USA: Player Profiles

USA won the Women's World Cup in 2019 after defeating the Netherlands 2-0 in the final. Credit: Bernadett Szabó/Reuters

FIFA WWC USA: Player Profiles

Pulse Sports Team 10:07 - 23.06.2023

Get to know every member of the USA squad participating at the Women's World Cup this summer.

Goalkeepers

Alyssa Naeher

Date of birth: April 20, 1988
Club: Chicago Red Stars

Naeher was the United States’ No 1 in 2019 and came through when needed, gracefully managing a heap of outside comparisons to her role in replacing former No 1 Hope Solo. Affectionately known by some teammates as “uncle” for her propensity to fix things, Naeher’s personality is private and quiet. 

Her club career is one of standing on her head despite bad defending in front of her. She was named 2014 NWSL goalkeeper of the year for making 106 saves, despite the now defunct Boston Breakers conceding a league-worst 53 goals. The Chicago Red Stars have struggled this year, too, ahead of the World Cup.

Casey Murphy

Date of birth: April 25, 1996
Club: North Carolina Courage

All signs point to Murphy as the future of the US in goal, at least in the eyes of the current coaching staff. Murphy earned significant caps at World Cup qualifying in 2022 in what was framed publicly as an open competition for the No 1 spot. 

At 185cm, Murphy is the team’s tallest goalkeeper and thus has the wingspan to stop shots others can’t get to. Her household is competitive: Murphy’s fiancé is professional track and field athlete Chris Mirabelli, who once won a gold medal in javelin at the Pan American Junior Championships.

Aubrey Kingsbury

Date of birth: November 20, 1991
Club: Washington Spirit

At 31, Kingsbury arrives late to the international scene. She has only one cap to her name at the time of writing, a 9-0 thrashing of Uzbekistan last year. Kingsbury spent years in reserve roles with struggling teams before getting her shot as the No 1 with the Washington Spirit. 

Her breakout came while on loan to Sydney FC, where she won a championship and a goalkeeper of the season award. Kingsbury arguably enters the World Cup as the most in-form of the three US goalkeepers despite clearly being third on the depth chart.

DEFENDERS

Naomi Girma

Date of birth: June 14, 2000
Club: San Diego Wave FC

Meet the United States’ two-way centre-back. Girma is as capable of playing a key pass as she is thwarting an opponent 1-v-1, which fills a critical role in the absence of 2019 World Cup winner Abby Dahlkemper. Girma was born in Northern California to parents who both immigrated from Ethiopia. 

She graduated from Stanford with a 3.92 GPA (and an NCAA title) before becoming the top pick in the 2022 NWSL Draft. She was an immediate starter for expansion side San Diego in a league historically unkind to rookies and won the Defender of the Year and Rookie of the Year awards while finishing as a finalist for league MVP.

Alana Cook

Date of birth: April 11, 1997
Club: OL Reign

Cook is one of several centre-backs who graduated from Stanford in the US. pool. “Lans,” as she is known to teammates, signed with Paris St-Germain out of college and was part of the 2021 team that won the league title for the first time, ending Lyon’s 14-year run. 

Cook’s transfer that summer to OL Reign was one of the five largest fees of the year in women’s football. She can occasionally be an asset on offensive set pieces, as she was when she scored in a Champions League semi-final against eventual champion Barcelona.

Crystal Dunn

Date of birth: July 3, 1992
Club: Portland Thorns

Dunn is a top central midfielder in the NWSL. She is also the United States’ best full-back. The positional debate has followed her throughout her career and has been reignited lately, in her return from maternity leave in late 2022. 

Dunn was stellar as the starting left-back at the 2019 World Cup. Her experience in more advanced roles makes her dangerous getting forward, and her work rate to track back is unmatched. She has been vocal about her desire to play higher up the field, but also her willingness to do what’s best for the team. Once again, that is playing at full-back.

Kelley O’Hara

Date of birth: August 4, 1988
Club: NJ/NY Gotham FC

A super-sub winger at the 2015 World Cup, a starting full-back at the 2019 edition: O’Hara has long owned the wide areas thanks to her pace and tenacious work rate. 

With the US trying to hold a late lead against Germany in the 2015 semi-final, then head coach Jill Ellis famously turned to her assistants and said, “We need a bitch: Get Kelley.” It was meant to be endearing toward a player never shy to lay out for a crunching tackle. Nine minutes after she entered the game, O’Hara scored an insurance goal and the US won, 2-0.

Sofia Huerta

Date of birth: December 14, 1992
Club: OL Reign

Huerta is the only player to ever play for Mexico against the US and for the US against Mexico, after completing a one-time switch of associations in 2017. “Playing for Mexico helped me realise I want to play for the US,” she said. Huerta was born in Boise, Idaho. 

