Women's World Cup: Lauren James scorcher helps England edge Denmark

England
Lauren James, right, celebrates with teammates after scoring a stunner. Photo: AFP/David Gray

Sydney: Lauren James scored a wonder strike in her first Women's World Cup start to lead England to a 1-0 Group D victory over Denmark on Friday, all but guaranteeing the European champions a spot in the knockout stage.

Coach Sarina Wiegman made two bold changes to Friday's squad, moving the versatile Rachel Daly back to defence and inserting James into the starting line-up - and the two teamed up to score in the sixth minute at Sydney Football Stadium.

Daly knocked the ball to James, who sped past one defender then curled in a rocket from 22 yards out that goalkeeper Lene Christensen had little chance of stopping.

Bayern Munich forward Pernille Harder almost pulled one back for Denmark in the dying minutes, clanging a header off the post.

The fourth-ranked Lionesses, who defeated Haiti 1-0 in their opener, play China on Tuesday in their final group game. Denmark, who beat China 1-0 to kick off their campaign, play Haiti the same day.

Argentina
Argentina's Romina Nunez, right, celebrates with teammates after scoring their second goal. Photo: Reuters/Molly Darlington

Argentina and South Africa settled for an exciting 2-2 draw in their Group G clash at Dunedin Stadium that kept both teams alive in the tournament but dented their hopes of progressing.

The South Americans had to fight back from 2-0 down after the Africans scored goals through Linda Motlhalo on the half hour mark and Thembi Kgatlana in the 66th minute.

Motlhalo tapped the ball into the net from a Kgatlana pass after the winger had raced onto a long ball with the Argentinian defenders standing still assuming she was offside. Video Assistant Referee (VAR) system confirmed Kgatlana had been behind the last defender.

For all their neat approach work, Argentina looked unable to threaten Kaylin Swart in the South African goal and their first attempts on target did not come until the second half.

In the 74th minute, though, Sophia Braun launched a stunning long-range strike that curled into the corner of the net to cut the deficit in half and Romina Nunez's header five minutes later levelled up the scores.

The entertaining draw leaves both sides with a single point - South Africa's first in five World Cup matches -- and highly unlikely to progress from a group also containing European powers Sweden and Italy.

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