Karen Carney was utterly dismayed yet intensely proud. Prominent amid the maelstrom of emotions was concern for Laura Bassett, her best friend and the scorer of the stoppage-time own goal on Wednesday that gave Japan a place in the World Cup final.
That cruel 2-1 defeat
brought England’s challenge to a jarringly abrupt conclusion. As the
fireworks flaring into the humid July air near England’s downtown
Edmonton hotel marked Canada Day, Carney and company were busy consoling
the Notts County centre-half.
“I felt heartbroken when I realised the ball had crossed the line,”
said Carney, who has been close to Bassett since they became Birmingham
team-mates as teenagers. “I’m particularly heartbroken because Laura’s
my best mate; I just feel for her. She’s inconsolable and we didn’t
deserve that as a team. We deserved to go through. We were the better
team. It’s crap, isn’t it!”
A Japan side who had been a little condescending towards England
ended up being really put through their paces and the winger Carney gave
the impression she will not cheering them on in Sunday’s final against the USA in Vancouver.
“Their karma, or whatever it is, will get them,” she said before
turning her attention to the legacy the Lionesses trust will be created
by their achievement in reaching a semi-final for the first time. “We
believed we would come back with a gold medal, we believed we would win
the trophy but we haven’t,” she said.
“Hopefully, though, we’ve inspired a nation. Hopefully we’ve changed a
lot of stereotypes and a lot of people’s perceptions about women’s
football.”
The sense that a watershed has been reached is acute. “Hopefully
people now fully respect us,” Carney said. “Hopefully young girls, and
young boys, now admire England, are backing our team and have
rediscovered a love for the game
“I think we’ve got a lot of respect for the way we are as people.
We’re just normal people who put on a jersey for our country and give
everything. Television viewers would have seen that after the game, seen
how heartbreaking it was for us.”
And one player in particular. “We’re all looking after Laura, letting
her know it wasn’t her fault,” said Carney. “We’re there for her; we’re
a team through all the highs and lows. We have to stick together.
“We just need to look after Laura now. We’re 100% going to give her
all the love and support she needs. Losing wasn’t just about the own
goal, it just wasn’t meant to be today.”
As Bassett enjoyed the additional consolation offered by her
boyfriend and her brother – who, without accreditation, performed the
not insignificant task of persuading Fifa officials to permit him into
the Lionesses’ dressing room to comfort his sister at the final whistle –
Carney attempted to look forward to Saturday’s third place play-off
against Germany. “We’ve got to get our jerseys back on,” she said. “We’ve got to try and get that third place.”
It was a message reiterated by Steph Houghton. “Now we have Germany,”
said Mark Sampson’s captain. “We’re desperate to finish third. Fingers
crossed we can do that.
“We’re devastated to have lost to Japan but they are world champions
for a reason and we were immense. Hopefully we did the nation proud. Our
aim was to try and inspire young girls in England – and we were that
close to the final. Football really can be very cruel but we’ve had
amazing highs in this tournament.
“We have to respect Japan – they’re world champions for a reason. We
wanted to go one step further but our failure wasn’t for a want of
trying. It was just that Japan never gave in. Every one of our players
gave everything on the pitch, there was no energy left. I couldn’t be
prouder of everyone.”
During the Lionesses’ long trek across Canada, all the way from the
Atlantic coast to the Pacific, they have increasingly captured hearts
and minds – and Houghton could not be more delighted.
“We’re aware a little bit of how we’ve been received back home but
when I talk to my family they tell me how much it has gripped the
nation,” she said. “We wanted to do England proud and I think we have.
“The amount of TV exposure we’ve had and the attention women’s
football has got has been brilliant. We want to be role models. We hope
girls are inspired to start playing at a younger age and try to get to a
World Cup themselves.”

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