Gulf Today

Rapinoe spurred by Olympic ’16 exit as US chase double in Tokyo

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LOSANGELES: The biter memory of defeat is driving Megan Rapinoe and the United States women’s football team as they chase an unpreceden­ted double at the Olympics.

Five years ago, the US women were bundled out of the Rio de Janeiro Olympics in the quarterfin­als, losing to Sweden on penalties in an upset that shatered American hopes of a fourth consecutiv­e gold medal.

It marked the first time that the US has failed to reach the gold medal game since women’s football was introduced at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.

“It was terrible,” Rapinoe said. “It felt like total failure. We didn’t complete the task, we didn’t play well and it was a particular­ly kind of guting loss in a lot of ways.

“It was really sad. We had a lot of people in their first major championsh­ips, so that was tough to go out as early as we did. I wouldn’t say it let a bad taste in our mouth -- it let a fire under people to never let that happen again. It gave a lot of us motivation.

“Everybody who was in Rio does not want that to be their last Olympic experience.”

The ill-fated Rio campaign was a rare blemish on Rapinoe’s dazzling record of success at internatio­nal level.

The 36-year-old midfielder is arguably the most recognisab­le member of an American women’s team that has dominated internatio­nal football for most of the past decade.

A key member of the US team that won the gold medal at the 2012 Olympics, Rapinoe was also a pillar of the squads that won back-to-back women’s World Cups in 2015 and 2019. Since making her internatio­nal debut in 2006, Rapinoe has accumulate­d 177 caps with 59 goals and 69 assists.

She will spearhead a US team in Tokyo which is on a 44-game unbeaten streak, having not lost a game since a 3-1 defeat by France in January 2019.

A gold medal in Tokyo would make the US women the first team to follow up a World Cup triumph with Olympic gold.

Rapinoe says the enforced break caused by the pandemic has benefited the US women in their quest for the double.

“This was a nice silver living of Covid and the pandemic -- to have a year of rest,” she said. “Some players played overseas, some players took more time for themselves, time that we never really get, to get our bodies right. I think of all the teams we probably have the most benefit because we would have been so tired ater all the wildness of 2019.”

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