by Abby Wambach
DEDICATION
Dear Abby,
Before there was soccer, championships, applause, jeers, heartbreak, shame: there you were, 4 years old.
Today I want to hold you and promise you this:
Don’t try to earn your worthiness. It’s your birthright.
Fear not failure. There is no such thing.
You will know real love. The journey will be long,
but you’ll find your way home.
You are so brave, little one. I’m proud of you.
Love, Abby
EPIGRAPH
“There is no greater agony than bearing
an untold story inside you.”
—Zora Neale Hurston, Dust Tracks on a Road
CONTENTS
Dedication
Epigraph
1 Fraud
2 Tomboy
3 Rebel
4 Teammate
5 Lesbian
6 Rookie
7 Manic
8 Depressive
9 Captain
10 Leader
11 Apprentice
12 Head Case
13 G.O.A.T.
14 Romantic
15 Hero
16 Wife
17 Gambler
18 Champion
19 Advocate
20 Control Freak
21 Addict
22 Failure
23 Human
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Photo Section
About the Author
Credits
Copyright
About the Publisher
1
FRAUD
I have scored more professional soccer goals than anyone in the history of the game, 184 to be exact, but I never once witnessed the ball hit the net. Although my eyes were open and aimed in the right direction, as soon as leather met rope the picture went black—not a slow fade, but a swift guillotine chop that separated the scene from my ability to see it.
My mind celebrated while my vision, blinded from adrenaline, lagged a beat behind, and by the time the two equalized there was a party on the field: high fives and hell yeahs, upraised arms and pumping legs and bouncing ponytails. I thrived on these brief blackouts, these zaps of instant amnesia. For thirty years scoring goals was my currency, the one skill I could barter for security and acceptance and love. Rarely did my frenetic brain pause long enough to consider what might come next, and how the shape of my life would look without soccer to fill it up.
Now it’s November 2015, two weeks after I announced my retirement, and my life is in no shape at all. President Obama recently called me and my teammates “badass” and I feel entirely unworthy of the term. I either sleep for 12-hour stretches or not at all, roaming the hallways of my hotel or impulse shopping online. The only time I break a sweat is when I hustle to the minibar. I am at my heaviest weight, my hibernation weight. I am cultivating Olympic-caliber love handles. ABBY WAMBACH HAS A SERIOUS BAKED GOODS ADDICTION, reports espn.com, and it’s a charge I can’t deny. Room service delivers at least one basket of muffins per day. In an effort to carb-shame myself, I Instagram every one that touches my lips, accompanied by self-flagellating hashtags: #cantstop. #socialpressure. #onedayatatime.
It doesn’t work. I remain unashamed. The muffins keep coming. I study old pictures of myself—American flag draped over sculpted arms, face tipped up to the cheering crowd—and marvel not only at my physique but at my expression; I look much happier than I was.
There’s a good chance that last night’s mixed drinks amounted to a half bottle of vodka, chased by red wine and garnished with some Ambien. Five months ago, at the World Cup final, my wife Sarah and I made international news with a celebration kiss, and now she isn’t speaking to me. We’d renovated a beautiful, sprawling house tucked in the hills outside of Portland, Oregon, and I can’t even consider it home. I’m thirty-five years old and had planned on being pregnant by now. My body feels like a foreign object and I am desperate to escape my own mind. My two prime dueling emotions are misery and terror. If my life were currently on the roster, I would force it to do suicide runs up and down the field. I would make my life ride the bench. I might even cut it from the team.
I argue with myself: You’ve been here before. You’ve had your heart broken. You’ve been depressed. You’ve been afraid. You’ve faced change. And the unspoken response comes: This time is different. This time there’s permanence. This time you don’t have soccer waiting for you, and you’ll never have soccer again.
I have relinquished soccer, but it has not relinquished me. I am still an ambassador of the sport, called upon to extol its virtues and translate its language. Today I’m scheduled to speak at a fundraiser for children’s programs. I am expected to be fun and upbeat and inspirational, qualities that, once upon a time, came naturally to me. When the driver picks me up I realize I don’t even know where I am: it could be Milwaukee or Nashville or Houston. I stare out the window, watching the streetscape blur past, and think, These are kids; I don’t want to lie.
I am a terrible liar.
The field house is dimly lit. A single spotlight aims its beam at my head as if to illuminate the mess within. This moment is the opposite of instant amnesia, that thrilling shot of adrenaline that temporarily blinds me; this is anti-adrenaline, and I can see the kids all too clearly—hundreds of sweet, earnest faces and compact bodies squirming in anticipation. They are lined up in neat rows, looking like shots I’m bound to miss. The host introduces me with words that seem to apply to someone else: two-time Olympic gold medalist; FIFA World Player of the Year; winner of the Women’s World Cup; record breaker; leader; legend.
I don’t memorize speeches or even write them out, much to my mother’s perennial dismay, but I have a rough chronology at the ready, a tour through my childhood and club career and time on the national team, a quick dip into challenges and triumphs, a hint at my future. But the kids don’t want to hear a detailed exposition of my résumé. They want to know how they can be just like me when they grow up.
