ANNA Signeul conceded the better team won over two legs as Scotland's dream of reaching next summer's Women's World Cup in Canada ended in Rotterdam.

Lieke Martens and Manon Melis, who scored the two Dutch goals at Tynecastle on Saturday, obliged for Roger Reijners again in front of almost 8000 enthusiastic home fans. Over the two legs of the play-off semi-final they were the main difference between the two sides.

"Their goalkeeper and two central defenders were very good, but the difference was that Holland put their chances away and we didn't," Signeul rued. "At the end of the game it didn't look as if we really, really believed we could do it. If you look at the overall quality, they had more of it. We have had a great campaign in terms of consistency and performance - it's just that we're not quite there yet when it comes to the big teams."

Signeul made two changes from the first leg, Caroline Weir and Emma Mitchell replacing Leanne Crichton and the injured Hayley Lauder. The Dutch were unchanged.

The occasion was especially auspicious for Ifeoma Dieke and Mandy van den Berg, who play in central defence for the Swedish club Vittsjo. It was Dieke's 100th cap while Van den Berg, the Dutch captain, was winning her 50th.

The century-maker was prominent in the opening 15 minutes despite Scotland, with Kim Little playing much deeper to get her more involved in the game, making a much more positive start than on Saturday. The 33-year-old twice cleared dangerous balls from Manon Melis just in front of the Scotland goal-line, but was also responsible for a short back pass to Gemma Fay which nearly handed Martens a gift opener.

Scotland's much more resolute approach was epitomised by Lisa Evans, who in the space of a few minutes dispossessed the ever-dangerous Melis near the Scotland penalty box and then did the same to the imposing Anouk Dekker at the other end of the pitch. She then took a neat reverse pass from Jo Love and rounded Loes Geurts only for the offside flag to go up.

Midway though the half the noisy home crowd thought their side had gone ahead. Vivianne Miedema, the prolific teenage striker, collected a through ball and easily shrugged aside Frankie Brown, but her shot was crucially deflected into the side- netting by Fay.

Scotland finally got their sights on Geurts twice in the last 15 minutes or the half. Love was first up, but the Gothenburg goalkeeper easily saved her shot from the edge of the box. Then she again thwarted the visitors after their best attacking move of the 45 minutes when Rachel Corsie and Love put Ross behind the defence, only for Guerts to close the angle down and block the subsequent close range attempt.

With niether side having scored the goal which would completely change the complexion of the tie, Anna Signeul pushed Little much further forward in the second half. While it gave Scotland much more presence up front, the Dutch tore up that script with the opener in the 51st minute.

As in the first leg, Martens was the scorer. Danielle van de Donk, the energetic central midfielder, cut in from the right and squared to Martens, who fired a terrific shot past Fay from 20 yards.

Scotland started the game needing at least two goals to stay in the tie, and while the Netherlands strike did not change that, it made the visitors' predicament more acute. They nearly got a penalty when Love went down in the box, but Swiss referee Esther Staubli decided the push occurred just outside it; Little's low free kick was saved on the line by Geurts, who a minute later again denied the Scot, turning her shot round the post for a corner.

With the game opening up, the Dutch made three quick chances of their own, any one of which would have put the tie beyond Scotland's reach. Miedama made a hash of the first, but Fay did really well to ensure that neither Melis nor Martens scored with the other two.

The second goal arrived 13 minutes from tim. Dieke failed to clear her lines and Melis exuberantly beat Fay to spark the biggest cheer of the night from the home fans.