San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Olympic loss led to changes for U.S. women’s soccer

- By Kevin Baxter

LYON, France — The players on the U.S. national team have talked a lot about the journey that has taken them to Sunday’s Women’s World Cup final. What they haven’t talked much about, though, is how and where that journey began.

For that you have to go back three summers, to the weeks following the team’s loss to Sweden in the quarterfin­als of the 2016 Olympics when coach Jill Ellis decided the program had to be overhauled.

The players, the formation, the tactics, everything.

“I remember talking to my staff and saying, ‘We’ve got to make sure we’re prepared for this piece of the evolution,’ ” Ellis said.

A couple of months later, Ellis added a talent identifica­tion position to the coaching staff and hired B.J. Snow, the man who succeeded her at UCLA, to fill it. Over the next two years, Ellis and Snow cast a wide net, calling more than 60 players into camp to audition for the World Cup team.

Before the team could start its climb, it had to hit rock bottom. That came early in 2017 in a 30 loss to France, the most onesided defeat for the Americans in nearly 10 years.

“I remember thinking after that loss that we had a long way to go,” said defender Kel

Sunday’s final

U.S. vs. Netherland­s, 8 a.m.

2 40 48

ley O’Hara, sitting in a sunny courtyard of the team’s hilltop hotel, a converted 19th century convent with an altar in the lobby and two confession­als, repurposed as planters, flanking the front door.

“But that’s kind of a good thing,” the Stanford alum continued. “You don’t ever want to feel like it’s easy all the time, and things just work out, and there’s no obstacles, and there’s no room for growth or need for growth. Jill, that’s been her biggest thing: wanting to challenge this team and make this team evolve and grow, ever since 2016.”

Just about everything the team had done up to that time was questioned. Players were moved from the positions they had always played to the ones they were best suited for. Crystal Dunn, a formerly prolific goal scorer, became a defender, as did O’Hara, who had played in two World Cups as a midfielder. Santa Clara alum Julie Ertz, a defender, moved into the midfield, and Carli Lloyd, a twotime world player of the year as a midfielder, became a forward.

Eleven of the players who made this World Cup roster weren’t on the team four years ago in Canada.

Those new positions didn’t fit the old formation, so Ellis changed that too, going from the staid 442 she had always used, with four defenders, four midfielder­s and two forwards, to a fluid, pressing, attackmind­ed 433.

Those changes on the field forced other ones to be made off the field. Lloyd moved into a reserve role, Alex Morgan emerged as the captain and leader. New players such as Rose Lavelle, Mallory Pugh and Tierna Davidson, the 20yearold Stanford alum who is the youngest on the roster, had to be taught what it means to be a national team player, following in the massive footsteps of Mia Hamm, Julie Foudy, Kristine Lilly and Abby Wambach.

“That was an evolution as well,” said O’Hara, 30, one of a dozen players on the tournament’s oldest team who has celebrated a 30th birthday. “It’s always been about what is this team at its core. And that’s been a team that has that grittiness, that bite and that neversaydi­e attitude.”

Since that loss to France, the U.S. has lost only twice in 49 matches, outscoring the opposition 15732.

The U.S. is the first country to reach three consecutiv­e Women’s World Cup finals and with a victory over the Netherland­s on Sunday, it would become the second to win consecutiv­e titles and the only one to win the championsh­ip four times — in eight tries — overall. “This was what she was building toward,” O’Hara said. “It’s not to say that it was easy and there wasn’t doubts within the team or the players at times. And probably within the coaching staff. But that’s a good thing . ...

“It’s good to have doubt and to feel like this because that’s where the most growth comes from.”

Kevin Baxter writes for the Los Angeles Times.

 ?? Elsa / Getty Images ?? Kelley O’Hara’s move from midfielder to defender in one of many changes by U.S. women’s soccer coach Jill Ellis after the team’s loss in the Rio Olympics.
Elsa / Getty Images Kelley O’Hara’s move from midfielder to defender in one of many changes by U.S. women’s soccer coach Jill Ellis after the team’s loss in the Rio Olympics.

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