The Bad Girl of Women’s Soccer

Written by admin on Saturday, August 22nd, 2009 in News.

Excellent girls wear , which is why won’t. Earlier this year, as the new ’s Professional league prepared to kick off its inaugural season, it unveiled the uniforms had designed for the league’s seven teams. Solo, who plays goalie for the St. Louis Athletica, wasn’t impressed. “They go and make this padded goalkeeper jersey and it’s hot —it just looks girly, it looks juvenile, it doesn’t look professional,” she told me one afternoon as we sat on a bench in an empty Harvard Stadium, where her team had just finished practicing for its match the next day against the Boston Breakers. “And so I said, ‘There’s no way in hell I’m wearing this.’” (more…)

Olympian Hope Solo returns to Richland

Written by admin on Friday, October 3rd, 2008 in News, pictures.

The first part of ’s name had more significance than the second Friday, as the native and Olympic gold medalist was swarmed by hundreds of young people she has inspired.

“As your name says, you provide hope for many,” said Todd Baddley, executive director of student services for School District, one of at least 500 people who turned out to welcome Solo at the Hampton Inn in .

In one of her first Tri-City public appearances since returning from the Beijing Olympics, she signed autographs, posed for and encouraged aspiring young players in the audience.

“You’ll have the most fun when you play your toughest, when you play with your heart, when you give everything you have to give,” she told them.

Solo spoke to a packed house in the hotel’s Columbia Pointe Room. The event started at 3 p.m., and she still was receiving fans three hours later. Mayor John Fox presented her with a certificate and a crystal plaque and surprised her with that the city had declared the day Day.

She also fielded questions for about 10 minutes, and the young people didn’t waste the chance to pick her brain about how to become as successful as she is and how to deal with stumbles along the way.

“Have I ever gotten kicked in the face with the ball?” Solo said, repeating one of the questions. “I reckon every goalkeeper has, so yes, I have.”

One 14-year-ancient girl questioned two questions and had excellent reason to, because she has a lot in common with Solo, including a first name. Hope Butler plays at Hermiston High School and has played goalie for several years. She brought her goalie jersey and joked that maybe she could trade with Solo.

“I just want to be like her,” Butler said.

Butler questioned Solo how she deals with frustration when she’s scored on and what she does when someone is driving the ball down the field to try to score on her. Butler said her own habit is to bounce on her knees and tap her fingers as the other team’s shooter approaches.

Solo said she gets very mad when she’s scored on, even when it’s a fantastic shot that’s tough to defend.

“You learn to channel that and turn that energy into something positive,” Solo said. “For me, I get more focused.”

She recalled in the Olympics, she surrendered two goals in the first two minutes of the first match, and her team lost to Norway, 2-0. She realized afterward she didn’t have time to feel sorry for herself because her team needed her.

In the gold medal match against Brazil, Solo made six saves and got the team into overtime before the U.S. won 1-0.

Friday’s homecoming was the latest step in a long journey for Solo, 27, who lives in Seattle.

She played for High School from 1996 to 1999 before playing for the University of Washington, where she set the school record of 18 shutouts.

She debuted for the U.S. national team in 2000, was drafted by the Philadelphia Charge in 2003, and later played in Sweden and France. Last month, she was drafted to play for the St. Louis franchise in the new ’s Professional league, which is to start play in April.

Solo acknowledged the controversy she found herself in a year ago, when she publicly second-guessed her coach’s choice to bench her in the semi-final match of the . The U.S. lost 4-0 to Brazil in that match, a year ago today.

“I reckon we all know sometimes I can lose focus, sometimes I could say things maybe I shouldn’t say — maybe I should say,” she said with a slight laugh. “But I really had right guidance here in this community.”

She said she’s still getting used to being a role model, but that the responsibility means a lot to her.

“And I really, really pray one day I can look back at you guys and cheer you on in the stands as you play for your universities or as you play for High or as you go on to hopefully play for the U.S. team,” she said, looking directly into the faces of the girls and boys in the audience.

Solo will sign autographs again from 10:30 to 11 a.m. today at the City Honest on the city hall campus at George Washington Way and Swift Boulevard. Here is picture gallery

Hope Solo Talks About World Cup

Written by admin on Friday, December 7th, 2007 in News.

Nearly three months after her fell apart, still is pained by the experience.

In her first public comments since a brutally frank TV interview in which she criticized her benching, Solo told The Associated Press she never saw it coming and wasn’t prepared for it.

“I had felt as though my childhood dream basically had been ripped away from me,” she said.

The starting goalkeeper for the U.S. team in China, Solo played well in the opening round and quarterfinals. But then coach Greg Ryan benched her for veteran Briana Scurry against Brazil, and the Americans were routed 4-0.

After the loss, Solo said: “It was the incorrect choice, and I reckon anyone that knows anything about the match knows that. There’s no doubt in my mind I would have made those saves. … You have to live in the present. And you can’t live by huge names. You can’t live in the past.”

Ryan dismissed Solo from the team. She wasn’t allowed on the bench for the third-place match, did not participate in the medal ceremony and flew home from China on her own.

Until Thursday, Solo had only spoken with close friends and family about her ordeal. As she prepares for a training camp in Carson, Calif., where she will mingle with many of the players, Solo spoke to the AP by phone.

“It is a small hard to relive that,” she said. “Mentally, I was full of all sorts of emotions. The was the only thing that kept me together after the death of my father (in June), kept me fighting and together and dedicated to the match.

“Moreso, the moment I realized we didn’t have the opportunity to win the gold medal, my world came tumbling down. I had nothing to immediately give back to my father. I was wound so tight emotionally, and the moment after the loss I broke.”

The worst part, Solo said, was her comments seemed directed at her teammates as well as at Ryan, who recently was replaced at coach by Pia Sundhage.

“Of course I know I have some friendships to rebuild and teammates to rebuild relationships with,” she said. “But there is nothing I can go back and do.

“Never did I intend to place down a teammate, and that is the thing that hurts the most. I always have respected and will respect Bri. And that is the thing that hurts me the most.”

Solo issued an apology through U.S. just before an exhibition tour against Mexico in October. She and Scurry were together during that series, along with most of the players.

“I have reached out to her, but beyond the Mexico series we have not really spoken, which is not unusual with my teammates, because we’re often not together for long (stretches),” Solo said.

“I have spoken to a handful of different teammates here and there at different levels. In the end, we are all professionals and have a common goal to qualify for the 2008 Olympics. I can only hope we place our differences aside because we have a job to do.

“It’s vital we respect each other on the field; we don’t have to be best friends off the field.”

The 25-year-ancient keeper from , Wash., chuckled at the irony of the Olympics, for which the Americans must qualify in April, being staged in China.

“China is going to bring back a lot of memories for me, no doubt,” she said. “But I’ve been through a lot of worse things in life.”

Particularly the death of her father, Jeffrey. Would getting that gold medal in the Olympics ease the pain from the fiasco?

“My father was even more excited about this than I was,” she said, her voice cracking. “Looking back, it is not just gold medals that I have to celebrate his life and give back to his passing. If I never see a gold medal in my life, I will be doing what I can to make my father proud.”



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