The United States women’s soccer team’s 3-0 victory over China at Allianz Field on Saturday marked a year, minus a day, since coach Emma Hayes took to the sidelines for her first game with the four-time Women’s World Cup champions.
It also marked 361 days since the team played Hayes’ second game in charge at Allianz last June, a 3-0 victory over South Korea, prepping for the Paris Olympics.
In the whirlwind span since, Hayes led a young American squad to a gold medal in France. There, the Englishwoman had the chance to sit down and swap experiences with Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve, who was leading the U.S. women’s basketball team to its 10th gold medal.
On Tuesday, the pair connected again at the Lynx’s home victory over Seattle. Hayes and a group of U.S. players crowded into the WNBA team’s locker room at Target Center postgame to watch Reeve speak to the team.
“That was an awesome experience to watch another coach, high-level coach, in action,” Hayes said. And also, in the stands, “I jumped so high to grab [a] T-shirt.”
Hayes faced a different challenge in the national team’s fourth trip to Allianz — no longer racing against the clock of prepping for the Olympics, but instead using summer friendlies to puzzle out the long-term runway ahead of the 2027 World Cup.
That meant, on Saturday, the U.S. could introduce a few new faces, work regular stars back from injury and test out new combinations of familiar veterans.
In the 28th minute, one of those new faces helped the Americans break through China’s unusually-high defensive back line. Michelle Cooper, a 22-year-old forward playing in her fifth game with the national team, slotted a pass from the right side of the field into the 6-yard box. After Alyssa Thompson’s initial shot was blocked, Cat Macario tapped the ball across the goal line.