Kristine Lilly

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Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox football biography

Kristine Marie Lilly Heavey (Template:Nee; born July 22, 1971) is an American former professional soccer player. She was a member of the United States women's national team for 23 years and is the most-capped football player in the history of the women's sport, gaining her 354th and final cap against Mexico in a World Cup qualifier in November 2010.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Lilly scored 130 international goals for the US national team, making her the team's fourth-highest goal scorer behind Carli Lloyd's 134, Mia Hamm's 158 goals, and Abby Wambach's 184.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Early life

Lilly was born in New York City and attended Wilton High School in Wilton, Connecticut.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> While still attending high school, Lilly became a member of the United States women's national team. She was recruited by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

University of North Carolina

Lilly competed as a student-athlete, playing for the university's North Carolina Tar Heels women's soccer team from 1989 to 1992. During her time there, she won the NCAA Women's Soccer Championship every year she played. She won the Hermann Trophy as a junior in 1991.<ref name="ST profile">Template:Cite web</ref> As a senior, she won the Honda Sports Award as the nations's top soccer player.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> To honor her time with the school, North Carolina retired her #15 jersey in 1994.

Club career

File:Lilly-2010-stl.jpg
Lilly with the Boston Breakers in 2010

Lilly began her career with Tyresö FF of Sweden in 1994. She spent one season with the club before returning to the United States. On August 20, 1995, Lilly joined Washington Warthogs of the now-defunct Continental Indoor Soccer League. She was the only woman in the all-male professional indoor league, following in the footsteps of Collette Cunningham and Shannon Presley who had played in the league sparingly in 1994.

Lilly joined W-League side Delaware Genies in 1998. With the club, she appeared in four games, scoring five goals and providing two assists.

February 2001 saw the formation of the world's first women's professional soccer league in which all the players were paid. Women's United Soccer Association (WUSA) had its inaugural season in 2001. Lilly was the team captain and a founding member of the Boston Breakers. In her first season with the team, she appeared in all twenty-one matches and played every minute of the season. She led the league in assists with eleven and added three goals. For her performance, she was named First Team All-WUSA. In 2002, she started in a further nineteen games. She increased her point total for the season, scoring eight goals and assisting on thirteen others. She was again named First Team All-WUSA and was a starter on the WUSA North All-Star Team. In 2003 Lilly started all nineteen games in which she played, chipping in three goals and four assists and again being named to First Team All-WUSA, the only player in the history of the league to do so. Following the 2003 season, the WUSA ceased operations.

Following the termination of the league, Lilly followed former Boston Breakers head coach Pia Sundhage to Sweden to play for Damallsvenskan club KIF Örebro DFF in 2005. There she was joined by fellow USWNT teammate Christie Welsh as well as USWNT and Boston Breakers teammate Kate Markgraf.

In late-2006 and early-2007, the formation of a new women's league took shape under the name of Women's Professional Soccer (WPS). On September 16, 2008, Lilly was allocated to Boston Breakers along with USWNT teammates Angela Hucles and Heather Mitts. The inaugural 2009 Women's Professional Soccer season saw Lilly appear in all twenty games (playing every minute) and score three goals with three assists.

International career

File:Lilly356.jpg
Lilly (left) with Mia Hamm in St. Louis, 1998

Lilly made her debut for the United States national team in 1987, when she was still attending high school. During her international career, she surpassed the previous women's world record of 151 caps, held by Norway's Heidi Støre, on May 21, 1998.<ref name="ST profile" /> On January 30, 1999, she surpassed what was then the men's record of 164 caps, held by Adnan Al-Talyani of the United Arab Emirates.

Lilly has participated in the 1991, 1995, 1999, 2003, and 2007 editions of the FIFA Women's World Cup. She is a two-time World Cup champion, winning in 1991 and 1999; during extra time of the '99 Final against China, Lilly, standing on the goal line, blocked a Chinese shot which had passed goalkeeper Briana Scurry<ref>Archived at GhostarchiveTemplate:Cbignore and the Wayback MachineTemplate:Cbignore: Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref> - since the tournament took place with the golden goal rule in effect, the game would have been over if China had scored - and in the ensuing shootout, she scored the goal which would give the US the lead. When she played against North Korea on September 11, 2007, in the 2007 FIFA Women's World Cup, she became the first woman (and only the third player overall) to participate in five different World Cup Finals; by scoring a goal against England on September 22, 2007, she became the oldest woman to score in the World Cup.

