Los Angeles Times

For U. S. women, just getting back on the field is big

National team is ready to square off against Netherland­s in first match since March.

- By Kevin Baxter

Alyssa Naeher should have been in training camp this past spring, preparing for the National Women’s Soccer League season with the Chicago Red Stars and the Summer Olympics with the national team. Instead, the two- time World Cup champion goalkeeper found herself standing alone on the roof of a Chicago parking garage, kicking a ball against a wall.

“Just me, the ball and the wall,” Naeher said. “That was my go- to spot for a few months.”

From the time they join their first teams as toddlers, many elite athletes live lives controlled by a schedule: practice, travel, game, repeat. The coronaviru­s outbreak changed all that, shutting down cities, leagues, even entire sports for months and forcing players such as Naeher to improvise and f ind their own ways to stay sharp.

“Obviously, this year has certainly been different in terms of scheduling and preparatio­n,” said Naeher, 32, who is expected to start Friday when the women’s national team faces the Netherland­s in Breda, Holland, in the Americans’ f irst game since early March. “As athletes, we rely on our preparatio­n. That’s certainly been different this year. The biggest thing has just been to stay as ready as we can.”

For a couple of months, that meant kicking a ball against a wall. Gently.

“I only had two balls, so I had to be careful with what I was doing,” she said.

The NWSL eventually gathered for a 23- game tournament, played within a protective quarantine, in early summer and another hastily organized 18- game tournament in the fall. But the full national team — which typically plays in competitio­ns arranged months, if not years, in advance — has gone more than eight months without a match, its longest break in more than three decades.

“It’s been so great to be back with the team,” said midfielder Sam Mewis, who played in six games in the 2019 World Cup in France before joining Manchester City of the Women’s Super League this year. “It’s been obviously a crazy year. It’s important to get us together.”

Partly because it brings at least a brief period of structure and camaraderi­e to a year that has had little of either.

“There’s been some opportunit­y for some personal growth along the way,” said Naeher, who Wednesday was named to the FIFA shortlist for world’s best goalkeeper, the only American to make the cut in any category. “The biggest thing this year, in a year of uncertaint­y, is just controllin­g what you can control, and what I can control is staying f it, staying mentally sharp, staying as ready as I can be.”

How long that uncertaint­y will continue is … well, uncertain. Friday’s game will be the ninth and f inal one of 2020, the fewest for a women’s national team since 2009. The Tokyo Olympics, postponed this past summer, are scheduled to begin in July, but with COVID cases blowing up worldwide, there’s no guarantee that will happen.

“We’re hoping that the Olympics go ahead next year,” Mewis said.

In the meantime, coach Vlatko Andonovski, unbeaten in 10 matches since taking over for Jill Ellis 13 months ago, is trying to keep his players focused and motivated without lowering the bar for performanc­e

“It’s been a difficult year for us all together,” said Andonovski, whose team is riding a 31- game unbeaten streak. “The goal, every time we step on the f ield, we also want to raise the standards and continue building on what we’ve built, or started building, at the beginning of the year.”

Friday’s game will be a rematch of the last World Cup f inal, although both teams are missing key pieces. The U. S. will be without reigning world player of the year Megan Rapinoe, who hasn’t trained since March, and Carli Lloyd, a two- time world player of the year who is rehabilita­ting a knee injury. But Andonovski will have Alex Morgan for the first time this year.

The Dutch will be missing forward Vivianne Miedema, the team’s alltime leading scorer and a nominee for world player of the year. She has a hip injury.

But the Netherland­s has an edge in that it has played three times in the last 10 weeks — winning three Euro qualifiers by a combined 14- 0 — while the Americans have been idle.

“Obviously the Netherland­s are a top team and a tough opponent for us to be facing. That’s exciting,” Naeher said. “You always want to play those types of teams, the most competitiv­e matches.”

It sure beats kicking the ball against the wall of a parking garage.

 ?? Brad Smith Getty I mages ?? ALYSSA NAEHER is expected to start in goal today when the U. S. women’s team plays the Netherland­s.
Brad Smith Getty I mages ALYSSA NAEHER is expected to start in goal today when the U. S. women’s team plays the Netherland­s.

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