How the Lethargic US Womens Soccer Team Can Save Its Olympic Dreams
After the U.S. womenâs soccer team lost to Sweden in the quarterfinals of the 2016 Rio Olympicsâ"the earliest Olympic exit the team had ever sufferedâ"goalkeeper Hope Solo infamously called her opponents a âbunch of cowards,â knocking their staid style of play. The comment set off a bit of an international controversy; Solo was later suspended and never appeared in a national team game again.
That wasnât the teamâs finest moment. And no fan of the incredibly popular and influentialâ"if slightly divisiveâ"U.S. Womenâs National Team (USWNT) wants to see another Olympic quarterfinal exit. But it would be fair for any observer of the teamâs performance so far at the Tokyo Summer Olympics to look back somewhat fondly Soloâs raw emotion and fire, and wonder why that sort of thing seems to be missing here.
The U.S. takes on the Netherlands in the quarters on Friday night (7 a.m. Eastern Time) in Yokohama
The U.S. muddled through pool play. In the opener on July 21, familiar foe Sweden embarrassed the Americans, 3-0, handing the team its worst international loss since Brazil beat the U.S. 4-0 in the 2007 World Cup semifinal. âItâs hard because you just want to kind of put a mirror up to everyone and just say, âRelax, weâre goodâ,â said Megan Rapinoe after that game. âYou can kind of feel the tightness.â The Americans found a groove in a must-win game against New Zealand on July 24, routing the Football Ferns 6-1. Knowing that a draw with Australia on July 27 would put the U.S. through to the quarters, U.S. coach Vlatko Andonovski set a defense-driven strategy to prevent the Matildas from scoring: the game ended in an 0-0 tie.
This team, however, thrives on inspirationâ"both on and off the field, as its fight for equal pay continues to weave its way through the courts. The U.S. women also like to pile on goals. Andonovskiâs strategy was practical. But scoreless ties arenât a part of this teamâs DNA. Crushing Australia might have done more for the teamâs momentum than playing it safe into the knockout round.
The teamâs fairly staid performance is surprising, especially since players have repeatedly discussed how badly they want to win this tournament so they can become members of the first womenâs team to ever win a World Cup and Olympic gold, back-to-back. Thatâs pretty much the only feat the USWNT hasnât accomplished. âItâs hugely important,â forward Christen Press told TIME about the World Cup-Olympic double in a recent interview. âThe way our schedule works, we really built to these two pivotal moments in a four-year cycle. And thatâs the World Cup and the Olympics. Everything else is beautiful and fun and competitive. But as a U.S. Womenâs National Team player, this is it.â
But at times, the teamâs body language at the Olympics hasnât exactly screamed âweâve got this.â So whatâs ailing the USWNT? Andonovski has juggled starting lineups so far and liberally used the five substitutes now allowed in international soccer, instead of the usual three (the increase is designed to ease player workload during the pandemic.) These moves do allow players to rest up in Japanâs sweltering humidity. But at the same time, all the shuffling could prevent players from developing the cohesion needed to win an Olympic tournament.
In some ways, the last weekâs listlessness may not matter: Pool play is over, and slates are wiped clean for the knockout stage. However the Netherlands, whom the U.S. defeated in the 2019 World Cup final, is a daunting quarterfinal opponent. The Dutch have scored 21 goals, to Americaâs six, in their first three games. âI think the Netherlands are probably playing more fluid, cohesive soccer,â former US womenâs coach Jill Ellis, who led the Americans to the 2015 and 2019 World Cup titles, tells TIME. âBut I also think weâve got game changers like a Press and [Rose] Lavelle that can pull something out of nothing. Weâve still got difference-makers that are very, very special.â
Ellis, now president of the the National Womenâs Soccer League expansion team in San Diego, believes a U.S. goal within the first 30 minutes is key to settling the teamâs nerves and rebuilding confidence. A Dutch player to watch: forward Vivianne Miedema, who plays for Arsenal in the FA Womenâs Super League.
âMiedema is arguably one of the best forwards in the world,â says Ellis. âSheâs just so complete, in terms of her ability to hold the ball, her movement, her technical proficiency. Sheâs just got a lot of amazing skills. And a lot of great assets.â
Ellis recalls the U.S. strategy against the Dutch in that 2019 World Cup final. âItâs the ability to stop the transition of [Lineth] Beerensteyn whoâs got pace, and [Shanice] van de Sanden, whoâs got pace,â says Ellis. âTheyâre very similar to the team we played in the World Cup final. Our focal point was to minimize the set pieces at all costs, the corner kicks and such because they have such good service. Try to stop their transition and then try to make their back line as uncomfortable as possible.â
If anyone knows to never write off the USWNT, itâs Ellis. âItâs a new day,â she says. âSo do I think they have the capability to win the whole thing? For sure.â
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