Her father, an engineer for Hewlett-Packard in Guadalajara, applied for jobs at every company location in the US and moved the family to Boise with $500 in their pockets. Huerta started playing full-back full-time in late 2021 after years as an attacker. From right full-back, she plays more crosses into the penalty area than any other player in the NWSL by roughly double.

Emily Sonnett

Date of birth: November 25, 1993
Club: OL Reign

Enters the World Cup as a versatile defender who provides cover for the U.S. at center back or fullback. She also has not played either position consistently in months. Once a holding midfielder in college, Sonnett is now in that position for OL Reign in a double pivot after an offseason move to the Seattle club that already had a set back four. 

Sonnett is known as the team jokester who can always keep the mood light, and her personality shows on the field. Her exuberant reactions are responsible for some of the greatest memes in NWSL history. Among her best friends is club-and-country teammate Rose Lavelle.

Emily Fox

Date of birth: July 5, 1998
Club: North Carolina Courage

Fox is the full-back who plays like a No 10. Versatile enough to play on the right or the left, Fox is known for underlapping runs rather than simple overlaps. She likes to drift into high, central areas to add numbers to the midfield. 

She is also a capable finisher when in those positions. For as strong and as deep as the US player pool is, natural full-backs have long been lacking. Fox developed in the position through the youth national teams and is viewed by the coaching staff as the long-term solution there.

MIDFIELDERS

Julie Ertz

Date of birth: April 6, 1992
Club: Angel City FC

Even despite her recent 18-month absence, Ertz has been the single most defining player for the US for the past half-decade. She is a bruising, ball-winning defensive midfielder who in 2019 was among the best players in the world. Her all-consuming midfield presence unlocked all the other pieces for the Americans. She took a break following the Tokyo Olympics and gave birth to her first child in August 2022. 

In her absence, the US struggled to find solutions in midfield, eventually trying a double-pivot as tangible confirmation that it took two players to replace Ertz. She announced her surprising return in late March. Trained with Phoenix Rising’s boys’ academy before signing with Angel City in a race to be game-sharp again. “I don’t even want to go back and be the player that I was because I want to be better,” she said.

Lindsey Horan

Date of birth: May 26, 1994
Club: Olympique Lyonnais (loan from Portland Thorns FC)

Horan is known for her high football IQ and for her groundbreaking path to the pro game. In 2012, she gave up a full scholarship to the storied University of North Carolina team to sign a professional contract with Paris St-Germain right out of high school. 

She played in Paris for four years as a forward before transitioning to a midfield role upon her move to Portland Thorns. Sometimes called “The Great Horan,” she now wears the No 10 shirt for the US but is at her best as a box-to-box midfielder. Her loan to Lyon makes her the only player on the US roster not currently competing in the NWSL.

Rose Lavelle

Date of birth: April 14, 1995
Club: OL Reign

The breakout player (and Bronze Ball-winner) from the 2019 World Cup is now the locked-in No  10 for the United States, although injury severely limited her playing time in the lead-up to this World Cup. She is the most creative one-v-one player in the squad and was initially brought into the senior team in 2017 in response to the US’ failures to solve low blocks. 

Lavelle is obsessed with her bulldog, Wilma, who has her own Instagram account filled with costumes and resting bulldog face. Among Lavelle’s pranks and subtle humor is an annual tweet to roast her sister, Mary, who was once chased down the street by a dog. Each September, Lavelle tweets that “to this day it is still the funniest thing I have ever seen”.

Kristie Mewis

Date of birth: February 25, 1991
Club: NJ/NY Gotham FC

Older sister to Sam, who will miss this World Cup with a long-term knee injury, Kristie Mewis is the comeback story of the 2023 team. Mewis debuted for the senior US team in 2013 and looked like a star for the future. 

She went six years without a call-up as form ebbed and flowed (along with a torn ACL) before returning to the team in late 2020. When she scored off the bench against the Netherlands late that year, 2,722 days had passed since her last international goal, a team record. Mewis is in a long-term relationship with star Australia forward Sam Kerr, who plays for Chelsea.

Andi Sullivan

Date of birth: December 20, 1995
Club: Washington Spirit

Sullivan is the No 6 who likes to be a deep playmaker. She debuted for the US in 2016 but was limited by injuries at different times before becoming a regular starter in 2022. “Sunny,” as she is known, has been a leader on and off the field for the Washington Spirit, captaining the team through a traumatic 2021 season that saw an allegedly abusive coach, Richie Burke, fired and banned from the league for life, and an owner forced to sell the team for enabling the behaviour. 

Sullivan led the team’s public demand for the sale while shining on the field as the Spirit went on a long unbeaten run to win the 2021 NWSL Championship. Sullivan married fellow professional soccer player Drew Skundrich, who briefly played in the same home club stadium, for DC United.

Savannah DeMelo

Date of birth: March 26, 1998
Club: Racing Louisville FC

Only one player had previously been named to a World Cup squad without having any previous caps: Shannon Boxx in 2003. Twenty years later, DeMelo follows the same path as a midfielder who has been so good in league play that she’s too in-form to leave behind. 

