We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Christen Press & Tobin Heath: THE OLYMPICS! THE SOCCER!
Episode Date: July 30, 2024332. Christen Press & Tobin Heath: THE OLYMPICS! THE SOCCER! Abby, Glennon and Amanda are talking ALL about The Olympics and US Women’s Soccer with Olympians and soccer legends, Christen Press and ...Tobin Heath. Discover: -Their take on the impact of not having Alex Morgan on the team; -The Canada cheating scandal and Christen’s solution for it; -What Tobin would have done differently, if anything, in the Germany game; and -How Tobin, Christen, and Abby feel about our chances of winning the games. On the guests: Christen Press is a two-time World Cup Champion, two-time Olympic gold medalist, and an equal pay pioneer. She is one of the all-time top 10 goalscorers on the U.S. Women’s National Team and currently plays for Angel City FC. Christen led the USWNT's historic achievement of Equal Pay and served as the leader of the USWNT Players Association for 2 years. Christen is Co-Founder and Co-CEO of RE—INC, a values-led brand that exists to reimagine the way women are seen and experienced in sports. Tobin Heath is a two-time World Cup Champion and two-time Olympic gold medalist, known as one of the most skillful and entertaining players in the game. Throughout her club career, Heath has played for PSG, the Portland Thorns, Manchester United, and Arsenal. Tobin has taken her vision, leadership, and creativity off the pitch and into her roles as Co-Founder and Co-CEO of RE—INC, and host of the critically-acclaimed The RE—CAP Show. Tobin will be going live directly following each US Women’s Soccer Olympic game to Debrief with the community. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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You've probably heard Abby teasing this out on recent episodes and now it's finally here,
our special Olympics episode with Kristin Press and Tobin Heath.
We just freaking love them and we're so excited and this episode is brought to you without
interruptions, thanks to our partner Airbnb.
Because what do you want to do without interruption?
You want to listen to Kristin Press and Tobin Heath.
That's what you want to do without interruption, you want to listen to Kristen Press and Tobin Heath. That's what you want to do without interruption. And what I want to do without interruption is visit beautiful places
that have couches and spices and where I can bring my dog. And that is why Airbnb is the perfect
partner for us because they like the Olympic games, bring people together. Let's get into the episode. ["We Can Do Hard Things"]
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things, Pod Squad.
Welcome.
You know who does hard things?
We do. Olympians do hard things.
Yes.
This is the Olympics.
Olympians do very hard things.
Today, we have three Olympians and also me. Yes. Olympians do very hard things. Today we have three Olympians and also me.
And not only are they three Olympians, but they're the three most precious, amazing Olympians
in all the land. Okay. Okay. And they are you. Yep. Congrats on all the success. I know,
but honey. Kristin might appreciate this the most
out of the three of us, I think.
But like, I like to be like powerful and strong Olympian.
Okay.
I don't want to be precious Olympian.
You're not precious and cute.
You are strong and very tough Olympians.
That's what I want.
Kristen Press and Tobin Heath and Abby Wambach.
Let's talk about Kristen Press first.
Kristen Press is a two-time World Cup champion,
two-time Olympic gold medalist and an equal pay pioneer.
She is one of the all-time top 10 goal scorers
on the US Women's National Team
and currently playing for Angel City FC.
Kristen led the US Women's National Team's
historic achievement of Equal Pay
and served as the leader of the US Women's National Team
Players Association for two years.
Kristen is co-founder and co-CEO of our favorite Re-Ink,
a values led brand.
I mean, let's just start with that.
What's that?
That is a thing.
They're starting it.
They're starting a thing called a values led brand
that exists to reimagine the way women are seen
and experienced in sports.
Thank you, baby Jesus.
Tobin Heath is a two-time World Cup champion
and two-time Olympic gold medalist,
known as one of the most skillful
and entertaining players in the game.
You will know her as the one who appears
that her feet are disconnected from her legs.
Just whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot,
whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot,
whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot,
whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot,
whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot,
whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot,
whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot,
whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot,
whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot,
whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot,
whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, whoot, who and creativity off the pitch and into her roles as co-founder and co-CEO of Re-Ink
and host of the critically acclaimed,
the Recap Show, which everyone is watching.
Tobin will be going live directly following
each US Women's Soccer Olympic Games
to debrief with the community.
And so if you wanna watch
and then wait to know what you think,
you can find out what to think after the game. That's right. Right.
And then you, you wait to talk to anyone until after you watch.
And then you just say Tobin's ideas as yours. And then you sound amazing.
Yeah. You'll be smarter for exactly what I do.
Yeah, you'll be smarter for it. That's exactly what I do.
Hi, you all.
Yes, that's what it's for.
We're so excited that you are here because we cannot wait to talk about this team and the last two games.
Yes, it's been...
So let's just set the scene for the folks listening.
They'll be listening to this.
We're recording this on a Monday.
They'll be listening to this. We're recording this on a Monday. They'll be listening on a Tuesday.
Ooh.
The women's national team has gone through two games.
They beat Zambia three to zero.
