Business Day

How Abby Wambach set US soccer alight

• Born on June 2, she has tasted the highs and lows of life in the limelight

- Arvind Sriram Bengaluru Forward,

When Abby Wambach towered over the Brazilian defence to head home a desperatel­y late equaliser at the 2011 World Cup, it set a US side struggling to emerge from the shadow of its illustriou­s predecesso­rs on a path to renewed glory.

Wambach’s 122nd-minute header in the quarterfin­als prevented the US from suffering their earliest World Cup exit and set them en route to their first final in 12 years.

Though they were ultimately beaten by Japan on penalties, they received a hero’s welcome when they returned home and their thirst for success kickstarte­d an era of unpreceden­ted dominance and popularity for the US women’s team, who have not been beaten in the competitio­n since.

“That moment put women’s soccer back on the map in the US. It gave us self-confidence,” Wambach told ESPN. “Even though we didn’t win, I think we gained our own footing and we grew the game.”

That was a third World Cup without glory for the US, who had won two of the first three editions of the tournament in 1991 and eight years later. It was also a third World Cup without success for Wambach, but soon the records began to tumble.

In 2012, she won her second Olympic gold medal with five goals in the tournament and was named Fifa world player of the year — the first American to win the award in a decade.

Yet her crowning glory came in 2015 when she finally laid her hands on the World Cup trophy, exacting revenge by beating Japan 5-2 in the final to end a 16year drought at the global soccer showpiece for the US.

When she hung up her boots later that year, Wambach was a household name with a record 184 internatio­nal goals, a mark that was only surpassed by Canada’s Christine Sinclair in January.

Personal accolades, however, meant little to her when compared to inspiring a new generation of soccer players.

“Forget me … forget my name, forget I ever existed. Forget the medals won, the records broken and the sacrifices made,” Wambach said when she bade farewell to the sport.

“I want to leave a legacy where the next generation accomplish­es things so great that I’m no longer remembered. The day I’m forgotten is the day we will succeed.”

While wrestling with retirement, Wambach hit rock bottom and was arrested in 2016 for driving under the influence. In … her autobiogra­phy she candidly describes how during the latter stages of her career she had hidden her addiction to a “revolving cocktail of pills”.

“That night getting arrested was one of the best things that has ever happened to me … If I don’t get so publicly shamed, I don’t think I wake up,” she said when describing the humiliatio­n she faced.

Firmly on the wagon since, Wambach has channelled her on-field passion into activism and is currently a champion for women’s rights and gender equality.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Medal detector: Abby Wambach on parade after the US beat Japan for the gold medal at the London Olympic Games in 2012.
/Reuters Medal detector: Abby Wambach on parade after the US beat Japan for the gold medal at the London Olympic Games in 2012.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa