U.S. Soccer set up a fan fest on the north side of Allianz Field on Tuesday, an area called the Great Lawn. A D.J. thumped old school jams. Some fans played cornhole. Others formed a long line to take pictures next to an oversized US Soccer logo.
And others visited a display sent up by the yet-to-be named local W-League team that will begin play in 2022.
A close-to-sellout crowd attended the U.S. Women's National Team game against South Korea on Tuesday, the third time a U.S. national team, men or women, has played there. A few dozen checked out the nameless team's booth before kickoff.
The two events are linked. The game at Allianz Field — which still has some new car smell left — as well as the new women's league team here represents the present and future of soccer and women's sports.
While the USA men's team has faltered — it failed to qualify for the last World Cup and the last two Olympics — the women's program has been the gold standard. Carli Lloyd's international career began in 2005. The USA women — led by Michelle Akers, Mia Hamm, Brandi Chastain and others — won two World Cups. Lloyd's teams tacked on two more World Cups, as the USA women became the most recognizable and emulated squad on the planet.
Girls wanted to play like them. Nations wanted to win like them.
The seeds were planted. And there's been a harvest of talent, inspiration and awareness.
The timing couldn't be better, as there's more evidence that sports could use a woman's touch, among other things.