And then on Sunday afternoon, they beat Germany four to one.
Big games, putting us through to the quarterfinals.
We don't know if we're going to go out one or two from our group,
but we have a third game to play.
But we're talking about the second game now.
Well, no, I was talking about all of the games.
Oh, okay.
I want to talk about the second game because that was the most fun thing that's ever happened.
Okay.
Can I ask a question?
Yeah.
The jerseys.
Yeah.
Abby's wearing her 20 jersey.
I get that.
And you're wearing 2024.
Is this also a political campaign?
Oh, that's interesting.
You do know that everything for me is a political campaign.
I know.
So I'm wondering, is this your actual number, Glennon?
Or is this a statement?
So that is hilarious.
The team, somebody from the team.
Beathy, Beathy sent us these.
Sent us these jerseys.
Mine has my actual name on the back.
I believe that they understand
what a crucial role that I play.
In explaining soccer to the people.
Okay? That's what I am accepting this honor as. In explaining soccer to the people.
Okay? That's what I am accepting this honor as.
They will only believe you
if you're wearing a US Women's National Team jersey.
That's right.
Yeah, for sure.
Yeah, B.P., he sent them to us
and we were wearing them yesterday for the game
and we're wearing them right now
for the taping of this podcast.
Well, look at you, Glennon.
You just fit in.
You look like one of the gals.
Thanks so much, Tobin.
We're gonna use that as the clip.
Do you understand what a big compliment Tobin just gave you?
I do, that's why I'm gonna use it as the clip.
One of the gals.
Yeah, I know.
That's like a huge compliment.
I know.
Okay.
I really, really am feeling it deeply in my bones.
Okay, enough about us.
You are both here to answer our questions. I really, really am feeling it deeply in my bones. Okay, enough about us.
You are both here to answer our questions. So what are your thoughts about the Germany game
that we just watched yesterday?
And I don't know,
Glennon also wants to know what your feelings are
about the team. Yeah, mostly that.
That's how we like to take it.
A little bit of, you know,
football and a little bit of feelings. Yeah. Well, thank you for having us back on my favorite podcast. I'm so happy to be here.
And we are full swing Olympic mode. So much joy. Our team is energizing and exciting us in a way
that we haven't, honestly, since we were on it, which is a lot. But they really are, they're making us all so proud,
right? They're so fun to watch, so dynamic, a little bit of humility with people, you know,
being good teammates, making unselfish runs. That's really exciting. And you know what I'll say,
when you play a top opponent, you can sometimes get in early in a tournament, you get this like paralysis
where like it's always like zero zero or like just like a stale game. So for us to come
out against Germany and just play like we were just having fun, I just feel like inspired
the whole country and made us all believe that we could do this again.
I agree. I agree. It felt like, oh, there they are. Oh, there they are. And I haven't said that since
19. I haven't said that since 19. And that, and I mean this in the most, you know, this has happened
throughout my career. There were many spells that we couldn't figure out who the hell we were.
What do you guys think is the difference? What do you think that the real, like if we
get it, what are some of the factors that you believe is to why this is happening for
our team?
Well, Glennon, you're a writer and you know, there's many words on the page.
So think of it as 11 players or 11 words on the page.
And you can get those 11 words perfectly right.
And you're like, oh my gosh, I'm a genius.
And you can get the 11 words completely wrong.
And you're like, this makes no sense.
And that's exactly what it's like when you put 11 players on the field.
And not only do you have to put like the right combination of words on the page, but then
you have to make them like all kind of like orchestrate and collaborate and like make
the reader feel something and do something. And I think that's like what Emma Hayes has
gotten right. Like these players have been here,
like it wasn't like we just like lifted up rock
and we're like, oh my gosh, players.
These players have been here.
They're very good.
We've seen them be very good.
We just haven't really seen them collectively
be good together.
And I think like, and I say this over and over again,
I think we were just scratching the surface
on how good this group and for us as attacking players, I think that were just scratching the surface on how good this group and for
us as attacking players, I think that's where our mind always goes to for this group and
especially the attacking players, how good they can actually be.
That was so poetic.
That was so poetic.
Glennon just pulled it out of me.
I know.
You must be inspired.
That was amazing.
I mean, talk about metaphors.
We live, I walk into a room and then she's like,
you know what that walking into the room is like?
I'm like, I don't care.
And Abby's like, it's just a kitchen table.
Damn it, it's a table.
That was special though.
And I think like what you're saying though, Tobin,
and I want to get into like the front three because,
you know, we all love Alex Morgan,
but her being left off the roster,
in a way, it's been like given these three players
permission to go for it.
Like your mom would say, you know what I'm saying?
Like that for me is like, oh wow,
like there's a stability that I am seeing
like a sense of confidence in the three of them,
that they're not fighting for their life out there,
that they're playing free and confident.
And making the Olympic roster is so difficult.
It's so much more competitive
with it being only 18, 16 outfield players.
It's unreal how difficult it is.
But to watch them connect,
and Tobin, I was watching some of your stuff
and you're so right.
You pointed out some stuff in your podcast or on the, on the recap show
that I thought of when I was watching.