Lilly has also competed in the 1996, 2000, and 2004 editions of the Olympic Games. She won a gold medal in 1996 and 2004, and a silver medal in 2000. She missed the 2008 Summer Olympics due to the birth of her child.

Unlike several of her longtime teammates (among them Joy Fawcett, Julie Foudy, and Mia Hamm), she did not retire after the team's "farewell tour" which finished on December 8, 2004.

On January 18, 2006, Lilly made her 300th international appearance in a game against Norway. In the same match, she equaled Michelle Akers for second place on the team's all-time goal scoring list with 105. Lilly was named as a finalist for the 2006 FIFA Women's World Player of the Year. She finished second in the voting to Brazil's Marta.

After the birth of her daughter, Lilly returned to the national team in December 2008. Her last match for the national team, representing her record 354th cap, was a World Cup qualifying loss to Mexico (1–2) on November 5, 2010, in which she played for six minutes as a substitute.

Coaching career

Lilly has been an assistant coach for the Boston Breakers since 2012.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Personal life

Lilly grew up in Wilton, Connecticut, and lives in Medfield, Massachusetts. She is married to Brookline firefighter David Heavey, a former hockey player and golfer at the University of Connecticut. Lilly gave birth to her first daughter Sidney Marie Heavey on her birthday, July 22, 2008, and her second daughter Jordan Mary Heavey on September 2, 2011.

She appeared in the HBO documentary Dare to Dream: The Story of the U.S. Women's Soccer Team. Lilly helps run a soccer camp with Mia Hamm and Tisha Venturini-Hoch.<ref>Wahl, Grant, "Seeing Stars", Sports Illustrated, July 4, 2011, p. 101.</ref>

Career statistics

Club

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
Club Season League
Division Apps Goals
Tyresö FF 1994
Washington Warthogs 1995 CISL
Delaware Genies 1998 W-League 4 5
Boston Breakers 2001 WUSA 21 3
2002 WUSA 19 8
2003 WUSA 19 3
KIF Örebro DFF 2005
Boston Breakers 2009 WPS 4 4
Career total

Matches and goals scored at World Cup and Olympic tournaments

Kristine Lilly competed in five FIFA Women's World Cup: China 1991, Sweden 1995, USA 1999, USA 2003 and China 2007; and three Olympics: Atlanta 1996, Sydney 2000, and Athens 2004; altogether played in 46 matches and scored 12 goals at those eight global tournaments.<ref name=fifaps_kl>Template:Cite web</ref> With her USA teams, in eight world cup and olympic tournaments, Lilly had 39 wins, 3 losses, and 4 draws; finished first place with her teams 4 times, second place once and third place 3 times.

Template:Football international goals keys

Goal Match Date Location Opponent Lineup Min Score Result Competition
colspan=10 align=center Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament | China 1991 FIFA Women's World Cup
1 1991-11-17<ref group=m name=mat001>Template:Cite web</ref> Panyu Template:Fbw Template:Subout Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Group stage
2 1991-11-19<ref group=m name=mat002>Template:Cite web</ref> Panyu Template:Fbw Template:Subout Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Group stage
3 1991-11-21<ref group=m name=mat003>Template:Cite web</ref> Foshan Template:Fbw Template:Subout Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Group stage
4 1991-11-24<ref group=m name=mat004>Template:Cite web</ref> Foshan Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Quarter-final
5 1991-11-27<ref group=m name=mat005>Template:Cite web</ref> Guangzhou Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Semifinal
6 1991-11-30<ref group=m name=mat006>Template:Cite web</ref> Guangzhou Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Final
colspan=10 align=center Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament | Sweden 1995 FIFA Women's World Cup
7 1995-06-06<ref group=m name=mat007>Template:Cite web</ref> Gävle Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Group stage
1 8 1995-06-08<ref group=m name=mat008>Template:Cite web</ref> Gävle Template:Fbw Start 9 1–0 Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Group stage
9 1995-06-10<ref group=m name=mat009>Template:Cite web</ref> Helsingborg Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Group stage
2 10 1995-06-13<ref group=m name=mat010>Template:Cite web</ref> Gävle Template:Fbw Template:Subout 8 1–0 Template:Sortfbs rowspan=2 Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Quarter-final
3 42 2–0
11 1995-06-15<ref group=m name=mat011>Template:Cite web</ref> Västerås Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Semifinal
12 1995-06-17<ref group=m name=mat012>Template:Cite web</ref> Gävle Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Third place match
colspan=10 align=center Template:Fb bg olympic tournament | Atlanta 1996 Olympic Women's Football Tournament
13 1996-07-21<ref group=m name=mat013>Template:Cite web</ref> Orlando Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg olympic tournament|Group stage
14 1996-07-23<ref group=m name=mat014>Template:Cite web</ref> Orlando Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg olympic tournament|Group stage
15 1996-07-25<ref group=m name=mat015>Template:Cite web</ref> Miami Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg olympic tournament|Group stage
16 1996-07-28<ref group=m name=mat016>Template:Cite web</ref> Athens Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg olympic tournament|Semifinal
17 1996-08-01<ref group=m name=mat017>Template:Cite web</ref> Athens Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg olympic tournament|Gold medal match
colspan=10 align=center Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament | USA 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup
4 18 1999-06-19<ref group=m name=mat018>Template:Cite web</ref> E Rutherford Template:Fbw Start 89 3–0 Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Group stage
5 19 1999-06-24<ref group=m name=mat019>Template:Cite web</ref> Chicago Template:Fbw Start 32 4–1 Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Group stage
20 1999-06-27<ref group=m name=mat020>Template:Cite web</ref> Boston Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Group stage
21 1999-07-01<ref group=m name=mat021>Template:Cite web</ref> Washington Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Quarter-final
22 1999-07-04<ref group=m name=mat022>Template:Cite web</ref> San Francisco Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Semifinal
23 1999-07-10<ref group=m name=mat023>Template:Cite web</ref> Los Angeles Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Final
colspan=10 align=center Template:Fb bg olympic tournament | Sydney 2000 Olympic Women's Football Tournament
24 2000-09-14<ref group=m name=mat024>Template:Cite web</ref> Melbourne Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg olympic tournament|Group stage
25 2000-09-17<ref group=m name=mat025>Template:Cite web</ref> Melbourne Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg olympic tournament|Group stage
6 26 2000-09-20<ref group=m name=mat026>Template:Cite web</ref> Melbourne Template:Fbw Template:Subout 35 2–0 Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg olympic tournament|Group stage
27 2000-09-24<ref group=m name=mat027>Template:Cite web</ref> Canberra Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg olympic tournament|Semifinal
28 2000-09-28<ref group=m name=mat028>Template:Cite web</ref> Sydney Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg olympic tournament|Gold medal match
colspan=10 Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament |{{safesubst:#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=|preview=Page using Template:Center with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | style }}
7 29 2003-09-21<ref group=m name=mat029>Template:Cite web</ref> Washington Template:Fbw Start 27 1–0 Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Group stage
30 2003-09-25<ref group=m name=mat030>Template:Cite web</ref> Philadelphia Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Group stage
31 2003-09-28<ref group=m name=mat031>Template:Cite web</ref> Columbus Template:Fbw Template:Subout Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Group stage
32 2003-10-01<ref group=m name=mat032>Template:Cite web</ref> Foxborough Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Quarter-final
33 2003-10-05<ref group=m name=mat033>Template:Cite web</ref> Portland Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Semifinal
8 34 2003-10-11<ref group=m name=mat034>Template:Cite web</ref> Carson Template:Fbw Start 22 1–0 Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Third place match
colspan=10 align=center Template:Fb bg olympic tournament | Athens 2004 Olympic Women's Football Tournament
35 2004-08-11<ref group=m name=mat035>Template:Cite web</ref> Heraklion Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg olympic tournament|Group stage
36 2004-08-14<ref group=m name=mat036>Template:Cite web</ref> Thessaloniki Template:Fbw Template:Subout Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg olympic tournament|Group stage
9 37 2004-08-17<ref group=m name=mat037>Template:Cite web</ref> Thessaloniki Template:Fbw Start 19 1–0 Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg olympic tournament|Group stage
10 38 2004-08-20<ref group=m name=mat038>Template:Cite web</ref> Thessaloniki Template:Fbw Start 43 1–0 Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg olympic tournament|Quarter-final
11 39 2004-08-23<ref group=m name=mat039>Template:Cite web</ref> Heraklion Template:Fbw Start 33 1–0 Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg olympic tournament|Semifinal
40 2004-08-26<ref group=m name=mat040>Template:Cite web</ref> Piraeus Template:Fbw Start Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg olympic tournament|Gold medal match
colspan=10 align=center Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament | China 2007 FIFA Women's World Cup
41 2007-09-11<ref group=m name=mat041>Template:Cite web</ref> Chengdu Template:Fbw Start; (c) Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Group stage
42 2007-09-14<ref group=m name=mat042>Template:Cite web</ref> Chengdu Template:Fbw Start; (c) Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Group stage
43 2007-09-18<ref group=m name=mat043>Template:Cite web</ref> Shanghai Template:Fbw Template:Subout; (c) Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Group stage
12 44 2007-09-22<ref group=m name=mat044>Template:Cite web</ref> Tianjin Template:Fbw Start; (c) 60 3–0 Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Quarter-final
45 2007-09-27<ref group=m name=mat045>Template:Cite web</ref> Hangzhou Template:Fbw Start; (c) Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Semifinal
46 2007-09-30<ref group=m name=mat046>Template:Cite web</ref> Shanghai Template:Fbw Template:Subout; (c) Template:Sortfbs Template:Fb bg world cup final tournament|Third place match

International goals

No. Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
1. 13 August 1987 Shenyang, China Template:Fbw 1–? 1–1 Friendly
2. 27 July 1990 Winnipeg, Canada Template:Fbw 1–? 4–1
3. 5 April 1991 Varna, Bulgaria Template:Fbw 1–0 2–0
4. 7 April 1991 Template:Fbw 1–0 5–0
5. 25 April 1991 Port-au-Prince, Haiti Template:Fbw ?–0 10–0 1991 CONCACAF Women's Championship
6. 28 April 1991 Template:Fbw 3–0 5–0
7. 28 May 1991 Vianen, Netherlands Template:Fbw ?–? 3–4 Friendly
8. 1 September 1991 Medford, United States Template:Fbw 1–? 1–2
9. 12 October 1991 Fairfax, United States Template:Fbw 1–0 2–0
10. 10 April 1993 Atlanta, United States Template:Fbw 1–0 3–0
11. 3–0
12. 12 June 1993 Cincinnati, United States Template:Fbw 3–0 7–0
13. 15 June 1993 Mansfield, United States Template:Fbw ?–0 5–0
14. 7 July 1993 Hamilton, Canada Template:Fbw ?–0 6–0
15. 12 July 1993 Template:Fbw 2–? 3–1
16. 14 July 1993 Template:Fbw 2–0 2–0
17. 4 August 1993 New Hyde Park, United States Template:Fbw ?–0 3–0 1993 CONCACAF Women's Invitational Tournament
18. 6 August 1993 Template:Fbw ?–0 9–0
19. 16 March 1994 Silves, Portugal Template:Fbw 2–0 5–0 1994 Algarve Cup
20. 10 April 1994 Scarborough, Trinidad and Tobago Template:Fbw 3–? 3–1 Friendly
21. 13 August 1994 Montreal, Canada Template:Fbw ?–0 9–0 1994 CONCACAF Women's Championship
22. ?–0
23. 17 August 1994 Template:Fbw ?–? 11–1
24. 19 August 1994 Template:Fbw ?–0 10–0
25. ?–0
26. 24 February 1995 Orlando, United States Template:Fbw ?–0 7–0 Friendly
27. 14 March 1995 Faro, Portugal Template:Fbw 1–0 2–0 1995 Algarve Cup
28. 15 April 1995 Strasbourg, France Template:Fbw 2–0 3–0 Friendly
29. 30 April 1995 Davidson, United States Template:Fbw 1–0 6–0
30. 19 May 1995 Dallas, United States Template:Fbw 6–? 9–1
31. 7–?
32. 8 June 1995 Gävle, Sweden Template:Fbw 1–0 2–0 1995 FIFA Women's World Cup
33. 13 June 1995 Template:Fbw 1–0 4–0
34. 2–0
35. 3 August 1995 Piscataway, United States Template:Fbw ?–? 4–2 1995 Women's U.S. Cup
36. 10 February 1996 Orlando, United States Template:Fbw 1–? 2–1 Friendly
37. 16 March 1996 Davidson, United States Template:Fbw 2–0 2–0
38. 20 April 1996 Fullerton, United States Template:Fbw 3–0 6–0
39. 4–0
40. 26 April 1996 St. Louis, United States Template:Fbw 2–0 4–1
41. 16 May 1996 Horsham, United States Template:Fbw 2–0 4–0 1996 Women's U.S. Cup
42. 3–0
43. 4 July 1996 Pensacola, United States Template:Fbw 2–? 2–1 Friendly
44. 3 March 1997 Bathurst, Australia Template:Fbw 2–? 3–1
45. 24 April 1997 Greensboro, United States Template:Fbw 4–2 4–2
46. 4 May 1997 St. Charles, United States Template:Fbw 1–0 6–1
47. 11 May 1997 Portland, United States Template:Fbw 5–0 6–0
48. 5 June 1997 Ambler, United States Template:Fbw 7–0 9–1 1997 Women's U.S. Cup
49. 9 October 1997 Duisburg, Germany Template:Fbw 1–0 1–3 Friendly
50. 1 November 1997 Chattanooga, United States Template:Fbw 2–0 3–1
51. 17 March 1998 Loulé, Portugal Template:Fbw 3–? 4–1 1998 Algarve Cup
52. 21 March 1998 Quarteira, Portugal Template:Fbw 3–1 3–1
53. 26 April 1998 Fullerton, United States Template:Fbw 1–0 7–0 Friendly
54. 21 May 1998 Kobe, Japan Template:Fbw 1–0 2–0
55. 24 May 1998 Tokyo, Japan Template:Fbw 2–0 3–0
56. 12 September 1998 Foxborough, United States Template:Fbw 2–0 9–0 1998 Women's U.S. Cup
57. 5–0
58. 27 January 1999 Orlando, United States Template:Fbw 2–0 7–0 Friendly
59. 5–0
60. 6–0
61. 30 January 1999 Fort Lauderdale, United States Template:Fbw 1–0 6–0
62. 4–0
63. 18 March 1999 Albufeira, Portugal Template:Fbw 2–1 2–1 1999 Algarve Cup
64. 28 March 1999 Pasadena, United States Template:Fbw 2–0 3–0 Friendly
65. 3–0
66. 13 May 1999 Milwaukee, United States Template:Fbw 3–0 5–0
67. 22 May 1999 Orlando, United States Template:Fbw 2–0 3–0
68. 3 June 1999 Beaverton, United States Template:Fbw 3–0 4–0
69. 6 June 1999 Portland, United States Template:Fbw 3–2 4–2
70. 19 June 1999 East Rutherford, United States Template:Fbw 3–0 3–0 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup
71. 24 June 1999 Chicago, United States Template:Fbw 4–1 7–1
72. 4 September 1999 Foxboro, United States Template:Fbw 5–0 5–0 Friendly
73. 7 October 1999 Kansas City, United States Template:Fbw 4–0 6–0 1999 Women's U.S. Cup
74. 5–0
75. 10 October 1999 Louisville, United States Template:Fbw 2–2 4–2
76. 4–2
77. 6 February 2000 Fort Lauderdale, United States Template:Fbw 2–1 2–3 Friendly
78. 5 April 2000 Davidson, United States Template:Fbw 7–0 8–0
79. 5 May 2000 Portland, United States Template:Fbw 2–0 8–0 2000 Women's U.S. Cup
80. 20 August 2000 Kansas City, United States Template:Fbw 1–0 1–1 Friendly
81. 20 September 2000 Melbourne, Australia Template:Fbw 2–0 3–1 2000 Summer Olympics
82. 10 December 2000 Houston, United States Template:Fbw 1–0 3–2 Friendly
83. 12 January 2002 Charleston, United States Template:Fbw 2–0 7–0
84. 6 October 2002 Cary, United States Template:Fbw 1–0 4–0 2002 Women's U.S. Cup
85. 6 November 2002 Seattle, United States Template:Fbw 7–0 7–0 2002 CONCACAF Women's Gold Cup
86. 26 April 2003 Washington, D.C., United States Template:Fbw 2–1 6–1 Friendly
87. 21 September 2003 Template:Fbw 1–0 3–1 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup
88. 11 October 2003 Carson, United States Template:Fbw 1–0 3–1
89. 25 February 2004 San José, Costa Rica Template:Fbw 2–0 7–0 2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament
90. 3 March 2004 Template:Fbw 3–0 4–0
91. 17 August 2004 Thessaloniki, Greece Template:Fbw 1–0 1–1 2004 Summer Olympics
92. 20 August 2004 Template:Fbw 1–0 2–1
93. 23 August 2004 Heraklio, Greece Template:Fbw 1–0 2–1 Template:Aet
94. 29 September 2004 Pittsburgh, United States Template:Fbw 3–0 3–0 Friendly
95. 3 October 2004 Portland, United States Template:Fbw 4–0 5–0
96. 10 October 2004 Cincinnati, United States Template:Fbw 2–0 6–0
97. 13 March 2005 Vila Real de Santo António, Portugal Template:Fbw 1–0 4–0 2005 Algarve Cup
98. 4–0
99. 10 July 2005 Portland, United States Template:Fbw 2–0 7–0 Friendly
