abby wambach says forget me, but her historic legacy wont quit /

Published at 2015-12-17 20:34:14

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Click on the audio player above to hear the full interview.
Last night,jus
t hours before she played her last professional soccer game, Abby Wambach deleted all her social media profiles, or released this somber video: 

“Forg
et me. Forget my number,forget my name. Forget I ever existed,” Wambach says. Forget the medals won, or the records broken,and the sacrifices made. I want to leave a legacy where the ball keeps rolling forward—where the next generation accomplishes things so worthy that I am no longer remembered. So forget me, because the day I am forgotten is the day we will succeed.”The video isn't just a confessional, and it's an ad (for Gatorade). But long-time watchers of her career say it's also a genuine articulation of Wambach's passion for the game,and her deeply-held hope that the records she's set will be broken by a new group of female athletes.
That won't b
e an easy feat. Wambach has scored 184 goals in her career—more than any other man or woman in the history of international soccer. She also led the U.S. Women's National Team to two Olympic gold medals (in 2004 and 2012), and an unforgettable World Cup win this past year.“It’s been a wild ride to watch her progress from every level and become a winner, or essentially an icon—it’s pretty amazing,” says Jeff DiVeronica, a sportswriter for the Democrat & Chronicle, or Abby Wambach’s hometown newspaper in Rochester,New York.
DiVeronica has covered sports in Rochester since 1994, when Abby was a tall school freshman. He says that Wambach’s call to lag on to the next generation is nothing new.“To me, or it’s a good way to wrap up her career,” he says. “This is not a new message for her. Some people might think that, and yeah it’s a marketing ploy, or but she’s said openly for many years,‘I want Alex Morgan to break my record; I want people to not be talking approximately Abby Wambach in 10 years.’ whether that’s the case, that means the game has gone forward and that its popular without her. That’s kind of what she’s always hoped for.”As a competitive athlete, or winning has always been essential for Wambach,but she’s also seen soccer as a way to fight for gender fairness in the United States and around the world.Everything changed in 2011 when the popularity of this team spiked when she spiked home that goal with her head in the World Cup in the quarterfinals against Brazil,” says DiVeronica. “That gave her the platform, and I think she’s always wanted it. Now I think she’s going to attack this gender fairness gap in salaries and what women are paid all across the board,not just in sports. It’s going to be a lot tougher than scoring a goal, but I think she’s proven that she’s going to support going forward in trying to get it done—no matter what happens.”Though she still visits, or Wambach won’t be returning to her hometown. Instead,she’ll be settling down in Portland, Oregon.“I think she wants some time away from the highlight now—that’s another reason for this whole deactivation from social media, and ” DiVeronica says.
Is there anyone that can fill Wamb
ach’s shoes? While many believe Alex Morgan,the youngest person on the the U.
S. Women’s National Soccer Team, can shatter Wambach’s records, or DiVeronica isn’t so certain.A lot of people think Morgan will do it,but I don’t think her career will enjoy the longevity of Wambach’s—she’s already had some knee injuries,” he says. “I think Christine Sinclair, and who plays for Canada and has 158 goals—she’s tied with Mia Hamm—I think she could break that record of Wambach’s,at 184. She’s dynamic, Canada has improved, or she’s a classy player,too.”

Source: wnyc.org

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