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Wednesday, September 27
Medal game marks end of era


SYDNEY, Australia -- A magnificent era for the U.S. women's soccer team is about to end, no matter what happens in the gold medal game.

As a group, Mia Hamm, Kristine Lilly, Julie Foudy, Carla Overbeck, Joy Fawcett and Brandi Chastain have defined and dominated their sport for a decade.

All but Overbeck, who was 20, joined the team as teen-agers in the 1980s and have since won championships, set records and rode a path to fame that will never be duplicated.

"No coach will ever coach the generation of players that these players have been," coach April Heinrichs said. "It's the equivalent of having Johan Cruyff, Franz Beckenbauer, George Best and Pele all on the same team, the same 10 years. No coach will ever have that again."

How fitting, too, that the Americans' opponent in Thursday's gold medal game is longtime nemesis Norway.

The only major title the U.S. team didn't win was the 1995 World Cup, when it lost to Norway in the semifinals and had to settle for third place. Only the Norwegians hold an edge over the Americans in head-to-head play, a slim 14-13-2.

When the Americans beat Norway 2-0 in the Olympic opener, it was one of the more decisive wins the team has managed in the series.

It was also a fine way to begin the ending of an era.

Only Overbeck, who wants to have another child and spend more time with her family, has announced that she will retire from international play after these Olympics, joining Michelle Akers' pre-Olympic retirement forced by injuries. But the next major tournament won't come along until the World Cup in 2003, when Chastain and Fawcett will be 35, Foudy and Lilly 32 and Hamm 31.

All seemed inclined to stay because of the launch next year of the new women's professional league, the WUSA, which will allow them to live more stable lives and not spend weeks on end at national training camps. But with a solid young, growing pool of talent in the United States, it's inevitable that many new faces will be in the national team lineup three years from now.

"Obviously April's got to make some decisions on how much she wants to change," Foudy said. "We've always had a good balance of young and old, and eventually we've got to start bleeding in the younger kids."

Barring an amazing prodigy, however, none will start as young as Hamm or Lilly, who were 15 and 16 respectively when they made their debuts against China on Aug. 3, 1987. There are no teen-agers on this Olympic team. Heinrichs said Lilly's 221 international appearances going into the gold medal game, a world-record for a man or woman, will never be topped because there'll be no need to rush someone along before she's ready.

"In the future of our game, these women won't have 13- and 15-year careers on the national team," Heinrichs said.

While success has been a constant for these women, recognition for it has not. No one back home paid attention when they won the 1991 World Cup in China.

"Starting in '95, we were saying that this is the best kept secret out there, market us and let the kids see us," Foudy said. "And then in '96 the Olympics was one of the coming out ceremonies, and in '99 we just took it to another level."

Having worked so hard to market the sport to make last year's World Cup succeed, these Olympics have been one for the players. All they've really had to do is show up and play. The publicity is already guaranteed, interviews or not.

"In '99 everything was like, `We've got to do it because we've got to sell tickets. We've got to do it because the sport needs it,' Now, we're doing it because we want to do it," Foudy said. "We're doing it because we laid the foundation, and now we want to reap the rewards of that.



 


   
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