US women’s national team coach Vlatko Andonovski resigns after early World Cup exit, AP source says

US coach Vlatko Andonovski during the Women's World Cup round of 16 against Sweden. Andonovski has resigned, a person familiar with the decision told The Associated Press on Wednesday. (File/AP)
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Updated 17 August 2023
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US women’s national team coach Vlatko Andonovski resigns after early World Cup exit, AP source says

  • The move comes less than two weeks after the Americans were knocked out of the Women’s World Cup earlier than ever before
  • Andonovski was head coach of Seattle’s OL Reign in the National Women’s Soccer League when he was hired

NEW YORK: US women’s national team coach Vlatko Andonovski has resigned, a person familiar with the decision told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

The move comes less than two weeks after the Americans were knocked out of the Women’s World Cup earlier than ever before.

The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the move had not been officially announced. An announcement was expected Thursday.

The four-time tournament champions struggled throughout the World Cup. A victory over Vietnam to kick off the group stage was followed by a pair of draws against Netherlands and Portugal — barely enough to get the team into the knockout stage,

The Americans played well in the Round of 16 against Sweden, but ultimately fell on penalties after a scoreless tie. The US scored just four goals over the course of the tournament.

The US had never finished worse than third at the World Cup.

The 46-year-old Andonovski was named coach of the US in October 2019, taking over for Jill Ellis, who led the US to back-to-back World Cup titles. He finished 51-5-9 during his time with the team, and was 3-2-5 in major tournaments.

Following the match against Sweden, Andonovski said he wasn’t thinking about his future with the team — only his young players. Fourteen players on the US roster were appearing in their first World Cup, and 12 of them had never played in a major tournament.

“We spent four years together. They got their first caps with me, they got their first national-team call-ups with me,” Andonovski said. “We spent tough times, good times. I don’t want to see them like that. That’s all I think about.”

It wasn’t just the World Cup that hurt Andonovski’s chances of keeping his job. The US also finished with a disappointing bronze medal at the Tokyo Olympics.

Following the Olympics, Andonovski turned his attention on developing young players ahead of the World Cup. Some of the players who emerged were Sophia Smith, last year’s US Soccer Player of the Year, and Trinity Rodman.

The US were bitten by injuries in the run-up to the tournament, losing a pair of key players. Mallory Swanson injured her knee during a friendly in April, and captain Becky Sauerbrunn couldn’t recover from a foot injury in time.

Promising young forward Catarina Macario tore her ACL playing for her club team Lyon last year and also wasn’t ready to play in the World Cup.

The World Cup was challenging for many elite teams because of the ever-growing parity in the women’s game. Germany, Brazil and Canada, the winners in Tokyo, also got knocked out early. Sunday’s final between England and Spain in Sydney will give the tournament a first-time winner.

Andonovski was head coach of Seattle’s OL Reign in the National Women’s Soccer League when he was hired. During his seven years in the NWSL, he led the now-defunct FC Kansas City from the league’s inception in 2013 until the club folded in 2017, winning two league titles with the team.

Andonovski, a native of Skopje, Macedonia, played for several teams in Europe before embarking on a professional indoor soccer career in the United States.

His predecessor on the US team, Ellis, was named coach of the team in 2014 and led the US to eight overall tournament titles, including victories at the World Cup in 2015 and 2019. Over the course of her tenure, the US lost just seven matches.

Now the process will start to find a replacement, and the timeline is relatively short. The US havve already qualified for the 2024 Olympics in France.

Before that, the team have a pair of exhibition matches against South Africa on Sept. 21 in Cincinnati and Sept. 24 in Chicago.


