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Once Upon A Time

Series 2, Episode 15 The Queen Is Dead 23 May 13 00:41:02

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Herdman, Canada bitter as ref favours US

Published: 3:07AM Wednesday August 08, 2012 Source: Reuters

Former Football Ferns coach John Herdman - now in charge of the Canadian women - has seen his London Olympic hopes dashed in a controversial semifinal that saw the United States prevail 4-3 in extra time yesterday and advance to the final.

Canada's beaten players have accused Norwegian referee Christiana Pedersen of bias towards the Americans when she penalised goalkeeper Erin McLeod for holding the ball too long after making a save in the 80th minute, awarding the US an indirect free kick in the penalty area.

The law states the goalie should release the ball after six seconds, but it's hardly ever applied in either men's or women's soccer.

While that decision appeared harsh to Canada's team, Pedersen then awarded the US a penalty resulting from Megan Rapinoe's free kick. The ball struck the elbow of Canadian Marie-Eve Nault with the player turning away.

The referee was not available for comment. A spokesman for world soccer's governing body, FIFA, said: "As is our practice, FIFA will make no comment on this issue and in any case, the referee's decision is always final."

Herdman, who coached the NZ women's team at the Beijing Olympics four years ago, initially shied away from the controversy, but then added: "She's got to live with that. We'll move on from this - I wonder if she'll be able to."

McLeod told reporters: "The referee said I had the ball for 10 seconds. She obviously counted the time I was on the ground with the ball. Once I got to my feet, I calculate I only had the ball for five seconds.

"We feel like we got robbed in this game. The referee was very one-sided. I've never known this to happen before in a game - referees never make this kind of decision."

Skipper Christine Sinclair, who scored all three of Canada's goals, added: "When she gave the penalty, she giggled and said nothing. Classy!

"In an important match, it's a disappointment the referee had such an impact on it. We feel cheated."

Canada will meet France for the bronze medal on Thursday, but Sinclair added: "Maybe the referee will wear a Canadian jersey for this game."

Canada had already felt hard done by at these Games, when equestrian rider Tiffany Foster was disqualified before the team show jumping final on Sunday because of hypersensitivity in her horse's front leg, a decision team captain Eric Lamaze called "a complete miscarriage of justice".

The soccer match was as dramatic as the scoreline suggests, with the winning header from US striker Alex Morgan coming three minutes into added time at the end of extra time.

Sinclair's goals had Canada ahead three times, with the US equalising each time, twice through Rapinoe and once from Abby Wambach's contentious penalty that took the game into extra time.

Thursday's gold medal match is against Japan at Wembley, where the US will aim to win their third successive Olympic title against the team that beat them on penalties in last year's World Cup final.

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