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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Wambach sets sights on every challenge


Abby Wambach had to endure some trying times in making the transition from college star to international sensation. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Barry Wilner Associated Press

Abby Wambach welcomes the biggest challenges.

Team her with the greatest scorer in soccer history? Bring it on.

Ask her to take a leadership role on a team renowned for its stream of strong leaders? You bet.

Rely on her to fill the net? No problem.

“I do me. I do what I do,” said the prolific striker, who has 74 goals in 92 games to rank 13th in international goals among all players. “Whatever the role – score, lead – I do me.”

Over the last five years, Wambach has gone from college hotshot to outright star, with some bumps in between. When the U.S. women, ranked No. 1 in the world, get to China in September for the World Cup, Wambach will be a marked woman.

Opponents will hack her, trip her, shove her and generally treat her the way other NBA centers treat Shaquille O’Neal. On June 24 against Brazil, Wambach was fouled a half-dozen times in a variety of manners in the first half. Several times, she remained on the turf for long periods.

But in the 17th minute, she made a perfect diagonal run to head in a long free kick by Cat Whitehill for a 2-0 lead.

“That’s what Abby does,” Whitehill said. “If I just put the ball anywhere near her, she’s going to make the right play and she’s going to finish.”

Wambach’s career – and chance for stardom – nearly was short circuited when she first joined the U.S. team in 2001 out of Florida. A college standout with a rugged presence the Americans needed after Michelle Akers left international soccer, Wambach struggled to fit in. And it ate at her core.

“I went through one or 1 1/2 years in ‘01 and ‘02 unconfident,” she said. “I was not making rosters and not playing. But I wasn’t ready. … Then came the WUSA and playing with Mia (Hamm), and when I came back to the team, I still couldn’t get on the field. Why? I had to learn it just takes time as you work your way and you earn it. I had to earn it. It’s a road you know you have to go on and I am absolutely a better player for going on that road.”

That road was paved by the ” ‘91ers,” women such as Hamm, Akers, Julie Foudy, Brandi Chastain, Joy Fawcett and Carla Overbeck. All of them helped the United States win the first Women’s World Cup in 1991, and another, memorably, in 1999.

There also were U.S. gold medals in the 1996 and 2004 Olympics – the final tournament for most of the longtime regulars, including U.S. Soccer Hall of Famers Hamm, whose 158 international goals are more than any man or woman, and Foudy.

Wambach now teams up front with captain Kristine Lilly, the one link to all the glory years, and they are as formidable as Wambach and Hamm were just before Hamm retired.

Over the past few years, and especially since Greg Ryan became coach, Wambach has added variety to her game. She’s more patient with and without the ball, and she is more effective defensively. At 27, she may be peaking.

“I’ve never stopped working at it,” she says, “and now I know I can play defense if I’m needed.

“I can shout encouragement or instructions to any of my teammates, and I can score in the last 20 minutes of a game because I’m fit and I have that determination.

“There’s a fine line between whether you are doing the right thing or not, always balancing the challenges, but always remembering it’s what is on the front of the jersey, not the back, that matters.”