100. 23 October 2005 Charleston, United States Template:Fbw 1–0 3–0
101. 18 January 2006 Guangzhou, China Template:Fbw 1–0 3–1 2006 Four Nations Tournament
102. 22 January 2006 Template:Fbw 1–0 2–0
103. 2–0
104. 11 March 2006 Faro, Portugal Template:Fbw 4–0 5–0 2006 Algarve Cup
105. 13 March 2006 Template:Fbw 1–0 4–1
106. 15 July 2006 Blaine, United States Template:Fbw 3–2 3–2 Friendly
107. 1 October 2006 Carson, United States Template:Fbw 5–0 10–0
108. 29 October 2006 Gimhae, South Korea Template:Fbw 1–1 1–1 2006 Peace Queen Cup
109. 31 October 2006 Cheonan, South Korea Template:Fbw 1–0 2–0
110. 4 November 2006 Seoul, South Korea Template:Fbw 1–0 1–0
111. 26 November 2006 Carson, United States Template:Fbw 2–1 2–1 Template:Aet 2006 CONCACAF Women's Gold Cup
112. 7 March 2007 Faro, Portugal Template:Fbw 1–0 2–1 2007 Algarve Cup
113. 14 March 2007 Vila Real de Santo António, Portugal Template:Fbw 1–0 2–0
114. 14 April 2007 Foxboro, United States Template:Fbw 3–0 5–0 Friendly
115. 4–0
116. 12 May 2007 Frisco, United States Template:Fbw 4–1 6–2
117. 23 June 2007 East Rutherford, United States Template:Fbw 1–0 2–0
118. 28 July 2007 San Jose, United States Template:Fbw 3–0 4–1
119. 12 August 2007 Chicago, United States Template:Fbw 2–0 6–1
120. 25 August 2007 Carson, United States Template:Fbw 2–0 4–0
121. 22 September 2007 Tianjin, China Template:Fbw 3–0 3–0 2007 FIFA Women's World Cup
122. 13 October 2007 St. Louis, United States Template:Fbw 3–1 5–1 Friendly
123. 17 October 2007 Portland, United States Template:Fbw 1–0 4–0
124. 22 May 2010 Cleveland, United States Template:Fbw 3–0 4–0

Honors and awards

Year Team Championship/Medal/Award
1989 University of North Carolina NCAA National Champion
1990 University of North Carolina NCAA National Champion
1991 USA WNT FIFA World Cup Champion
1991 University of North Carolina NCAA National Champion
1992 University of North Carolina NCAA National Champion
1992 University of North Carolina Honda Sports Award<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
1995 USA WNT FIFA World Cup Bronze
1996 USA WNT Olympic Gold
1999 USA WNT FIFA World Cup Champion
2000 USA WNT Olympic Silver
2003 USA WNT FIFA World Cup Bronze
2004 USA WNT Olympic Gold
2007 USA WNT FIFA World Cup Bronze
2015 None Inducted into the National Soccer Hall of Fame

See also

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References

Template:Reflist

Match reports

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Further reading

  • Grainey, Timothy (2012), Beyond Bend It Like Beckham: The Global Phenomenon of Women's Soccer, University of Nebraska Press, Template:ISBN
  • Lisi, Clemente A. (2010), The U.S. Women's Soccer Team: An American Success Story, Scarecrow Press, Template:ISBN
  • Longman, Jere (2009), The Girls of Summer: The U.S. Women's Soccer Team and How it Changed the World, HarperCollins, Template:ISBN

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