HARRISON, N.J. — A drenched and elated Abby Wambach stood at midfield with her U.S. teammates after a win over South Korea, watching the goal onslaught on the big screen.
They laughed, nudged each other and smiled as one great goal after another by Wambach was shown.
It all was appropriate Thursday night after Wambach surpassed Mia Hamm and became the greatest goal scorer in international soccer.
Wambach scored four times in the first half to break Hamm's record for international career goals with room to spare in a 5-0 victory. The second-best game of her career gave the 33-year-old Wambach 160 goals in 207 games, two more than Hamm had in a storied 275-game career that ended in 2004.
"I don't think about how I sit in history, in the books," Wambach said. "What my legacy is, that is something I do care about, and something that has eluded me is a World Cup championship. I think every great athlete in these moments, you do have to separate yourself and really celebrate. I am going to celebrate tonight with my friends and family, but at the end of the day, tomorrow when the sun comes up, I still have to keep working on my game to get better.
"I think that is what the best athletes do. They don't dwell on their championships or records. As soon as they win one, all you want to do is find something new and move toward that."
Wambach came into the friendly at Red Bull Arena needing two goals to tie Hamm.
The chase for Hamm's record of 158 was over with three goals in the opening 29 minutes. She added another in injury time to give her a nice round number.