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Best game ever? Alex Morgan heads US soccer to stunning win over Canada (+video)

The US women's soccer team beat Canada, 4-3, in the last minute of overtime in the Olympic semifinal, setting up a highly anticipated rematch with Japan. The game was one to remember.

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The American response was predictable, and for much of the match, ineffective. It was nothing less than a medieval siege – and about as subtle, too. As opposed to trying to break down the Canadian defense through passing and intricate interplay, the Americans simply catapulted the ball down the field in hopes that it might find the head of Abby Wambach.

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In recent years, as first Germany and then Brazil and Japan have caught up with the United States, this brand of soccer has been increasingly exposed. Good teams can defend it, and it gives away possession far too cheaply. 

But Canada has still not quite reached that level. While it defended stoutly, the American team's speed meant that almost as soon as the Americans lost the ball, they recovered it, giving the the first half and the beginning of the second a lather, rinse, repeat feel to it. The Americans were determined to break down the Canadians through the air, and the Canadians were having none of it. 

The breakthrough came from the unlikeliest of goals: a Megan Rapinoe corner kick that surprised the Canadians and skittered in directly at the near post. 

From there, the game slowly ground into gear. Twice, Sinclair found seams in the befuddled American defense, scoring on headers in the 67th and 73rd minutes that gave US keeper Hope Solo no chance. For someone who is the game's third all-time leading scorer, it felt strangely like a coming-out party – the world at last able to enjoy the intelligence of her movement and the assurance of her finishing on one of the sport's biggest stages.  

But again, Rapinoe's right foot proved to be by far the best thing America had going for it. She replied to the second Sinclair goal with a 70th-minute thunderbolt so powerful that it seemed to crack the post as it ricocheted in. By that point, the Americans were launching attacks from farther and farther forward as their relentless pressure began to wear down the Canadians. When the American third goal came, however, the circumstances could not have been more bizarre.

Unusual call

In the 79th minute, the referee called the Canadian keeper for holding on to the ball too long. Herdman called the decision "a bit random." It was more than that. For a major international knockout stage game, it was virtually unprecedented. The result was an American indirect free kick inside the penalty box, which resulted in the curious sight of the Canadians setting up a defensive wall virtually in front of their own goal.

Of course, it was Rapinoe's foot that struck it, and unfortunate Canadian defender Marie-Eve Nault whose arm it hit. Perhaps a bit harshly, but within the letter of the law, the referee awarded a penalty kick for hand ball in the box, and Wambach scored.

Over the final 40 minutes, Wambach missed an open net, Solo made a crucial sliding save of midfielder Sophie Schmidt, and Wambach hit a crossbar. A repeat of the 2011 World Cup final – a match decided on penalty kicks – seemed inevitable. But Alex Morgan, the American forward who seemingly never stops running, at last found herself in just the right spot.

Typically an artist in front of the net, this winner was more of the gritted-teeth variety. "I just jumped and hoped for the best," she said.

The result could hardly have been better, because more than Americans or Canadians, frankly, the women's game was the winner Monday.   

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