Abby Wambach
Aw
Professional Soccer Player
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Essentials
- Full name
- Abby Wambach
- Years active
- 1980–2019
- Position
- Forward
- Jersey number
- 20
- Nationality
- American
- Hometown
- Rochester, New York , U.S.
- College
- —
- Agent
- —
abby's story
In the 122nd minute of the 2011 Women's World Cup quarterfinal against Brazil, with the United States facing elimination, Megan Rapinoe delivered a cross from near the corner flag and Abby Wambach headed it into the net. The match went to penalties and the U.S. won. It is widely considered the greatest goal in U.S. soccer history, and it arrived at the moment the tournament was closest to ending for the team that had spent years defining what the sport looked like in America. That Wambach was the one who scored it is not a coincidence. She scored 184 international goals across her career, the all-time record across men's and women's soccer at the time of her retirement, more than any player in the history of the sport. She was the person you wanted on the end of a cross in the 122nd minute because she was the person who had been on the end of more crosses, in more consequential moments, than anyone who had ever played the game.
She grew up in Rochester, New York, the second youngest of seven children in a large Catholic family, and came to the University of Florida as a player whose physical presence and aerial ability were already exceptional. She was not the fastest player on the field and she did not need to be. She understood space and timing in the penalty area with a precision that made her dangerous from any delivery, at any point in a match, regardless of how long she had been on the field. The national team built its attacking identity around that quality for over a decade, and she delivered consistently enough that the record accumulated without anyone fully processing how far past every previous marker it had gone.
She retired in 2015 and subsequently spoke publicly and with unusual candor about her recovery from alcohol addiction, her identity, and her life after soccer, including in a memoir and in a marriage to author Glennon Doyle in 2017. The honesty she brought to that public accounting matched the directness she had always brought to the penalty area. She scored more international goals than anyone in the history of the sport, won a World Cup, and then spent the years after competing just as hard for something harder to quantify. Both careers are hers.
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Awards/Honors
Individual Awards
Media
1/6
reuters.com
Reuters revisits Wambach’s defining header
Reuters highlighted the Brazil equalizer as the play that defined Wambach’s legacy.
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