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Norwegian side Brann qualified for the quarter-finals of the Women’s Champions League after their 1-0 win at Slavia Prague on Thursday.
Benfica could only draw at Rosengard but Eintracht Frankfurt’s defeat by Barcelona later in the evening allowed them also to join Chelsea, Lyon and holders Barcelona in the last eight.
Brann made it through thanks to a second half own goal from Slavia goalkeeper Olivie Lukasova who could only parry a fierce drive from Signe Gaupset into her own net.
“It is incredible. I do not think it has sunk in yet,” said Brann captain Cecilie Kvamme.
“We’ve had quite a journey in the past 12 months and I am just so proud of all the girls for the way we’ve played in the Champions League.
“We are really excited to qualify for the quarter-finals.”
Brann are second in Group B behind Lyon who hammered St Polten 7-0 in Austria with Ada Hegerberg and Sara Dabritz both scoring twice.
Vanessa Gilles, Dzsenifer Marozsan and substitute Kadidiatou Diani also found the back of the net.
Lyon will take top spot in the group whatever their result against Slavia Prague in the final round of games next week due to their superior head-to-head record against Brann.
Benfica also qualified for the last eight but were made to wait after a late goal from Rosengard’s Japanese striker Mai Kadowaki denied them outright victory in Sweden.
Olivia Schough put the Swedes ahead early on, but goals from Jessica Silva and Marie-Yasmine Alidou appeared to have given Benfica the win they needed to stamp their ticket alongside Barcelona in Group A.
Kadowaki’s late goal, however, meant it finished 2-2, leaving Benfica needing the Catalans to beat Eintracht Frankfurt in the later game.
Barcelona duly delivered against some gutsy German pressing.
Patricia Guijarro netted the opener after 19 minutes and Norwegian winger Caroline Graham Hansen sealed the 2-0 win after 73 minutes, finding some space on the edge of the area before firing the ball into the net.
Three places remain to be settled in the final round of group matches next week.
Eric Woodyard covers the Detroit Lions for ESPN. He joined ESPN in September 2019 as an NBA reporter dedicated to the Midwest region before switching to his current role in April 2021. The Flint, Mich. native is a graduate of Western Michigan University and has authored/co-authored three books: “Wasted, Ethan’s Talent Search” and “All In: The Kelvin Torbert Story”. He is a proud parent of one son, Ethan. You can follow him on Twitter: @E_Woodyard
DETROIT — There are two numbers Detroiters will never forget: 0 and 16.
They represent the Detroit Lions’ 2008 season — the one in which they became the first team in NFL history to play a 16-game schedule without winning a game (though the 2017 Cleveland Browns eventually joined them).
The team set a record for most losses in a season, while allowing the third-most points, the fourth-most touchdowns and the second-most rushing touchdowns in league history. Those Lions were eliminated from playoff contention in Week 11, which was tied for the earliest a team’s postseason hopes had been dashed since 1990.
Five different quarterbacks threw at least one pass for Detroit — Dan Orlovsky, Jon Kitna, Daunte Culpepper, Drew Stanton and Drew Henson — with one of them making the most emblematic play of that miserable season.