Italy were on track to salvage a draw and a
place in the last 16 when Arianna Caruso leveled in the 74th
minute but Kgatlana refused to quit, sending in the
stoppage-time winner off a neat flick from Hildah Magaia.
"Over the last three weeks, I've lost three family members. I
could have went home, but I chose to stay with my girls,"
Kgatlana said. "Because that's how much it means."
The Racing Louisville forward suffered a torn Achilles tendon in
2022, an injury that kept her sidelined for some 10 months and
nearly cost her a trip to her second World Cup.
"I came back from a very, brutal injury to be here, to play for
the country, to represent every single girl that wanted to be
here, to make history with the girls for South Africa," she
said.
Sweden beat them 2-1 with a 90th-minute winner in their opener
and the team were forced to settle for a 2-2 draw in their
second group match against Argentina, after blowing a two-goal
lead.
But Kgatlana said she and her team mates walked into Wednesday's
match ready to "dig deep" despite the frustrating previous
results.
"Today we just told ourselves, we have to fight," she said.
"We were the underdogs and I think it worked perfectly for us.
When you play that underdog, they come out running for you and
we knew that in terms of pace, they weren't like us, and it's
something that we could utilize for the victory."
They will face the Netherlands in the last 16 in Sydney on
Sunday, after finishing second in Group G behind Sweden.
(Reporting by Amy Tennery; Editing by Christian Radnedge)
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