As a rookie last year, DeMelo led the NWSL in fouls suffered and fouls committed, a sign of her influence on the game. She continues to score stunning goals, including from set pieces (a memorable one last year came on the infield of the Daytona International Speedway). Her ability to play any central midfield role – and to defend relentlessly in the high press – earned her this call-up.

Ashley Sanchez

Date of birth: March 16, 1999
Club: Washington Spirit

Sanchez is among the most audacious players the US has on the ball. As a rookie in 2020, she famously scorpion-kicked an in-flight corner kick to assist a goal. She is close friends with fellow young star Trinity Rodman, who is a teammate for club and country, and the chemistry is clear on the field as the two combine for effective attacks. 

Sanchez has been set for success for a long time. In 2016, she captained the US Under-17 World Cup team and then played for the US’ Under-20 World Cup team a few months later, becoming the first player in program history to play in multiple World Cups in the same year.

FORWARDS

Alex Morgan

Date of birth: July 2, 1989
Club: San Diego Wave FC

Morgan’s celebrity dwarfs that of her peers, something she has leveraged in off-field fights for equal pay and higher standards in the NWSL. A regular with the team since her breakout 2011 World Cup, Morgan earned her recall in 2022 after several veterans were phased out in a total squad rebuild. Morgan, now mum to three-year-old girl Charlie, responded with her best club season to date, winning the NWSL Golden Boot. 

She’s a pure No 9, known for scoring big goals (121 in 206 caps to date). Her reputation precedes her as a forward who simply runs in behind, however. For years, she has done the dirty work as a check-down forward holding up play and drawing fouls to set up dangerous set pieces, a thankless task she mastered particularly well in the 2019 round of 16 game against Spain.

Sophia Smith

Date of birth: August 10, 2000
Club: Portland Thorns FC

The 2022 NWSL MVP is a threat from multiple positions on the forward line. She plays as a No. 9 for Portland and as a winger for the United States. 

She is the rare type of player who you might describe as faster with the ball, often dribbling her way out of 1-v-2 scenarios by thinking and acting faster than her defender. Smith is a dominant goal-scorer, but she also sets up teammates with regular assists. Her goals added (G+) metric (per American Soccer Analysis) was off the charts in 2022.

Alyssa Thompson

Date of birth: November 7, 2004
Club: Angel City FC

A year ago, Thompson was one for the future. Then she debuted for the U.S. against England at a sold-out Wembley Stadium, at age 17, decided to skip college and became the No. 1 pick in the 2023 NWSL Draft to Angel City FC, her hometown pro club.

Now she’s headed to her first World Cup and might be the like-for-like replacement for the injured Mallory Swanson. Thompson’s profile of game-changing dribbling ability and accurate shooting is a reminder of Swanson, once a teenage star herself. Thompson only just finished high school, shuttling between Angel City practices and English class on any given weekday.

Trinity Rodman

Date of birth: May 20, 2002
Club: Washington Spirit

There’s a reason Rodman was the first player in the NWSL to sign a million-dollar cumulative contract. She’s an electric forward capable of changing the game in wide areas and while cutting inside. She was an important piece of the Washington Spirit winning a championship in 2021, when she turned pro as an 18-year-old. 

COVID-19 canceled what would have been her freshman season at Washington State, where her brother played basketball, and Rodman decided to enter the draft. Many recognize her last name for her father, NBA Hall of Famer Dennis Rodman, but “Trin” calls her mum her superhero.

Lynn Williams

Date of birth: May 21, 1993
Club: NJ/NY Gotham FC

Lynn Williams is a do-it-all forward. She ranks among the historical leaders in goals and assists in the NWSL. She is also known for her superior defending ability. It’s an odd trait to point out for a forward, but an important one that Vlatko Andonovski has long valued in the U.S.’ high-pressing system that demands defensive responsibility from forwards. 

In that sense, there might not be a better two-way, all-around forward. She’ll feel at home in Australia, having played there several times on loan. Her fiancé, Marley Biyendolo, played professional basketball in Australia and won a season of the reality show, “Big Brother: Australia.”

Megan Rapinoe

Date of birth: July 5, 1985
Club: OL Reign

“Pinoe” is back for fourth World Cup after winning the Golden Ball in 2019. She carried the U.S. team through the tournament while trading barbs with then President Donald Trump during the tournament. From grabbing a field mic to sing “Born in the USA” at the 2011 World Cup, to the iconic pose celebration in 2019 and moments in between when she said would “talk [her] sh*t,” Rapinoe is an icon of the sport. 

She struggled through injuries and the “hamster wheel” of pro soccer in recent years, so much so that retirement thoughts crossed her mind. Her role is reduced significantly from what it was four years ago, but she’s at peace with being a super-sub and a veteran leader for a young roster if it means winning a third straight World Cup.

Written by Jeff Kassouf for the Guardian