The United States women's soccer team officially overcame its tournament-opening stumble to clinch a spot in the knockout rounds with a 0-0 draw with Australia on Tuesday.
Head coach Vlatko Andonovski's team finished second in Group G, the first runner-up finish in an Olympic group since 1996. The U.S. will face Netherlands, who defeated China 8-2 in Group F. The Dutch side topped Group F with seven points and 21 goals in three games.
The U.S. fell to Sweden 3-0 on the opening day of its Olympics, ending a 44-match unbeaten run, but rebounded to beat New Zealand 6-1 before an admittedly sleepy stalemate with Australia.
USA 0-0 Australia recap
Alex Morgan held off a strong challenge to meet a picture-perfect pass from Rose Lavelle, but the Orlando Pride star's shot was right to Australia goalkeeper Teagan Micah.
Australia forced a decent save out of Alyssa Naeher as the match neared the midpoint of the first half, the U.S. no closer to opening the scoring in Japan.
Morgan planted a terrific header home off a Kelley O'Hara cross in the 31st minute, but the assistant referee's flag meant that Video Assistant Referee would have to find a clear and obvious error in the razor-thin offside call. It did not.
Megan Rapinoe was shown a yellow card for a foul and then post-whistle kick of the ball in the 38th minute.
Morgan then sent Christen Press into the box but the former Manchester United striker took herself out of position for a dangerous shot with a wayward first touch. That sent the match to halftime at 0-0.
O'Hara's dangerous dribble into the right of the box then saw an inviting cutback pass miss three suitors and instead was blazed over the bar by Morgan, as the sharpness continued to evade the Americans.
Australia also advanced to the quarterfinals as one of the two best third-placed teams alongside hosts Japan, who edged out Chile 1-0 thanks to a late strike from substitute Mina Tanaka.
Sweden claims Group G with win over New Zealand
Sweden entered Tuesday's match assured of a knockout round berth, and didn't need long to assert itself as Group G's winner.
Anna Anvegard scored off an Olivia Schough feed after just 17 minutes against New Zealand at the Miyagi Stadium, and Madelyn Janogy had it 2-0 at the half-hour mark when she turned Hanna Bennison's cross over the line.
Those were the only goals in the match, as New Zealand finished 0-3 with two goals scored and 10 conceded.
Britain, who had already booked a place in the final eight, conceded their first goal of the tournament but battled back through a Caroline Weir strike to secure a 1-1 draw with Canada and remain unbeaten in the tournament.
Canada, bidding to upgrade their bronze from Rio 2016, finished second on five points in Group E. They will next face Brazil, who edged out Zambia 1-0 to finish second in Group F.