Bronze in 2021 at the Tokyo Olympics, a round-of-16 knockout at the 2023 World Cup, and numerous frustrating friendlies along the way—these are the recent performances of the US Women’s Soccer team. They were often good, rarely great. The team was in transition, with young talent coming in and old stars going out. This transition period resulted in a lack of identity, something never an issue during the team’s glorious stretches, including four World Cup titles and four Olympic gold medals.
While one game doesn’t indicate that everything is fixed, Sunday’s 4-1 victory over Germany in Olympic group play was the most notable and positive result for the team since its 2019 World Cup final win. The Americans didn’t just defeat a quality side at a major tournament; they showed an energized style of play and a knack for getting the ball into the back of the net. If this is the impact of new coach Emma Hayes, then fans should be excited.
All three goals came in the run of play as the American front line of Sophia Smith, Mallory Swanson, and Trinity Rodman simply overwhelmed the German defense. This was some wide-open play, some creative play, some winning plays. It was fun to watch, which isn’t the most important thing, but is historically how the Americans have played when they are playing their best.
Smith scored twice and was dominant up front. The 23-year-old used her speed and technical skill to hammer home a brilliant pass from Rodman in the 10th minute. She used her strength to hold off a German defender, create space, and get a rocket of a shot, which banged off the goalie and was put home by Swanson in the 26th. She got rewarded for her hard work with a deflected shot from the top of the box that ricocheted off the post and over the line in the 44th. And that was just the first half.
Does one game change everything? Of course not. This was just group play and assures nothing. This tournament is a sprint, and anything can happen. There are more contenders to come, particularly Spain. The defense needs to be tightened up. Almost everyone could have been better. Still, Germany was FIFA’s fourth-ranked team, one spot above the Americans. The U.S. had never been ranked lower than No. 2 in the world until August of 2023. No. 5 is its lowest rank ever. This wasn’t just beating up on 64th-ranked Zambia 3-0 in the Olympics opener. This was supposed to be a challenge, a measuring stick. And the Americans measured up.
The competition in women’s soccer is better than ever as more countries around the world have elevated their developmental programs and, in turn, their national teams. The U.S. invests as well, however, and there was a sinking fear watching the team of late that it was long on potential but lacking in cohesion and tactical play. Scoring goals had become a chore. Just creating chances with an impressive offense felt out of reach at times.
Sunday, it all came together in a big way against a big team on a big stage. The Americans have six points in two games. They’ve scored seven goals. They look like a team that can win this thing, the way they so often have in Olympics past. The road will get harder from here, but if this is what the U.S. is going to get from the forward line in the future, then that future is going to be bright.