Los Angeles Times

A relatively good year for soccer’s Lloyd

- By Kevin Baxter

Though she didn’t do much on the soccer field, she did reunite with her estranged family.

Last year was one of the worst of Carli Lloyd’s otherwise-stellar soccer career. She contracted COVID-19 (she thinks), didn’t play a game for her National Women’s Soccer League team, started just five matches for the women’s national team, saw the Olympics postponed and underwent surgery for the first time.

It was also one of the best years of her life, though, because the downtime allowed her to reconnect with a family from which she has long been estranged.

“It’s probably been the most touching year that I’ve ever had,” Lloyd said by phone from Stockholm, where the U.S. will meet Sweden on Saturday as part of its preparatio­n for the Summer Olympics in Tokyo.

If Lloyd plays in that game, she’ll join former teammates Kristine Lilly and Christie Rampone (nee Pearce) as the third player to appear in 300 internatio­nal games.

But the real achievemen­t will come afterward, when she receives calls and messages of congratula­tions from relatives she wasn’t talking to just a few months ago.

Lloyd had gone a dozen years without speaking to her parents and brother, a rift she wrote about in her 2016 book “When Nobody Was Watching: My HardFought Journey to the Top of the Soccer World.”

As Lloyd grew more independen­t and rebellious after college, she began embracing the sometimes-quirky philosophi­es of personal coach James Galanis, a man she approvingl­y called her guru, at the expense of a relationsh­ip with her family.

In 2008, in a fit of anger, her father, Steve, threw her out of the house, Lloyd wrote, completing the rupture.

When Steve had openheart surgery, no one told Lloyd until well afterward. When her sister got married, Lloyd wasn’t invited to the ceremony.

And when she turned in arguably the single-greatest performanc­e in a World Cup final in 2015, earning the first of two world player of the year awards, Galanis accompanie­d Lloyd to Zurich for the awards gala, not her parents.

Last year, sidelined by a pandemic and knee surgery, Lloyd reflected on all that. And with the end of her unparallel­ed career in sight, she cut ties with Galanis and phoned her parents.

“I started communicat­ing with my family, had them over at my house. They’d never been there,” she said. “And after that it’s, you know, been back to normal — 2020 has definitely been one of the most special years of my life.

“I’m super grateful we’re back in each other’s lives. I feel like there’s [been] a rebirth of myself. I feel happier. I feel like the weight of the world is off my shoulders.”

Galanis, who was introduced to Lloyd by her father, transforme­d her from a talented if undiscipli­ned college player into one of the fittest, most technical players in the world. His unorthodox methods including solo workouts and mindnumbin­g repetition­s of situps and push-ups that made Lloyd physically and mentally tough.

How tough? Last year Lloyd played 90 minutes in a 4-0 win over Mexico that qualified the U.S. for the Olympics despite, she believes, having been infected with COVID-19.

“I actually ran 600 meters more than the next-highest player,” she said proudly.

Lloyd now works with Danny Madaroski, a former Galanis assistant and volunteer coach at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelph­ia. But she hasn’t lost any of her edge.

“I’ve never felt this fit in my career,” Lloyd said. “I’ve never felt this explosive. My game has evolved over the years and I’ve become smarter tactically as well.”

She’s also retained the chip she’s carried on her shoulder for much of her career. That will to prove doubters wrong has fueled her drive and built a legacy that might never be matched.

Consider: Lloyd is the only player, male or female, to score the winning goal in two Olympic tournament­s and the only woman with a hat trick in a World Cup final. Mia Hamm is the only other American to win two world player of the year awards, but she didn’t play 300 games. And if Lloyd wins another gold medal this summer, she’ll join Rampone as the only players to win three Olympic titles and two World Cups.

“When I have my back up against the wall, coach benches me, things aren’t going well on the field with the team, that’s where I take it two to three notches higher,” she said. “Some people crumble under the pressure but I absolutely love it.

“I just love proving people wrong. I love defying odds.”

She might continue doing that even after the Olympics, which was to be her farewell tournament. She’ll be 39 by then, but now she’s not so sure she’s ready to walk away, citing Tom Brady, a Super Bowl MVP at 43, as her inspiratio­n.

Besides, there’s another World Cup in two years and her family has not been present when she’s won one of those.

“To have them in my life at the end of my career I think is really special,” Lloyd said. “They were there in the beginning and now they’re there in the end. I just think things happen for a reason and I’m just incredibly grateful that I had time to see things clearly in 2020, to think, to reflect.

“It’s been the best thing that’s come out of 2020 for me.”

 ?? Henrik Montgomery Agence France-Press via Getty Images ?? CARLI LLOYD didn’t have a great year on the field, but she did reunite with her estranged family.
Henrik Montgomery Agence France-Press via Getty Images CARLI LLOYD didn’t have a great year on the field, but she did reunite with her estranged family.

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