • 7Nobbs
  • 9Aluko
  • 11Moore
  • 13Chamberlain
  • 15Stoney
  • 18Duggan
  • 19Taylor
  • 20Sanderson
  • 21Telford
  • 22Kirby
Referee:
Hyang-Ok Ri
Attendance:
28,120

Match Stats

Home TeamGermanyAway TeamEngland
Possession
Home54%
Away46%
Shots
Home32
Away18
Shots on Target
Home7
Away4
Corners
Home11
Away10
Fouls
Home16
Away14

Scores, Results & Fixtures

Saturday 4th July 2015

As It Stood

A

TeamPWDLFAGDPts
1Canada31202115
2China31113304
3Netherlands31112204
4New Zealand302123-12

B

TeamPWDLFAGDPts
1Germany3210151147
2Norway32108267
3Thailand3102310-73
4Ivory Coast3003316-130

C

TeamPWDLFAGDPts
1Japan33004139
2Cameroon32019366
3Switzerland310211473
4Ecuador3003117-160

D

TeamPWDLFAGDPts
1USA32104137
2Australia31114404
3Sweden30304403
4Nigeria301236-31

E

TeamPWDLFAGDPts
1Brazil33004049
2South Korea311145-14
3Costa Rica302134-12
4Spain301224-21

F

TeamPWDLFAGDPts
1France32016246
2England32014316
3Colombia31114314
4Mexico301228-61
View full Women's World Cup tables