Soph's first goal, number one, I want you to talk us through that.
And then Mal's goal.
I think that those are two.
Who was your player of the match?
Who was your player?
I know who Tobin's player of the match is.
Oh, they watched the debrief. Yeah, yeah. They did. Yeah, we were in it. What was, was yours the of the match? I know who Tobin's player of the match is. Oh, they watched the debrief.
Yeah, yeah.
They did.
What was, was yours the same as mine
for the player of the match?
I think you kind of plus one did a little.
I plus one did, yeah.
I think that's like something that we're like
very passionate about when we give like kind of
our analysis of the game is to kind of think of it
through like our eyes and our lens.
And very much behind the scenes,
we always kind of applaud the little things
that nobody really sees, but that makes
the biggest difference.
And I think on the best teams,
the teams that applaud the little things more
are the more successful teams.
And, you know, Mal's a big player.
She's going to get praise regardless,
but I want to give her praise for the little things
because those are what are making this team like have these big decisions and these big
outcomes and the first goal, uh, like you mentioned, Abby, which so scored,
which looked like an easy goal for social score was made possible by a super
selfless run by Mal.
And, and listen, Abby has benefited from a lot of these super selfish runs. And honestly,
I will run every time selflessly for Abby because there's 99% chance if I run selfish,
selfless, selflessly for Abby, that like, I trust that she will score.
Like I trust that she will score.
And what Mal did was she made a run, a super dynamic run,
knowing that she wouldn't score because that would help her teammates score.
And that's the difference between team
and then on the second goal that then Mal scored.
Like when you talk about how you're gonna score goals,
like when you're dreaming about them in your mind,
they don't look like this.
They don't look like you following up a shot
when everybody else is sleeping.
Nope, no they don't.
But guess what?
Counts the same.
Yep.
Counts the same.
Same points, counts the same.
I love that.
That's such an Abby saying.
I love that.
Doesn't matter how, it matters how many. That's saying. It doesn't matter how, it matters how many.
That's exactly right.
It doesn't matter how, it's how many.
Four times a day, it doesn't even matter
if we're talking about soccer.
It still goes.
I just think that that's so important
because to me, not only the pointing out
of that kind of selfish run, selfless run by Mal,
it's like, that's the aha.
Like we are now, even as experiencing as fans, as viewers,
we're looking for the good instead of like looking for like the thing to critique
or looking for like the, the bad, It's just the nature of it, right?
Like when we have this like feeling of joy and structure
and commitment and selflessness,
we then get to just like look for the good things, right?
And then when it's the opposite,
when it feels like individual and clenchy
and ball hoggy and not fluid,
then we're just looking for all of that, right?
So it's like, it's like this interesting energy shift
that it's like, that's all I saw.
And it wasn't just because they were playing well,
because look, there were a couple of players
that I thought didn't play as well,
just wasn't as obvious because the score line.
There are a couple of players that I thought
should get subbed off a little bit sooner,
maybe have a little bit more sub happening throughout the game.
That's fine. But still, I was like vibing with the team for the first time in years.
I was like, yes, go, go Trinity.
Like, just keep going.
You know, like every time that Tobin or Kristen or Hale,
you guys would get like faced up with a defender on the sideline.
It was just like we knew it was going to happen.
And it was going to be a one v one battle out wide.
And she's going to figure something out.
And then it leads to a goal.
I get I get so excited about it.
Well, I actually love what you said about the impact of Alex
not being on the roster.
It's something that we talked about
a lot. And it's like, you know, we'll only time we'll tell if that was the right decision. It's
pretty much if they win, then fine. That's just how every decision goes on the US national team.
But we had talked about at the prior World Cup, there was like a shadow over, you know, a soap
or, you know, a player like Trinity,
who could emerge as what we've talked a lot about
as the face of the team.
Like Abby, you had this beautiful handoff
as the face of the team to Alex and you mentored her.
And then you had times where you both were
like the top players and you competed
and you pushed each other.
And then there was a time where you rolled off the team and that's like the natural transition of this. And you never know when the right time
is going to be. But what I was going to say, but there's nothing natural about the US one special
team. Like as much as we have this like beautiful picture of like Abby, like passing this torch off
to Alex, like it's complicated. There are complicated feelings in this.
There's big egos.
There's like generational talent.
There's, you know, there's the winning.
And I don't think like the passing of the baton
is as romanticized as we make it seem.
And I also think that maybe a passing of the baton
is easier between two people than it is between others.
It's true, but also it's fake.
It's not real.
Yeah.
It's not.
I, Abby, having been in a position
where I felt like Mia passed the baton to me,
and then I passed the baton to like Alex, that's just in our heads.
Yeah.
The truth is, statistics prove everything. And the truth is, Mia went out and scored
a shit ton of goals. I went out and scored a shit ton of goals. Alex went out and
scored a shit ton of goals. You know what I'm saying? Like, it's this thing, it's
like media, beautiful, like storyline. But at the end's this thing, it's like media, beautiful like storyline,
but at the end of the day, it's cutthroat.
You're either good enough, young enough,
fast enough, scoring enough to be on the squad or you're not.
