2023 Women's World Cup: NI's hopes of reaching tournament all but over with Austria defeat
- Published
Northern Ireland's hopes of qualifying for the 2023 World Cup took a severe blow with a 3-1 defeat by Austria in Wiener Neustadt.
Carina Wenninger, Nicole Billa and Barbara Dunst netted in a clinical 10-minute spell after half-time.
Joely Andrews scored a late consolation with her first international goal.
Defeat leaves Northern Ireland three points behind second-placed Austria, who are now favourites to secure the play-off position.
England are runaway leaders in Group D, aided by their 10-0 victory over North Macedonia, and with both teams still to face the Lionesses and two lower ranked teams in their final three games, Austria are now in pole position to secure second place.
After a 2-2 draw in Belfast in October and the sides level on points, the game had been described as a cup final pre-match. Despite the big billing, it was a low-key first half with few opportunities.
It was Northern Ireland who almost made a dream start when home goalkeeper Manuela Zinsberger missed Demi Vance's corner inside two minutes. Sensing the opportunity, NI's record goalscorer Rachel Furness raced in to the back post but the ball evaded her outstretched leg.
However, from there Austria began to dominate possession and press Northern Ireland deep in their own half. Dunst, who netted in the reverse fixture, curled an effort off target in a sighter for the Austrians before key forward Billa spurned two chances.
Billa, with 41 goals in 76 caps, lobbed over from a corner on 15 minutes and the prolific forward felt she should have done better when she fired over after Jackie Burns' punch landed at her feet on the edge of the area.
The heavens opened in Wiener Neustadt midway trough the half and both sides struggled to keep hold of the ball on the slick surface. Katharina Naschenweng saw a low effort easily gathered by Burns before Dunst again bent a wayward effort from range over the top.
Northern Ireland improved late in the half but struggled to create in the final third as referee Stephanie Frappart blew for half-time right on the 45.
Poor start to second half costly
Northern Ireland's good defensive work from the first half was undone two minutes after the restart when Bayern Munich defender Wenninger flicked home Dunst's corner after evading marker Sarah McFadden.
Needing a goal to keep their World Cup dreams alive, Kenny Shiels' side nearly mustered an immediate response after Vance's free-kick was spilled by Zinsberger, however Simone Magill and McFadden failed to capitalise in the resulting goalmouth scramble.
Another Zinsberger mistake almost gifted Marissa Callaghan an equaliser when the Arsenal stopper spilled Abbie Magee's low cross and it fell in to the path of the Northern Ireland captain, however a great recovery kept Austria ahead and Rebecca Holloway failed to capitalise on the follow-up.
But from there, two quickfire goals moved the game beyond the visitors. Burns misjudged Julie Nelson's pass 25 yards out and, making amends for her earlier misses, Billa slotted in to the unguarded net on 55 minutes.
Austria, showing a clinical touch that had deserted them in the first half, made it three when Dunst tucked home from close range after being played in by Laura Feiersinger to make the most of 10 minutes of uncharacteristic defensive errors by the visitors.
Northern Ireland regrouped well and began to press forward, with Vance's cross clipping the top of the crossbar and Furness firing wide after finding space at the back post.
The pressure kept coming, and Zinsberger had to be alert to push Wenninger's wayward header out for a corner, from which Andrews netted a deserved consolation with five minutes to play.
The ball was cleared to the substitute on the edge of the area and the 20-year-old's first-time effort rolled into the bottom corner after finding its way through a pile of bodies.
Naschenweng hit the post in the closing stages but, ultimately, Austria were well worth a crucial victory which puts one foot in the play-offs with three games to play with head-to-head decisive to teams level on points.
Austria can consolidate second place when they host Latvia on Tuesday, while Shiels' side will look to bounce back against England at a sell-out Windsor Park, with 16,000 set to be in attendance for the largest women's international to ever take place in Northern Ireland.
Northern Ireland and Austria have also been paired with host nation England at the Euro 2022 finals this summer, which will be a maiden tournament for NI's senior women.