USA v Portugal: Women’s World Cup 2023 Group E – live | Women’s World Cup 2023

Key events

Vietnam v Netherlands will take place simultaneously in Dunedin. You can follow that game with Sarah Rendell.

Portugal team news: six changes from Vietnam victory

Francisco Neto has changed more than half the team that beat Vietnam 2-0 on Thursday.

In Ines Pereira, Diana Gomes, Catarina Amado, Andreia Norton, Dolores Silva, Diana Silva.

Out Patricia Morais, Ana Seica, Lucia Alves, Andreia Jacinto, Joana Marchao, Telma Encarnacao.

Portugal (possible 3-4-1-2) Pereira; Borges, C Costa, D Gomes; T Pinto, Norton, Dolores Silva, Amado; Nazareth; J Silva, Diana Silva.
Substitutes: Morais, R Costa, Alves, Rebelo, Marchao, Jacinto, Rute, F Pinto, Seica, Mendes, Capeta, Encarnacao.

Jessica Silva
Jessica Silva

USA team news: Lavelle and Williams start

The US make two changes from the draw with the Netherlands. Lynn Williams and Rose Lavelle replace Savannah DeMelo and Trinity Rodman. It’s Lavelle’s first start of this World Cup; she has been eased into the tournament by Vlatko Andonovski as she recovers from a knee injury.

We’ll have the Portugal team news shortly.

USA (possible 4-1-2-3) Naeher; Fox, Ertz, Girma, Dunn; Sullivan; Lavelle, Horan; Williams, Morgan, Smith.
Substitutes: DeMelo, Rodman, Sanchez, Huerta, O’Hara, Thompson, Cook, Sonnett, Rapinoe, Murphy, Kingsbury, Mewis.

Rose Lavelle
Rose Lavelle

Preamble

Hello and welcome … to live, minute-by-minute(ish) coverage of Portugal v USA in Auckland. Life is binary these days, and there are broadly two ways today’s match can go. Either the USA will proceed to the last 16 as expected, or Portugal will cause one of the greatest earthquakes in the history of the women’s football.

Assuming the Netherlands beat Vietnam in the other Group E game, this is a straight shootout for a last 16 place: Portugal need a win, the USA will go through with a draw.

The USA have never failed to reach the semi-finals of a World Cup, never mind the last 16. They’re chasing a third consecutive World Cup win and a fifth overall. A defeat today would be entirely without precedent.

Realistically they should have too much for Portugal; they’ve won all ten meetings between the sides, scoring 39 and conceding none. If so, the USA will then become involved in a shootout with the Netherlands to decide who wins Group E. It won’t be confirmed until tomorrow, but the likelihood is that the runners-up will meet Sweden in the last 16, with the winners facing either Italy or South Africa.

The group winners could also face Spain in a mouthwatering quarter-final. But we’re getting ahead of ourselves now. Before we can talk about tomorrow, there is rather important business to attend to.

Kick off 7pm in Auckland, 3am EST, 8am BST.

Rob will be here shortly, in the meantime here’s Jeff Kassouf with a preview of today’s match:

Four years ago, the United States steamrolled their way through the Women’s World Cup, scoring in the opening 12 minutes of their first six games on their march to a second straight title.

Their start to the 2023 World Cup has been less dominant. A 3-0 victory over Vietnam in their opener was satisfactory for a brand-new starting 11, even if they were wasteful in front of goal. Then came a horrendous first-half against the Netherlands. USA captain Lindsey Horan eventually salvaged a point for her team against the Dutch, but the mood was one of disappointment not only at the result, but also the performance.

Now the Americans are in unfamiliar territory: they must pick up at least a point against Portugal on Tuesday in Auckland to secure passage to the knockout round. They are heavy favorites to win the game, but their performances thus far have only raised further questions of a team that has not looked this unsure of itself in a long time.

“I think being on the US women’s national team kind of always feels like this,” said Megan Rapinoe, who is playing in her fourth and final World Cup. “When was the last time anybody wrote a headline that was like: ‘They played the best game and that’s exactly what we were expecting them to’? No. When you’re at the top, you’re always looking to get better.”

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