And then when a new coach comes in
and they just want to start fresh, I totally understand.
Totally get it.
Totally get why Emma would wanna go this way.
And I'm fucking heartbroken for Alex.
Because I know what it's like to be in that position.
I understand it's a business.
And I know Alex is gonna be fine,
but I know that she would have probably preferred
to walk off on her own two feet and with her own choice.
You know? But that own choice, you know? Yep.
But that's it, you know?
I feel like all of the team dynamics are in that tension
between this beautiful thing that is real.
And for me, there was a handoff.
And also the reality that it's not as pretty
as it always looks on ESPN.
And, you know, fighting for your spot and
your role is what makes you great. Like without that competition, without that healthy dose of
kind of like the other side, the dark side of it, like you would never be pushed to your limits.
And so I think what makes me excited is there is a kind of a vacancy and there hasn't been a vacancy
in when I talk about the Face the Team, I really mean who's doing all of the media and like kind of has that responsibility to
represent and symbolize the team. And that's where there's a little bit of a gap. And we haven't
seen who that player is emerging. And I think it's an interesting dynamic to your frontline going
into a tournament when you have multiple people that could fill that role that are great players,
super dynamic, fun to watch, cute, marketable, all the things.
And what I see is an amount of humility and teamwork that I wasn't sure we were going
to get with this vacancy.
Yes.
Is there something to the discipline that they keep talking about?
Because I'm sensing the discipline.
Let me just explain something to you guys about the soccer.
Okay.
It feels to me like the discipline
with which they're now playing on the field.
You mean the structure and the discipline
that Rose LaVelle talked about Emma bringing.
Yeah, yeah.
Like she said, they're bringing us.
So my favorite thing about creativity in the world
that is the only way that I can survive
is the idea that structure liberates.
That I can be wildly creative from 7 a.m. to 8 30.
Like I need pockets to be in then, right?
So it feels to me like the structure and the discipline
that they're playing with on the field is translating
into the way they are talking about each other
and the game off the field.
Like they are being so humble
and like every time one of them talks,
they're talking about the other one so quickly
and they're putting team above individual
in every interview just like they are on the field.
Yeah.
Right?
Like doesn't it seem like maybe it's purposeful
that nobody's coming forward
as the star right now because they're all kind of sharing. And it's not our normal playbook.
Normally we go into that, like go into world championships and we're like, we win or we die.
Like we, we, like anything's a failure except for gold. And they're going in and they're sort of
like, you know, we have respect for all of our opponents and we have respect for it. And it's
a different playbook.
And it's surprising to me.
Yeah, me too.
But I kind of like it.
Me too.
As long as they win.
Yeah.
Remember Emma said, somebody asked her
about how it was gonna go.
I was thinking the same thing.
And she goes, well, I don't know.
I have to see.
Well, cause-
And I was like, did a leader just say, I don't know?
Yeah, yeah.
Because that is amazing.
Like that's a posture.
I think that the posture is she's so new right now.
It's hard for her to make a clear assessment
of the totality of her team and what the expectations are.
And it's good.
It's working for them right now.
That won't be the way that it lives forever with Emma.
She's gonna have to be able to stand in her own opinion.
But I think what she's trying to do
is earn a championship first, and then talk about,
let's talk about expectations later.
Because at the end of the day,
this team hasn't won anything in a while.
And I would also say the posturing
is also to the rest of the world, right?
Yeah, yeah.
And managers tell their team team and everyone sort of speaks
knowing that everybody's listening. So there's a little bit of a flex I feel and being like,
oh, you know, like we don't think we're the best anymore. Like we're going to have to earn it.
That's a little bit like I'm coming in and beating Germany.
Yeah. Cool. Yeah. Yeah. I actually think the, what I've noticed in Emma and just like her, her time with the US team is, you know, she's a very psychological coach.
She does it with the media. She does it with how she identifies and speaks about her players. Yes. I do think that she has so far tactically, she had her clear priorities.
Look, she hasn't done anything extraordinary with the tactics.
She has not.
We're playing the simplest form of football out there and that's on purpose.
She's like, how can I just get this 11 on the field as much as possible with one another,
just speaking the same language?
Just do soccer 101 together.
And then all of a sudden, like, and to your point,
like creativity comes after that.
It's like this team just needed to do soccer 101 together.
And it's like amazing how much then they're able to like
be confident and to be able to show their individual
personalities and be able to be brave on a world stage.
And like, I think she's almost dumbed down the football
and like upped up the ability to like psychoanalyze
what's needed for this team.
Yes.
Yes, and it's the leader that we've been needing.
So to me, she feels like kind of a psychological guru.
Like that's what I called her this morning.
I was like, she feels a little bit like
she's gotten her mind into the hearts
and minds of the players.
Have you heard of the story about when she was coaching at Chelsea that early
days, Arsenal would beat them a lot.
And she noticed that her players were like really nervous whenever that they
would play Arsenal, like outsize nerves.
Like this is, she's like, this doesn't make sense.
So she made her team wear Arsenal jerseys during practices
for a long enough period of time
so that the red wouldn't upset them.
