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Kevin Baxter: For U.S. women, Gold Cup title is the reward for a gritty tournament run

Kevin Baxter, Los Angeles Times on

Published in Soccer

“We’re a team that just takes all the good, all the bad. We’re proud of all the things we’re not, and use it together for our good.”

It’s also a team in transition. The team the U.S. took to the Tokyo Olympics three years ago averaged nearly 31 years of age, making it the oldest in the tournament. The team the U.S. used Sunday included eight players under the age of 26 and two — teenage forward Jaedyn Shaw and midfielder Korbin Albert — who were too young to join their teammates in the beer-drenched victory celebration afterward.

That makes the Olympic journey a new experience for many.

“Some of the less experienced players, they’ve never played in a stadium with 31,000 [fans], with a trophy on the line,” Kilgore said. “It’s just such a valuable experience. We’ve talked about squeezing everything we can out of these games, and it’s all coming with us.”

Shaw, who led the U.S. with four goals and was named the Gold Cup’s best player, certainly made a case she belongs on the Olympic team, as did Albert, Coffey and defender Jenna Nighswonger. All four came into the tournament with fewer than 10 international caps; for them the 12-team, 19-day Gold Cup was an important dress rehearsal.

“This replicates almost exactly what an Olympic tournament will be like,” said Naeher, who has played in the Summer Games twice. “For players who have never experienced that before, this is huge. And it’s even better because we still wanted to win this too. It’s not like just an experiment.

“Having that experience of being in hotels, being on the road, being together for 30 days playing six games in three weeks, it’s not an easy thing to do. We had to find a way to win, we had to dig deep as a group. And I think those are important lessons.”

For those young players to make the team, however, it will require leaving someone else off. The U.S. had 23 women on its Gold Cup team, but the Olympic roster will be limited to 18, meaning a number of players who made the World Cup trip won’t be going to Paris.

 

Those cuts won’t be up to Kilgore though. She has just two games left as interim coach — both in next month’s SheBelieves Cup — before Emma Hayes takes over as the permanent coach after Chelsea’s club season ends in May. Hayes will manage the team in a pair of friendlies against South Korea in early June before settling on the Olympic roster ahead of two send-off games in July.

She will then coach her first competitive game for the U.S. in France, seeking to get the Americans back to the gold medal game for the first time in 12 years. And for the U.S., making the championship match seems to be the key since Sunday’s win marked the team’s 10th consecutive win in a tournament final.

It fell well short of that in the last two Olympics, going out in the quarterfinals in 2016 before finishing third in Tokyo. Then came last summer’s World Cup debacle.

Horan, who played in all three of those tournaments, said those results haven’t been forgotten. But a win like Sunday’s, she added, makes it easier to move beyond them heading toward Paris.

“Obviously, there’s that confidence piece,” she said. “You win a major tournament going into another tournament, that’s always lovely. But there’s still a lot of hard work that we’ve got to do.

“We’ve got to keep grinding, with the forefront being we’re preparing for an Olympics.”


©2024 Los Angeles Times. Visit at latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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