Sports

USA women go 44 games unbeaten with rout of Mexico in final Olympic tune-up


Tobin Heath scored her second goal in as many games and the United States defeated Mexico 4-0 on Monday in the American women’s final match before the Olympics.

The United States are now undefeated in 44 straight matches, the second-longest unbeaten streak in team history. The Americans also extended their winning streak against Mexico to 15 games and improved to 39-1-1 overall. The only US loss in the all-time series came in a World Cup qualifier back in 2010.

US coach Vlatko Andonovski continued to fine-tune his lineups in advance of the Olympics later this month. The United States, a four-time gold medal winner, is aiming to become the first team to follow a World Cup title with an Olympic gold medal.

Heath started after coming off the bench and scoring in the United States’ first send-off game against Mexico on Thursday, when the Americans also won by a 4-0 score. The Manchester United forward hadn’t played for some six months because of injury.

Carli Lloyd got the start Monday in place of Alex Morgan, and midfielder Rose Lavelle got the nod while Kristie Mewis and Megan Rapinoe were available off the bench.

Rapinoe, Mewis and Morgan all started the second half.

The United States scored all its goals in the first half before a lively crowd of 27,758 at Rentschler Field in East Hartford, Connecticut. Horan scored on a volley in the sixth minute, followed by Lloyd’s diving header in the 11th. An apparent third goal only moments later by Christen Press was disallowed by referee Danielle Chesky.

After an own goal in the 37th minute, Heath scored in the 39th.

Next up for the United States are the Tokyo Olympics. The Americans play Sweden the team that knocked them out of the 2016 Games in the quarterfinals to open the tournament in Japan on 21 July.

Sweden ended the USWNT’s 16-game win streak in April with a 1-1 draw in Stockholm, the Americans’ lone hiccup since Andonovski took over the team.

Mexico did not make the field of 12 teams for the Tokyo Games.



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