You know what I'm saying?
So like to me, I think her psychology game is on point.
Glennon and I are talking about how she speaks
of her players in the media,
how she's almost like giving them each little brands of who they are.
She's branding them to like live, to like live within. And I,
I mean, you might think that that's right or wrong, but as a coach,
when you're coming in, you want somebody to know what they can bring, right?
And you want somebody to live fully
in that little self of theirs
that she's trying to build.
Cause she's like, here's how I see you.
And if you bring this, you're gonna get minutes.
If you bring this, then you're gonna give us the very best
and that's what I need from you.
Doesn't mean you can't grow and make gains,
but I just think that the psychology of it
has freed the players up to just be themselves.
Absolutely.
And I think like this is a time where these players,
they're so defined by outside noise.
Like this is a generation
that is a social media generation.
They don't even know who they are
unless their comment section is telling them.
Yeah.
And I truly believe this is a way to like coach this next generation, you know, to have the leader, to have the person that then is going to give the
brand to the media, to tell them what to say about their players that they're
then going to receive onto themselves.
I think it's, it's super smart. Um, and I think, I think it's super smart.
And I think it's working.
Yeah, you mentioned in the debrief or the recap,
do you guys call it the debrief and recap
or is it two separate things?
Ooh, so the debrief is like right after the game,
our reaction.
Got it.
Live.
Live. Got it. Live. Live.
Got it.
So it's really scary for us.
Yeah.
It's like.
And then obviously TRRS is like our, you know,
nice Polish show.
Sit down with an amazing guest like yourselves.
And you know, really get to be a little bit more thoughtful
about the things we're saying.
Okay, well on one of the shows you had mentioned
that our women's national team,
the way that the cycle works is World Cup, then Olympics,
World Cup, then Olympics, right?
And the US women's national team
has always won one of them.
That blew my mind.
Isn't that so wild?
But never both, right?
And never both in the same cycle? Never both in the same cycle.
Never both in the same cycle.
So yeah, the team has actually won an Olympics
and then in the next cycle, the World Cup.
So they kind of were back to back,
but not in the same cycle.
Yeah, so essentially folks who are listening,
what that means is like the World Cup is one summer
and then the following summer is often the Olympics
minus the COVID summer,
which it was two summers later. So we have the 95 Women's World Cup, we lost. Then we won the
Olympics in 96. Won, this is a couple years later, won the 99 World Cup, lost the Olympics. Then we
won the World Cup 03, won the Olympics 04. Then we lost the World Cup 07, won the Olympics of 08, we lost the World Cup of 11.
Okay. So what's supposed to happen this year?
Wait, you didn't get to the best part. And then in 1918.
And then in 1918. And then in 1919.
Okay, so all y'all are assholes.
What happened is, is we didn't win the World Cup in 2023 and we find ourselves in the
Olympics in 2024.
What do you think is going to happen?
Statistically we're supposed to win then, right?
Statistically, that is true.
Do you all think that we can win this whole thing?
Do I think we can?
Absolutely.
I don't think we can.
You don't think we can or you don't think we will?
Oh, I don't think we will.
Of course the football gods, you never know what they're up to up there.
But the only reason is just time. It's just time and the depth. It's the
problem and the depth of this team in a tournament like the Olympics.
I want you to know that our producer has never done this in the history of the show.
Just texted us. Fact check. Tobin is wrong. Oh no, it's Amanda.
Hey sister. Tobin is wrong. That no, it's Amanda. It's Amanda. Hey sister, Tobin is wrong.
That's even better.
She fact checked you.
She said you are wrong.
They are gonna win.
In what way?
No, it's just a win.
No, they are gonna win.
It's not a fact.
It's an opinion check.
Oh, she's prophetic.
She's opinion checking you.
Yeah, she thinks.
Opinion checking.
You're right.
You're right.
Let's cut.
We're all just
we're all just gonna do I want the team to win. Absolutely.
Yeah. What would you have done differently? Like, who do you
think could come off the bench? I think I wouldn't have done
anything different. No, in the Germany game. Oh, in the
Germany. Yeah, no, no. I mean, for one Germany, you'd be a fool
to try to go back and do it again.
Right. Right. And can we just talk about Sweet Lynn Williams? Oh my God.
Getting on the field. Getting her gold.
One cool thing is who is that woman that always writes the amazing things about the soccer?
Meg.
Oh, Linehan.
Linehan.
Oh, Linehan? Linehan. Meg? Yeah. Yes.
She said that she thought that that was a moment that showed such a switch in intensity
because just keeping up the intensity for that long, that that goal happened near the
end of the game, was just like such a shining moment of like, oh my God, they're just like
going to be fierce the whole time.
Yeah. I mean, look, I think that Lynn has, she has given her life to this game.
She's been committed to the national team for a long time.
And honestly, she based on an injury prior to the Olympics.
That's why she's there.
She replaced an injured player.
And then it just speaks to her character to like maintaining her readiness and staying ready.
And when she's called upon, she shows up and scores.
And you know, she had the leg, the red brace,
whatever the heck that thing was.
I was like-
Big old red sleeve.