“You need to make a plan,” I tell them. “You need to create your life.”
Beneath these words a commentary begins scrolling through my brain, silent subtitles that negate everything I say aloud.
You can’t even do that for yourself.
“You have every opportunity to do what you want in life. The whole world is open to you if you are brave enough to explore it.”
You are barely brave enough to leave your hotel room.
“You have to be confident in your ability to do the right things, make the right choices.”
You are incapable of living your own words. It’s only a matter of time before you’re exposed as the phony you are.
“Believe in yourself and you can change the world!”
They love me. I fold myself in half to give them high fives. They want to know they’ll still have access to me, that my absence from the field doesn’t mean I’ll disappear altogether. I assure them, this time with conviction, that I am not going anywhere.
Today, my life still isn’t what I’d once imagined, but I’m starting to appreciate the view. Soon after that event, I went for a run—just me gunning it uphill, feet batting against the road, fingers slicing the air, checking the data on my watch to ensure maximum effort, a twenty-year habit I’ll never break. I considered it a great personal triumph when I posted a photo of a pristine, intact muffin with the hashtag: #enough isenough. Out of necessity, I took an extended break from the vodka. My body became familiar again and I waded, tentatively, back into my mind. For the first time in years it felt still and calm, and it whispered something I had never heard it say: I can make an impact off the field.
I let myself start to believe it.
In thes
e pages I will share plenty of tales from the field—ones I have never told before—but this is not, at its core, a book about soccer. Because no matter who you are or what you’ve done with your life, you recognize the feeling I’ve described, that private, flailing terror that makes you wonder if you’re lost for good. You have, at some point, been flattened and immobile and forced to find a way to reanimate yourself. You’ve found yourself in the midst of transition, working up the nerve to release one rung and swing to the next, hoping to find some magic in the middle. You have been treated unfairly and unequally. You have been labeled, placed into ill-fitting boxes and told by others what you are and how to be. You have even labeled yourself, blunting your potential with your own words.
Here are just a few of my labels: tomboy, dyke, lesbian, butch, bitch, coward, failure, control freak, rebel, fraud. And a few more, on the flip side: phenom, inspiration, captain, champion, advocate. At a young age I learned that you own labels by defying them, and defy them by owning them. I know that the final word on me will be one that I choose.
Seventy-seven of those unseen soccer goals came courtesy of my head, and I am often asked to explain the technique: how my body knew where to be and how high to leap, how I sensed and facilitated the connection with the ball. For me, soccer was, and is, an intricate, chaotic dance, one that demands the repetition and mastery of its steps. In every game, in every play, my chance of scoring was directly proportionate to my recollection of previous goals. From past experience, I could predict the trajectory of the ball and position my head to meet it, finding the sweet spot just before everything went dark.
Soccer has taught me many lessons, but the greatest one is this: sometimes the only way to move forward is by first looking back.
2
TOMBOY
I am five years old, my legs pinwheeling across a soccer field, guiding the ball with my tiny cleats. My mouth is dry from catching the wind. I have only played the game a few times, but it already feels familiar, a task my body knows how to execute without much effort or direction, as though I’d been moving this way since the womb. The ball seems to be magnetically attached to my feet as I push past and through my opponents, looking for my mother in the stands, watching her watch me. When I am on the field I am her sole focus; I imagine myself as something so shiny and special she’s unable to look away.
Afterward she hugs me and tells me she’s proud—of my effort, my ability, my dedication. Silently I replay her words and will her to repeat them. Then she hesitates, curls her hands over my shoulders, and lowers herself to my level.
“Abby,” she says, “you scored a lot of goals today. Don’t you think it’s important that your teammates become part of it?”
I look up at her, confused, and ask, “Isn’t the whole point to score goals?”
She thinks on that for a moment and admits, “It is.”
“Well, I am the best one to do that. So if that’s the whole point, I don’t see the problem.”
She laughs, trapped by my innocent logic, and I’m not able to articulate my next thought: If you weren’t there to witness it, I wouldn’t care about scoring at all.
My six siblings and I are raised on competition. Tales of diligence and fortitude and success are passed down like cherished heirlooms. We hear about my great-grandfather, who bought a wooden stand, piled it high with colorful pyramids of fruit, and waved down each wagon passing through upstate New York. My grandfather improved upon the idea, trading in the wooden stand for a building and twenty-two acres of land, branding the business Wambach Farms. When he died he left everything to his only child, my father, who, upon his high school graduation, began working at the store seven days a week and has barely stopped since.
My father pauses long enough for dinner, coming home at 6 P.M. sharp before heading straight back to the store. His nightly presence at the table is one of the official family rules, a list curated and lengthened by my mother over the years. Another rule is the mandatory head count, instituted after my brother Pat was accidentally left home alone, Macaulay Culkin style, during an outing to a local restaurant.
