USA TODAY US Edition

Revealing family rift, Lloyd takes straightfo­rward path

- Nancy Armour narmour@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

It would have been so easy to hide.

Carli Lloyd’s career would have given her all the material she needed for her autobiogra­phy. She’d nearly quit soccer after being cut from the U.S. under-21 team, only to transform herself through a relentless training regimen and single-minded focus. Now she was one of the greatest in the game, the third U.S. woman to win FIFA World Player of the Year honors and one of two players, male or female, to score a hat trick in a World Cup final.

The rest, particular­ly the relationsh­ip with her family that for the last eight years has been tense at best and non-existent for the most part, the world didn’t need to know about that. No one would have been the wiser had she left it out.

“When I first started meeting with publishers, my family situation actually wasn’t on the table. Nobody knew about it then,” Lloyd told USA TODAY Sports in an interview Monday, the day When Nobody Was Watching: My Hard-Fought Journey to the Top of the Soccer World was released. But as Lloyd says in the very first line of her book, “I don’t do fake.”

So everything is laid bare, from the resentment and disappoint­ment as the tiny fractures in her family grew into gaping cracks to an unflinchin­g assessment of the person and player she was 15 years ago.

It is an unexpected level of honesty from a player who has always been as privately guarded as she is publicly forthright. So much so that even close friend and former teammate Hope Solo was taken by surprise.

“She couldn’t believe how much I opened up,” Lloyd said. “This book is all about sharing everything and being honest. It’s part of my journey and part of who I am.”

We are reminded time and again that our role models, the people we think we know because they play for our favorite team or portray our favorite characters, are not at all who we thought. Most times, that revelation comes as a bitter disappoint­ment.

Sometimes, however, that glimpse of humanity makes them even more appealing. Otherworld­ly skills and talents aside, they face the same challenges, heartbreak­s and doubts as we do.

That’s the message that comes through in Lloyd’s book, written with veteran sportswrit­er Wayne Coffey.

“It just goes to show people that it’s real life. It’s honest. … I’m humble enough to say I wasn’t good enough. I wasn’t a good enough person, I wasn’t a supportive teammate, I wasn’t coachable. But I also didn’t have anybody teaching me all the right things,” Lloyd said.

“Had I known that 15, 20 years ago, I would have done things way differentl­y. But I think you can always do that, wish you could go back in time.”

There is the tension with her family, of course. After so many years of guiding and supporting her in soccer, Lloyd’s parents were unable to let go when it came time for her to make decisions by and for herself.

But there is also her developmen­t as a player. Lloyd was devastated when she was cut from the under-21 team, and it was not until she started working with trainer James Galanis that she acknowledg­ed her shortcomin­gs in her consistenc­y, her work ethic and, yes, her character.

Lloyd owns all of this, and then some. Even as a World Cup champion and two-time Olympic gold medalist, she is still plagued by self-doubt, forever the underdog trying to make good.

Baring her soul doesn’t come without risk. Though Lloyd is quick to say she played a part in the breakdown with her parents and hopes they can eventually repair it, publicizin­g their estrangeme­nt could cause further damage.

Asked if her parents will be at her wedding in November, Lloyd quietly says no.

“There’s always that piece of me that wishes things were different and wishes things were how they used to be,” she said. “No one is really to blame. It’s kind of one of those things where I was young and immature and probably did a lot of wrong things and they were doing the best they could in trying to control the situation.

“Family dynamics can be tricky,” she added. “But I’ll be sad. Walking down the aisle I’m sure will definitely be emotional. Hopefully things can work out. I’m definitely wishing that will happen.”

That said, she has no regrets about opening up. She has become a lot of things through her hard work and determinat­ion.

Fake will never be one of them.

 ?? JIM BROWN, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Carli Lloyd, second from right, was the star of Team USA’s run to the 2015 World Cup title.
JIM BROWN, USA TODAY SPORTS Carli Lloyd, second from right, was the star of Team USA’s run to the 2015 World Cup title.
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