Yeah, I was like, is she okay?
Do we need to see a doctor here, Lynn?
But she went out-
I'm just thinking that's hot.
I know.
She went out there and she scores a goal.
And like for somebody who, you know,
has kind of struggled to find themselves
in the starting lineup and to get the goal
in the national team world,
like she kills it in the NWSL.
She's like, I think the leading goal scorer
of the NWSL, right?
Really?
Yeah.
So I don't know, I just felt really happy for her.
She did great.
Our front three, I don't know if our front three
can be stopped.
Alyssa Nair coming up with like three massive saves,
keeping it a game, like truly, and you need that.
So to me, if the team can show up on that top podium
at the end of this tournament,
it will be a lot due to Alyssa making big time saves.
Because other teams are so good,
it's impossible not to allow shots, you know?
It's impossible to not, like let's say we play France or Spain,
they're going to get through, they're going to have chances.
So it's like our goalkeeper has to show up
and then our front three also have to show up.
What do you guys think about our midfield? So I think the midfield, the like biggest problem was just like trust. You know, I think the midfield is completely dependent on balance
and trust. And if you try to do too much sometimes, it doesn't work. Like there
has to be like a very talk about like rigidity. Like I believe, especially in buildup play,
there has to be so much rigidity. Sorry, this is so soccer junkie-ish when I go a little
too deep. But basically what I'm trying to say is I feel like why the midfield has been,
why the whole team, because the midfield really is the engine of the team.
Why the team is performing is because there's more trust in the midfield. And I think that came with
a lot of work, but to the psycho analyzing of people and getting the right mixture.
Nicole Sarris Well, what someone wise told me yesterday was when you don't notice the midfield,
it means they're doing their job. Oh, that's actually what I think it was a little bit like
in the Germany game. Overall, I don't know if our performance was a 4-1 win, just being honest.
I felt like the whole time Germany was going to get a goal and make it a game. And I think, you know, we all know how important it is to win even like by a lot
or to kind of out your result to like outperform like actually how you did on the field.
That's actually a really good sign of mentality and chemistry and also a little bit of luck,
which is absolutely required in a moment like this.
That's smart.
But I think when it comes to how we go up
against the rest of the world,
I don't think we are gonna be able
to consistently outperform every team.
But that does not mean I don't think we can win.
Same.
Same.
I don't think that's what it's for.
I think people are gonna crush you for saying that.
Well, no.
If people are gonna crush Tobin, then I'm cutting that.
Yeah, we're cutting it if necessary.
But like at the end of the day, like I get it.
Like I kind of like, yeah, they can win.
And also guess what's happened to my little fragile heart
over the last four years.
I know.
It's gotten a little bit hard.
Yes, you've hardened your heart.
And I also had hardened my heart for different reasons
because I thought that I,
see, here's the thing about the sports.
When I was little, my dad was a football coach, okay?
So he coached our high school team.
And then we were massive fans
of the Washington football team.
Okay?
The commanders now, right?
I was like, my whole heart was with them.
Okay?
It was like when Joe Theismann and John Riggins and Joe Jacoby and we were like, our family
was obsessed.
And then this thing called free agency started happening.
And you guys, I don't mean this in a shallow way.
I mean, I was betrayed.
I was betrayed.
I used to sit and talk to my parents
at the kitchen table about it.
I used to like, what do you mean they just leave
and new people come in?
Like, what do you mean?
Like, of what are we a fan then?
If I am a big fan of Brandi Carlile's band,
and I love them, and then I go to the concert,
and Joe Schmo's singing now.
What am I a fan of?
I'm serious. Like, it's like a deep thing for me.
Like Van Halen.
Okay.
David Lee Roth.
No, you can't just put Sammy Hagar in.
Like I'm right.
Yeah.
So I felt, I think it's a problem.
I don't understand of what we are fans.
If the people keep changing.
So I love that you said this.
Really?
I really do.
Cause you're just a fan of a logo or a team color.
I have that too.
Like I, I really struggle with that, but that's why I feel like teams that like
have this winning mentality, like the US women's sash team that have like this
identity, I think that's the thing that breaks the heart, mentality, like the US Wimsash team that have like this identity.
I think that's the thing that breaks the heart, right, Abby, when you don't see
whatever version of the US Wimsash team, like playing with that same spirit that
makes you feel something.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's exactly right.
But I feel betrayed all the time and I don't understand sports anymore.
No.
I think contracts should have to be minimum five years.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
Absolutely.
No, no, no, no, no.
Something like that.
I don't usually have a big say here,
but free agency is extremely important
from a player safety and respect thing.
And our, and WSL, our lead has been fighting
for free agency so that we can leave.
This is such a different conversation where we want to
be respected as full humans. Okay. So I just think since we're
on we can do our things. It would be appropriate for you
to mention for to advocate for free agency. Yes, you're right.
And I think that we are going to achieve it in a an amended and
WSL contract. And it's huge. For those of us that have been
traded behind our backs in our sleep. It is huge.
Yes.
Amazing.
The hardest I've ever cried when I got traded.
I forgot you did too.
I can be a fan of that.
