The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Neville praises ‘big game player’ Taylor... and defends goalkeeper­s

- By Phil Medlicott sport@sundaypost.com

England boss Phil Neville hailed “big game player” Jodie Taylor after the striker’s second-half finish secured a 1-0 win over Argentina and a place in the last 16 of the Women’s World Cup.

Taylor, having been brought into the starting line-up, turned the ball in at the back post from Beth Mead’s cross just after the hour mark in Le Havre as the Lionesses made it six points from two Group D games.

What was the 33-year-old’s first internatio­nal goal since April last year took her overall tally for England to 18.

Taylor also netted during the 2015 World Cup campaign, then was the top-scorer at Euro 2017 with five goals.

And Neville said: “She’s a massive player, a big game player.

“I told Jodie before the game that I knew she would score. “From the Scotland game (the 2-1 victory on Sunday in which Taylor was an unused substitute) her training performanc­es, her attitude, the way that she has focused, because we told Jodie very early on that she would be playing against Argentina... “You reap your rewards from your training performanc­es and that is what we saw from Jodie. She thrives off service, off balls through and the support from around her.

“And I think in my time as manager, I have to say probably we’ve not given her the service she had in the Euros or past games for England, and it’s something we’re working really hard on.”

Neville was also keen to praise Argentina’s goalkeeper Vanina Correa, who saved Nikita Parris’ first-half penalty.

As well as pushing the spot-kick against the post, the 35-year-old made further fine stops to deny Mead and then Parris once again before Taylor’s goal broke Argentina’s dogged resistance. “Goalkeeper­s in women’s football get a lot of criticism,” Neville said.

“The Argentina goalkeeper produced a performanc­e of world-class ability.

“I think goalkeepin­g in the women’s game over the last 12

months, with the coaching, especially the goalkeepin­g coaches they’ve got, has risen incredibly, and I think not enough respect goes to the coaches and the goalkeeper­s.

“If anyone wants to challenge me on goalkeepin­g standards, then what I have seen from the last 12 months is that we’ve probably got six or seven England internatio­nals in the Women’s Super League, in our pathway, that are all of a fantastic level, and you’ve seen it in every team that we’re coming up against. The save from Nikita Parris was world-class.” When Correa herself was asked if she felt criticism of goalkeeper­s in women’s football was wrong and that her performanc­e had shown why, she said: “Yes, perhaps. “We might make more errors than our male counterpar­ts. Our training in Argentina, we’re not able to access it from a young age. We’re only able to do so from an older age. So perhaps we do make more mistakes. “But nowadays things are changing. We’re having better training. It’s not nice to criticise goalkeeper­s, even if we do sometimes make mistakes and they end up as goals. We’re trying to change things.”

England will now look to cement top spot when they conclude their Group D matches by facing secondplac­ed Japan in Nice on Wednesday.

Japan have four points, while Argentina and Scotland, whose meeting on Wednesday takes place in Paris, have one and none respective­ly.

As well as a top-two finish in a group guaranteei­ng a spot in the last 16, four of the six third-placed finishers will also progress.

 ??  ?? Phil Neville implores his players to focus
Phil Neville implores his players to focus

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