LE HAVRE, France — The United States, facing its toughest test of the Women’s World Cup, was dominant again Thursday night, beating Sweden 2-0 to serve up revenge against the team that stunned the Americans in the last Olympics.

Lindsey Horan scored in the first three minutes, the fastest goal of this tournament. The United States then went up 2-0 on an own goal off Jonna Andersson in the 50th minute that gave the Americans a tournament-record 18 goals in the group stage. The U.S. didn’t concede a goal for the first time in group play.

“We needed this next level and we responded to that. That’s the ignition we needed,” Coach Jill Ellis said.

Assured a spot in the Round of 16 before the game, the United States finished atop its group and will head to Reims, France, to face Spain on Monday. Sweden will play Canada in Paris.

The meeting was the first tournament game between the teams since the quarterfinals of the 2016 Olympics. The Swedes bunkered in on defense in that game and advanced on penalties after a 1-1 draw, handing the United States its earliest exit from the Olympics. Hope Solo, the U.S. goalkeeper in that game, called the Swedes “cowards,” a comment that effectively ended her career with the U.S. team.

“We’ve been part of some very big games against them and we haven’t beaten them in a major tournament in a while. So it feels good that we can go into this tournament, and we can play well against a quality side and get a result,” defender Becky Sauerbrunn said.
The United States pounced on Thailand in its opener, winning 13-0 and drawing criticism for celebrating every goal even when the game was well in hand. The Americans had a more staid performance Sunday against Chile in Paris, winning 3-0 with more muted celebrations, including a golf clap from Carli Lloyd, who scored twice.

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Ellis made seven lineup changes against Chile but for Sweden went back to a lineup similar to the one she used in the opener. Lloyd, who played every minute of the 2015 World Cup and scored three goals in a 5-2 victory over Japan in the final, came off the bench to start the second half.

She replaced Alex Morgan, who was involved in a couple of collisions in the first half and at one point held her right knee.

A hip contusion kept defensive midfielder Julie Ertz out of the game after she started in the first two and scored her first World Cup goal against Chile.

“Alex took a knock in the first half and it was just, `Let’s be smart about this.’ Similar vein to Julie. It’s a zero risk game in terms of having players available for the next round,” Ellis said.

Ninth-ranked Sweden, which opened with a 2-0 victory over Chile and followed with a 5-1 win over Thailand, made seven lineup changes.

Coach Peter Gerhardsson said he selected his starters with an eye toward the next game.

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“We know that we have a new match on Monday, which is a knockout match, and that’s the one that’s the most important one,” he said.

The victory gave the top-ranked United States a potentially more challenging path to the final. Getting by Spain could set up a quarterfinal against No. 4 France in front of its home fans in Paris, and then a possible meeting with No. 3 England in the semifinals.

With a victory over Canada, Sweden could have a quarterfinal against No. 2 Germany.

The U.S. was on the attack from the start and went ahead early when Horan scored on a corner kick from Megan Rapinoe that bounced twice past two defenders and deflected off Samantha Mewis just 2:40 into the game. It was Horan’s second goal in France and the earliest goal of the tournament.

American goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher didn’t face her first challenge until the 21st minute, when she stopped a shot from Kosovare Asllani.

Tobin Heath dribbled in front of Andersson, then blasted an angled shot in the 50th minute from 8 yards that went over goalkeeper Hedvig Lindahl at the near post. The goal was reviewed after it appeared Lloyd was offside. It was later determined to have come off Andersson for an own goal.

Lloyd was denied by Lindahl in the 90th minute, stopping her World Cup-record scoring streak at six games.

While U.S. fans dominated the crowds at the team’s first two games, there were nearly as many Sweden supporters at the Stade Oceane.

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