Real Madrid scrape win over Rayo, Athletic claim derby draw

Updated 4 sec ago
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Real Madrid scrape win over Rayo, Athletic claim derby draw

  • Vinicius Junior scored early on for Madrid after Jude Bellingham limped off with a hamstring injury which is expected to keep him out for around a month

BARCELONA: Kylian Mbappe stayed calm to roll home a 100th-minute penalty and claim Real Madrid a 2-1 win over nine-man Rayo Vallecano on Sunday in a spicy La Liga derby clash.
Elsewhere Athletic Bilbao struck late to secure a 1-1 Basque derby draw against Real Sociedad and Real Betis rose to fifth with a 2-1 win at Valencia.
Los Blancos cut Barcelona’s lead back to one point at the top of the table after the Spanish champions beat Elche on Saturday.
Vinicius Junior scored early on for Madrid after Jude Bellingham limped off with a hamstring injury which is expected to keep him out for around a month.
Jorge de Frutos pulled Rayo level early in the second half as Madrid fans showed their anger at their team following the midweek Champions League defeat at Benfica.
After Pathe Ciss’s red card tilted the game in Madrid’s favor, Mbappe netted from the spot at the death for his 22nd La Liga goal this season.
Pep Chavarria was also sent off in the final stages for Rayo, 17th, who took a shaky Madrid to the wire before falling short.
Madrid coach Alvaro Arbeloa said it would take time before the team could become more consistent, having had six games at the helm since replacing Xabi Alonso.
“I’m not Gandalf the White,” the Madrid coach told reporters, referring to the fictional wizard from the Lord of the Rings.
“What I want from my players is what I’m seeing, commitment, attitude, mentality, knowing that to win each game quality is not enough, consistency is key... we will work on that.”
Arbeloa said Madrid had to play better than other teams to beat opponents, because of their illustrious name.
“This is Real Madrid, and to beat Rayo Vallecano we need to do more than the rest of the teams in La Liga,” he continued.
The coach said Bellingham would be a “big absence” for the matches ahead after he limped off early, incuding the Champions League play-off games against Jose Mourinho’s Benfica — again.
After the defeat in Portugal stopped Madrid reaching the last 16 directly, the Santiago Bernabeu crowd was in unforgiving mood and whistled their own players, despite appeals from Arbeloa and Mbappe ahead of the game.
Vinicius, who was targeted, fired the hosts ahead in the 15th minute with a fine individual goal.
Los Blancos were in charge but despite taking the lead, their fans were not appeased, and whistled the team in at the break.
Things got worse when four minutes into the second half Rayo pulled level through De Frutos.
The visitors should have taken the lead after an hour when Andrei Ratiu ran through on goal but Thibaut Courtois denied him superbly, while Mbappe hit the crossbar at the other end.

Rayo self-destruct

Rayo made life harder for themselves when midfielder Ciss was sent off for an ugly foul on Madrid’s Dani Ceballos.
Eduardo Camavinga headed against the post as Arbeloa’s side turned the screw.
With nine minutes of stoppage time ticking down Madrid were awarded a penalty when Nobel Mendy clumsily fouled Brahim Diaz, and La Liga’s top scorer Mbappe dispatched it.
Rayo finished the match with nine men after Chavarria was shown a second yellow card for shoving Rodrygo Goes.
“The important thing is to improve, to grow as a team, try to be calmer, we can’t always be waiting for the opponent to make a mistake,” said Madrid midfielder Fede Valverde.
At Athletic’s San Mames home Inigo Ruiz de Galarreta’s fine solo goal snatched the hosts a point against in-form Real Sociedad.
La Real continued their fine start under American coach Pellegrino Matarazzo as they went a sixth game unbeaten, but victory was almost theirs after Goncalo Guedes’s 37th-minute long-range rocket.
Brais Mendez was sent off for hitting out at Aitor Paredes and Real Sociedad paid the price as Ruiz de Galarreta burst into the area and smashed home with two minutes left.
The draw left Real Sociedad eighth, still in contention for European football next season after their improvement.
“I think we deserved the three points today, when it was 11 against 11 we were dominant,” La Real midfielder Carlos Soler told DAZN.
Ernesto Valverde’s Athletic, 11th, are winless in their last six La Liga games but will be bolstered by avoiding a derby defeat by the skin of their teeth.
“We’ve had a difficult month, lots of adverse results... luckily with the final push we were able to draw,” said Ruiz de Galarreta.