The Guardian (USA)

Tobin Heath aims to be Manchester United's disrupter-in-chief

- Suzanne Wrack

The arrival at Manchester City of the USA World Cup-winning midfielder­s Rose Lavelle, who scored in the 2019 final, and Sam Mewis and the shock post-deadline day announceme­nt that Alex Morgan had signed for Tottenham dominated internatio­nal headlines. But Manchester United’s recruitmen­t of the forwards Christen Press and Tobin Heath has seen a quieter, but perhaps more knowing, excitement build over the American influx into England’s top flight.

United are relatively new to women’s football but the addition of two World Cup winners, adding balance to a team packed with young talent, has shown they do not want to coast through the season propping up the three teams that dominate the Women’s Super League. They want to disrupt.

That is perhaps what makes their acquisitio­n of Heath (who skipped high school football in her senior year, having committed to the University of North Carolina so she could play with boys), in particular, so exciting. She is a disrupter who thrives on placing herself in “uncomforta­ble situations”. A quick YouTube search will uncover clip after clip of the dynamic 32-year-old tricking, flicking and chipping her way around opponents. So the decision to join a team upsetting the usual order, while a little forced by the pandemic, was easy.

It “all happened fairly quickly”, says Health, speaking to the media for the first time from her apartment in Manchester, fresh out of quarantine. “The club bringing over Christen and I shows that they’re very ambitious; that they want to compete now, they don’t want to wait, and that’s exactly what I love to do.”

The two-times World Cup winner and twice Olympic gold medallist received glowing reviews of the manager, Casey Stoney, which also helped push through the move from Portland Thorns.

“It’s a young ambitious programme – they’re only a few years old,” says a free spirit who reportedly sofa-surfed after college because she missed dormitory life. “I was really drawn in by Casey Stoney and her reputation. When I was first asking about the club, trying to get intel, it was incredible how highly she was spoken of.

“I feel like she’s a show-not-tell manager. She shows you exactly how she wants the team to be, the culture of the team, by her own actions. And I think that comes with a lot of respect from the dressing room.”

The launch of an in-house women’s team by one of the biggest clubs in the world had not gone unnoticed in 2018. “Christen and I were talking about this. I remember when Manchester United

 ??  ?? Manchester United’s Tobin Heath says: ‘It’s so important for clubs with all this tradition, history, power, influence to have a women’s team’ Photograph: Manchester United/Getty Images
Manchester United’s Tobin Heath says: ‘It’s so important for clubs with all this tradition, history, power, influence to have a women’s team’ Photograph: Manchester United/Getty Images
 ??  ?? Tobin Heath and Christen Press after winning the 2019 Women’s World Cup. Photograph: Naomi Baker/FIFA/Getty
Tobin Heath and Christen Press after winning the 2019 Women’s World Cup. Photograph: Naomi Baker/FIFA/Getty

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