If free agency is something that is important to the hearts and bodies and
minds of the players, then I can be a fan of that.
Yeah.
But what I'm saying is that yesterday,
I opened that game or whatever you do,
I started watching the game with a hardened heart.
I am not getting attached to these ones.
I will watch it, I will cheer,
but I am not getting attached to these love bugs
because I know I'm just gonna lose them in a couple years.
And guess what?
Nope, I'm totally attached.
I am absolutely emotionally connected to every single one of them.
Something about the game yesterday was heart.
Like, there was something to connect to.
There was something to be a fan of there that was beyond the individual people.
It's almost like all of us have been holding our breath,
and we were able to finally, like, take a collective inhale
for the first time in a while.
And I think that we saw glimmers. Like, look, this is a very young team, number one, in actual age.
Very young with a very new coach. So there's so much more to be seen. There's so much.
And they keep saying this in the media, which I love. They're like, this is like the tip of the iceberg.
Like we have so much more to go. We have so much more to prove and I love that.
But it's like, it's that thing that,
I don't like holding my breath.
I like feeling like free when I'm watching the game.
And I think that it was like, oh, here we are again.
This is nice again.
I like this.
And also it's not just like, again,
it's like also very new at the same time.
It feels old and exactly like,
and new at the exact same time.
Because like the US women's basketball team
has always been modernizing the women's game.
And it feels like we're not the ones modernizing anymore.
So that's why it like feels like a little weird.
Cause it's not like the US women's basketball team
was the same team in each cycle.
They were very, very different styles.
The game modernizes very quickly, but like we were always the ones doing that part.
So it was like almost like seeing like the new play for the first time and it being
like award winning every time.
But now it's like, the world is, it has changed.
Like other countries are modernizing the game and we're
trying to figure out how, where we fit into this new like world order. So it is pretty crazy. And
a fun fact for Amanda, if you're listening, this is the first team without a player with a gold
medal on it. What? Really? There she is. Oh my God. Wait, Alyssa Mare doesn't have a gold medal?
Pod squad, you have to know that Tobin said my sister's name and she's just desperate to be...
I was seeing if like the genie bottle worked. It did. Did you have something to say, sister?
And this is my moment. I also have not had a gold medal, so that means I could play on the team.
I'm just asking for a friend.
We are also on with Alex Cooper yesterday and I was thinking the whole time because she had referenced, you know, that she played college soccer and the whole time I was thinking you've
played more college soccer than some of the women on the field. So true. Oh my gosh, because none of
them played college soccer. Oh, because they went straight into.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think also had one year.
Thanks for that fact, Tobin.
Those are good fun facts.
I'm just here for that.
She's coming for my job.
I need to ask Tobin and Kristin about something different.
Okay, here we go.
Okay.
We can do hard things,
so we're just gonna get real quick into a hard thing.
I just need somebody to real quick explain to the pod squad what Canada has been up to.
And then I want to hear all of your thoughts about it because Abby and I have very different
reactions to this situation.
Oh my gosh.
I'm so happy we're talking about this.
They are rascals.
They're rascals?
That's one word for it.
So real quick, I'm going to describe it and then you tell me what actually happened.
Please describe it.
Canada soccer scandal.
Recently one team was practicing for the Olympics.
New Zealand.
Lo and behold, they're in a closed practice, practicing their little secret things as people
do who are getting ready for a game with their coach and their people they look up in the air
they hear a buzz they look up in the air and there is a what there is a drone a
drone which is filming their secret moves so that the drone can fly over to
the Canadian coaches who we all thought were nice
because of the whole Canada thing.
Not so much.
They are downloading the practices
so they can watch what the other team is doing,
which is called cheating.
Very organized cheating, predetermined,
premeditated, cheating.
Then the boss of Canada comes out in a statement.
On Friday.
And says something like,
we think this has actually been going on
for a very long time.
I'm like, whoa, that's different than America.
America would be like,
we don't know what you're talking about.
And also America would be like,
if you don't cheat, you're losers.
Everybody cheats.
You pay taxes, losing.
So.
Well, here's what happened.
So the New Zealand team looks up,
they notice a drone and they call the police.
That's how this happened.
And in France, they have no drone flying laws.
And so they were able to figure out who this was
because the New Zealand people were like,
hold on a second, we're gonna call the police.
So, so far, the only consequences are that the staff,
a bunch of the coaches have to go home.
The Canadian team gets docked six points.
Yeah, they're now, yep.
But they're still in the tournament.
And the New Zealand team who lost to the cheating Canadian
team just is like, oh well.
We lost.
They don't have anything?
Why don't they give them their six points?
They should get their six points.
I feel like that would be fair.
They just have no six points, but the other team
doesn't get any of that. I feel like there's like a par They just have no six points, but the other team doesn't get any of that.
I feel like there's like a parable in the Bible about this.
Yes.
And as of today...
It's like if someone takes a hundred dollars from me
and it's like, well, the recompense is you have to give away a hundred dollars.
It's like, wait, but it was from me.
Yeah.
Well, and as of today,
the Canada Soccer Federation is appealing the six points.
