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Settling for silver, the Japanese players shed tears in defeat, with coach Norio Sasaki trying to encourage them as they huddled on the field. But they were all smiles when they re-emerged for the medal ceremony, bouncing their way to the podium.
"Even though we got defeated and we couldn't win in this Olympics, if I look at it objectively, they all played very well," Sasaki said through a translator. "There is nothing we should be ashamed of."
Lloyd also scored the winning goal in the gold medal match against Brazil in Beijing four years ago. On Thursday she found the net in the eighth and 54th minutes, making it four goals in the tournament for the midfielder who lost her long-held starting job weeks before the Olympics. She got back on the field when Shannon Boxx injured her hamstring in the opener against France and started every game since.
"I was on a mission this Olympics to prove everybody wrong, and that's what I did," Lloyd said. "To show everybody that I belong on the field."
Yuki Ogimi answered in the 63rd minute for the Japanese, who used speed and discipline to dominate possession and scoring chances for long stretches. Japan was unfortunate not to have a penalty kick awarded in the first half for a clear hand ball by U.S. midfielder Tobin Heath, who stuck out her left arm to stop a free kick inside the area.
The Americans knew they'd gotten away with something.
"The one on Tobin?" Rapinoe said, smiling. "Thank God I'm not a referee."
Asked about the play, Japan coach Sasaki responded with a wry grin and said he wondered what the referee was thinking at the time. He diplomatically added that he respected the call.
Lloyd's first goal began with a run by Heath down the left side. She fed Alex Morgan, who settled the ball near the goal line, spun and chipped it toward Wambach. Wambach raised her left foot for the shot, but Lloyd charged in and got to it first, her strong running header beating goalkeeper Miho Fukumoto from 6 yards out.
Lloyd extended the lead with a 20-yard right-footer just inside the left post after a run from midfield, with Wambach staying wide to draw defenders away.
Ogimi soon cut the deficit to one after a mad scramble in front of the net. Rampone saved a shot off the line, but the ball went to Homare Sawa, who fed Ogimi for the tap-in.
Canada won the bronze earlier Thursday, beating France 1-0 at Coventry.
[Associated
Press;
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