Canada 'getting better' as win over New Zealand secures 2019 Fifa Women's World Cup last-16 berth

Goals from Jessie Fleming and Nichelle Prince cap dominant display for Canada to seal progress from Group E

Soccer Football - Women's World Cup - Group E - Canada v New Zealand - Stade des Alpes, Grenoble, France - June 15, 2019  Canada's Jessie Fleming celebrates scoring their first goal   REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
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Jessie Fleming and Nichelle Prince got second-half goals to give Canada a 2-0 win over New Zealand on Saturday and book their place in the last 16 of the 2019 Fifa Women’s World Cup.

Canada dominated the first half and Fleming put them ahead three minutes after the interval following a fine run by Prince who cut the ball back for her teammate to score from eight yards.

Prince grabbed the second goal 11 minutes from time, stabbing home from close range after Christine Sinclair's header struck the post.

The result takes them to six points, equal with Group E leaders the Netherlands, who beat Cameroon 3-1 in Valenciennes to secure their place in the knockout round.

"It is a great team, I can trust the players," Canada manager Kenneth Heiner-Moller said. "Players from the bench are contributing and the team are getting better.”

The defeat means the New Zealanders, who never had a shot on target the whole game and ended the match with just 30 per cent of possession, have now gone 14 games without a win at the Women’s World Cup.

They lost their opening match against the Netherlands and sit bottom of Group E with only a faint chance of progressing to the second round.

"I think we were holding on from the start to be honest and never got a foothold in the game," said manager Tom Sermanni. "We were thoroughly outplayed, so I have to congratulate Canada on an outstanding performance.

"But some of the things we did well against the Dutch, we didn’t do tonight. I don’t think we won a challenge or won any kind of loose ball, and we never got close enough to put pressure on any Canadian players. You can’t take away from how well Canada played but on the other hand we never got close to them physically or put them under any pressure."

Canada’s clean sheet extended to 256 minutes their run without conceding a goal at the World Cup, which goes back to 2015.

"We’re excited as a group to get the win," said player-of-the-match Fleming. "We wanted to come out of the group stage with three wins, so that’s two down and one to go."

The Canadians now play the Netherlands on Thursday, while New Zealand meet Cameroon the same day.