U.S. WOMEN’S SOCCER | ANALYSIS
A year removed from its earliest exit ever at a Women’s World Cup, the U.S. women’s national soccer team is a win away from an Olympic gold medal.
The four-time World Cup champions face Brazil on Saturday in Paris, the finale to their first major international tournament under new head coach Emma Hayes. The U.S. hasn’t won an Olympic gold medal since 2012, but its early exit from the World Cup last year was what brought about a coaching change and roster turnover.
“It means everything,” forward Sophia Smith told reporters in France. “We had a tough year last year in every way possible, but I feel like this is a new year, and we’re really just showing the world that we didn’t ever drop off.”
A 1-0 extra-time win over Germany in the tournament semifinals sent the U.S. through to the gold-medal match. In the 95th minute, midfielder Sam Coffey found forward Mallory Swanson in the center of the field. Swanson turned and threaded a pass between Germany’s backline and to the feet of a sprinting Smith, who put a one-touch shot over the charging German goalkeeper and collapsed to the ground, letting her teammates swarm her in celebration.
Defensive anchoring from 24-year-old centerback Naomi Girma — described by Hayes as the “best defender I’ve ever seen” — and veteran goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher have kept the team in close matches, and the forward line has sealed the deal when it counted.
The young forward trio of Smith, Swanson and Trinity Rodman has scored nine of the team’s 11 goals in Paris. A year ago, the U.S. scored just four goals in four games at the World Cup and missed Swanson, out with a torn patella tendon.
“We’re all like best friends off the field, so we have that chemistry naturally,” Smith said. “We just recently [have] kind of gotten to play together … getting more games together, getting more minutes together.”