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Fast Facts:
Full Name: Mary Abigail Wambach
Born: June 2, 1980 in Pittsford, NY
Hometown: Rochester, NY
Height: 5’11”
College: University of Florida
Career Stats
Abby Wambach has been known to describe herself as a
“goofball,” but she leaves that laid-back side of her nature
on the sidelines come game time. In barely three years, she
has established herself as the most formidable offensive
player on the U.S. Women’s National Team, dominant in the air
and all but unstoppable on the ground.
Abby was the USA’s leading scorer in the 2003 Women’s World
Cup, with three goals, including a critical header in the
team’s 1-0 quarterfinal win over Norway. She entered the 2004
Athens Olympic Games with an impressive streak of 14 goals in
16 games.
After the World Cup, Abby was named U.S. Soccer’s Female
Player of the Year for 2003. The award capped a stellar year
that also included a WUSA Founder’s Cup Championship with the
Washington Freedom, a WUSA scoring championship (shared with
Freedom and WNT teammate Mia Hamm) and MVP honors in the
Founder’s Cup final.
Abby has attracted attention on the soccer field since early
childhood. She played in her first youth league at age four,
and was transferred from the girls’ to the boys’ team after
scoring 27 goals in three games. She probably felt right at
home with the boys’ team, since her childhood was spent
roughhousing with four older brothers (she’s the youngest of
seven children).
After
playing soccer and basketball in high school, Abby focused on
soccer at the University of Florida. She was named All-SEC for
four straight seasons, conference Player of the Year twice,
and led the Gators to the NCAA Final Four in 2001, her senior
year. She set school career records for goals (96), assists
(49), points (241), game-winning goals (24) and hat tricks
(10).
Also in 2001, she caught the eye of U-21 National Team coach
Jerry Smith (husband of her now-WNT teammate, Brandi
Chastain), who convinced her that, with a lot of hard work,
she could earn a spot on the senior national team. She began
training with a new sense of purpose, and made her WNT debut
with that year’s Nike U.S. Women’s Cup.
In 2002, she was the second player taken in the WUSA draft,
and became Hamm’s teammate on the Washington Freedom. With Mia
as mentor, Abby polished her physical skills and sharpened her
ability to read the game. As importantly, she learned how to
stay focused on the game while being targeted by opponents for
whom the only way to stop her was to knock her down, and to
constantly keep striving to improve.
By 2003, Wambach and Hamm were the WUSA’s most lethal scoring
tandem, combining for 66 points as the Freedom stormed to the
league title. National Team coach April Heinrichs was quick to
take advantage of the pair’s chemistry. Abby started nine of
her 14 WNT games that year, including all five Women’s World
Cup matches.
During two WUSA seasons, Abby collected 23 goals and 17
assists in 37 games. Entering the Athens Olympics, she had 40
caps and 28 goals, and was arguably the USA’s most dependable
goal-scorer.
When not playing soccer, Abby unwinds by playing video games,
listening to music and reading. She likes mountain biking and
camping, and would someday like to hike the Appalachian Trail. |
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