Even manners are a contest. It is widely acknowledged that the Wambach kids are the nicest and best behaved in all of Pittsford, a conservative, suburban community just outside of Rochester. Pittsford is heavily Catholic and affluent, and we not only adhere to but improve on its unspoken code. It is mandated that we will be unfailingly polite to neighbors, strangers, and elders: we will send handwritten thank-you notes; we will hold open doors; we will not mouth off or cuss. We will attend Mass at St. Louis every Sunday, dressed in our finest, and sit erect in the front pew. “That priest up there?” my mom whispers. “He’s watching your every move. God is watching, too, so no monkey business.” We will behave when my parents go on their annual vacation to Florida, leaving us with our grandparents, occasionally for months at a time since my dad’s work was seasonal. We will listen. We will obey.
We will understand and acknowledge how blessed we are, and be exposed to those less fortunate. Every year, my parents enroll in the Fresh Air program, inviting city kids to stay with us for the summer. I look forward to these visits, eager for a glimpse of anything and anyone outside of my daily life. A boy named Manny is a repeat guest and I am obsessed with his hair, circling my hand atop his head as we sit and watch TV. When my mother bathes him he splashes and flails, protesting that she’s trying to turn him white. On some level, I sense that I am different, too—a difference that stretches beyond my usual abilities on the soccer field. I know it will take time to understand how and why.
My mother’s most cherished rule: there will be order and calm at the dinner table. Designated family time is sacrosanct. We are to share something about our day, one child at a time. My mother enforces this rule—and every rule—with what we all call “The Look”: eyebrows pressed into a V, lips flattened into a line. The Look renders her invincible, a tyrant in Talbots and a conversion van. Being on the receiving end of it is punishment enough.
She turns her face toward me, the equivalent of being handed the conch in Lord of the Flies. I feel the glorious weight of everyone’s attention, and I look at them one by one. My mother, who named me “Mary Abigail” after the Virgin Mary, and who has been dressing me in ruffles and bows since the day I was born. My father, who’d been a gifted athlete himself, wrestling and running track and playing football. My four brothers, who—at my request—take me to the neighborhood cul-de-sac, swaddle me in goalie pads, and crush slap shots at me until sundown. Soon, they will all dutifully begin working at the family store. My sister Laura: creative, free spirited, musically gifted. The oldest sibling, my sister Beth: athletic, brilliant, on her way to becoming an Ivy League–educated doctor. She’s my second mother, always willing to tend to me when the real one runs out of time. After she leaves for college I become so sullen and withdrawn that my parents take me to a psychiatrist. “Being gone seems the same as being dead,” I explain—an early lesson in the power of choosing to leave, and one that I will draw upon in the decades to come.
I pause, a forkful of mashed potatoes hovering by my mouth. I am beginning to realize that soccer is my secret weapon, the wand I can wave to invoke adoration and respect.
My father prods me. “How many goals did you score today, Abby?”
I beam at him. “A hat trick,” I say. Three goals.
His response is swift: “Why not four?”
I have no answer. My mother shifts her face, passing the conch to my sister, and there is nothing I want more than to have another turn.
I score more hat tricks. I score more times than I can count. I score twenty-seven goals in three games and, at age nine, am sent to join the boys’ league. They tease me, calling me “tomboy” and telling me to go back to the girls. I welcome this treatment and yearn to prove that I belong. I play football with my brothers and their friends, tackling one neighborhood kid so brutally I leave him moaning on the ground. I add basketball to my schedule and discover that
it helps my soccer game; I become an amateur kineticist, analyzing how bodies leap and lean to meet rebounding balls. During my weekly phone call with Beth—established so I’m reassured that she’s still alive—she asks if I won my latest basketball game.
“Sure did,” I reply. “Thirty-two to nothing.”
“That’s great! How many points did you score?”
“Thirty-two.”
I apply my newfound knowledge to the soccer field, experimenting with headers, taking note of how the ball launches from my forehead. My father, ever the pragmatist, orders me to move from central midfielder to forward, since the latter position guarantees more opportunities to score. In eighth grade, I am recruited to start on the varsity team for Our Lady of Mercy High School, the private, all-girls’ institution that my sisters attended. I start participating in the Olympic Development Program (ODP), which gives me exposure to college and national team coaches. I grant my first interview to a local television station.
“Where do you get your athletic prowess?” the reporter asks.
“My mom played zero sports,” I say. “But my dad was one of the fastest white runners in New York State.”
Only later do I realize that those words might cause offense.
With each passing day soccer carves a larger scoop of my life. I love it for what it gives me: praise, affection, and, above all, attention. When I’m on the field I don’t have to plead to be noticed, either silently or aloud; it is a natural by-product of my talent. I loathe it for the same reason, terrified that soccer is the only worthwhile thing about me, that stripping it from my identity might make me disappear. My future teammate and friend Mia Hamm will one day offer this advice: “Somewhere behind the athlete you’ve become and the hours of practice and the coaches who have pushed you is a little girl who fell in love with the game and never looked back . . . play for her.”
I am not, and never will be, that little girl. Already I know I’m incapable of falling in love with the game itself—only with the validation that comes from mastering it, from bending it to my will.