Arab News

World Cup winner Rose Lavelle eyes FA Cup glory with Man City

The American midfielder will face Everton at Wembley just over two months after moving to England

- Ali Khaled Dubai

For a second or two, the World Cup winner was left speechless.

“No way, wait really? Your name is my name?” she asks the star-struck little fan standing in front of her just weeks after playing a major role in the US Women’s National Team triumph at the 2019 Women’s World Cup in France.

Rose Lavelle had just met Rose Lavelle.

The video of the Manchester City’s new American star meeting her mini-me namesake went viral, confirming her own popularity on the back of the wildly successful World Cup.

“That was so cute, I thought I was being pranked for a second,” Lavelle, preparing for the FA Cup final on Sunday, told Arab News.

“It was so cool, and I think it’s so special to be able to give back to the sport that same way that it gave to me. I know how huge it was for me to have role models that I looked up to, that I tried to envision myself being in their shoes one day. So I think it’s so cool now that I’m able to hopefully serve that same inspiratio­n and motivation for younger players to be in my shoes one day.” Lavelle is being modest, playing down her own astonishin­g rise over the last few years.

At last year’s World Cup, she scored her nation’s second goal in the final against the Netherland­s and was named in the tournament’s best 11.

She also claimed the Bronze Ball as the third best player in the tournament. Later she was ranked sixth in the The Best FIFA Football Awards 2019. In August this year, having been transferre­d from Washington Spirit to NWSL rivals OL Reign, she made the move to Manchester City. Lavelle joined a team bursting with some of the game’s best players including England captain Steph Houghton, 2019 UEFA Women’s Player of the Year Lucy Bronze, England stalwart Jill Scott, former Olympique Lyonnais left-back Alex Greenwood and fellow USWNT World Cup winner Sam Mewis.

“I’ve obviously played against a lot of these girls at internatio­nal level, but I think coming here I have even more respect for them because I see how talented they are and how much they know the game,” Lavelle said.

“It’s been awesome to come here and play with them, and not against them, and also to be able to learn from them every single day. I feel like I’m constantly learning and getting better every day.”

For obvious reasons, the move could not have come at a more complicate­d time, and Lavelle had to quarantine for two weeks on arriving in England. Still, the 25-year-old has taken the disruption­s in her stride. “It’s been pretty good being on the team and there was definitely a little bit of adjustment,” she said.

“To be fair, I still feel like I’m kind of adjusting and learning. But it’s something that’s making me so much better. It’s great to be in this environmen­t, I’m really grateful to have this opportunit­y especially with everything that’s going on,

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having this avenue to play every single day.”

Manchester City’s women’s team are now fifth in the FA Women’s Super League (WSL) standings, having won two, drawn two and lost one of their early season matches. They also beat Everton 3-1 in the FA Women’s League Cup, a match in which Lavelle scored a brilliantl­y kicked equalizer. All have been played to the backdrop of empty stadiums.

“Obviously the fans make the atmosphere so fun and incredible, and I would love to experience playing in front of an English crowd,” she said.

“I’ve never played in front of a crowd in England before. I’ve only ever trained in England, I’d never played a game. But obviously health and safety are the most important things, so it’s understand­able. I think whenever sports allow fans again, something that we all know and take for granted, it’ll be a fun time.”

On Sunday, Lavelle and her teammates take on Everton at Wembley in the delayed 2020 FA Cup final, the competitio­n’s 50th, with Manchester City having beaten West Ham 3-0 in the 2019 edition.

There will also be an opportunit­y to reach the 2021 FA Cup final later this season.

“One of the reasons I wanted to come here was there were so many different opportunit­ies to win different titles, so it’s so exciting to have this opportunit­y to play in a final, a final so early in the season,” Lavelle said. “And also, potentiall­y to play in another FA Cup final this [season], that would be unpreceden­ted.”

A win on Sunday will come just 16 months after the finest moment of Lavelle’s career, a winning role in the USWNT’s triumph at the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup in France.

 ??  ?? Like most sporting stars, Rose Lavelle longs for the stadiums to be opened again so she can play in front of the fans.
Like most sporting stars, Rose Lavelle longs for the stadiums to be opened again so she can play in front of the fans.

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