More to be revealed there, but... They want it to be more? No six points, more to be revealed there.
But they want it to be more. No, they want it to be less. But listen,
what are your guys' feelings about this? How are you thinking about it?
Okay. We also have slightly differing opinions, but it's very hard because
we kind of talked about it like similar to doping. Like if you don't know
that you are being slipped some sort of performance enhancer and then you by your coach or by
your trainer and then you go out and you run faster than everybody, you still didn't win
fairly even though it's not your fault.
And even if you, you obviously trained really hard, you tried really hard, you cared a lot.
And you could still have won without it.
We will never know.
Yeah.
But you still get disqualified.
Yep.
And for me, it doesn't make sense because New Zealand,
as you've implied, also had something taken from them,
which were their secrets.
And we don't know if Canada did that to the other teams.
We don't know what happened.
So for me, it seems like it would have made more sense to just have them kind of default
out of the tournament and give three points to every team that played them so that the
other teams could duke it out fairly.
And you just removed the cheating.
But I will say it's a really hard thing to say
to the players who, even if you're getting someone
slipping you drugs or performance enhancers,
it is your responsibility to know that.
But in this case, there's really nothing
they could have done.
And then the other thing that Topin and I both kind of
do agree on is the fact that when Canada women's soccer won
gold, they
won on penalties in the quarterfinals and the finals.
And that is the most advantageous thing of like watching someone's closed training is
that you can watch their penalties and in their quarterfinals, semifinals and finals,
as Tobin's like to say, they didn't score one goal in the run of play. They only won on penalties, which
could affect their strategy if they knew they were going to win in penalties. And the goalkeeper
gets told exactly which way each shooter shoots. So it is a very suspicious set of circumstances.
Well, I have a question about that. Does that mean because the prior scenario was
okay, so it's theoretically just the coaches are very bad coaches, bad, bad, bad, and the players
don't know. But if they were fed the information as specifically, is there a world in which the players could not know?
Yes.
That that?
I don't think the players.
So if you're a goalkeeper and you're preparing, you're going to watch hundreds of penalties
of the team and you're going to study it and they're going to give you a water bottle and
it's going to say which way they shoot.
And it's supposed to be based on film that you could see publicly.
And so you already get so much information that you're not going to be like,
Oh, how do you know?
Like you just, they just know, and you would just trust that.
Yeah.
And I think it's really important to remember with penalty kicks that like,
Abby took a lot of her penalty kicks.
So most of her penalty kicks have been studied.
There's tons of film on it, but with penalty kick shootouts, there will be a
lot of players that take penalty kicks that don't have a lot of film on it. But with penalty kick shootouts, there will be a lot of players that take penalty kicks
that don't have a lot of film on them. So their coaches will be making educated guesses on what
exactly that player will be doing. Unless, unless drone footage of their training, which I, I guess
people don't see this on audio. We're making the fingers, the fingers that are basically like, you know, why I think
this is really sad because we're talking about you referred to the Tokyo Olympics where they
won gold, but they also won bronze in the prior two Olympics.
And you just, and if this is a systematic thing, unfortunately, like my heart breaks
for these players because I would be livid if I was a player that my medal or something,
because these players work extremely hard to have these opportunities.
And now not only am I being called a cheater for something I wasn't even in control of, but now my medals could be on the line for that,
I would be livid.
But I think it's really hard to separate the two things
of like having an advantage.
And I think for other teams,
other teams should be livid too.
Like I think about the teams in Tokyo,
like if that is true,
everyone should be upset in some way, right?
Because those are other people working really hard
to have the opportunity to win a gold medal.
But it's like, that's why the buck stops somewhere.
Maybe this is the first time in history
that a leader was doing some really shady shit
for a lot of times and nobody else knew about it.
Of course people knew about it.
It is the top's responsibility to make sure
that the coach and the leaders are operating with integrity.
And if they're not, and if they cheat,
everybody gets penalized.
But yeah, but in sport, Glennon,
there's like this weird thing.
Like if you're not cheating, you're not trying.
It's like a very weird thing.
And there's a lot of gray area in sports,
always kind of pushing the boundaries
of being like just too much.
Yep.
But drones, don't you think we've gone into too much?
Did they have a silent drone?
Like, you know how on guns you can kind of like
make it not like you're out?
A silencer on your drone?
No, it was a loud drone.
Facts.
So stupid.
And I would know-
It wasn't even a clever thing.
I mean, if you're gonna cheat with drones, at least do it in a country that doesn't have
a no drone law.
I know.
Yeah.
When does the national team play next?
Wednesday.
What time is the game?
10 a.m. PT.
And then after the game, what are we all going to do to find out what we think about what
just happened?
Debrief.
We're going to listen to Tobin.
We're going to the debrief.
Let's go to the debrief.
Where do we find the debrief, Tobin and Kristen?
In membership.
So you have to be a re-imaginer.
I mean, you'll get the clips, you know, a few days after the hot clips, but to have
the full reaction.
You need to be a member.
To be the first ones to know.
Okay.
And you guys just please, Hot Squad, just please listen to it, and then don't tell your people you listened to it,
and then just sit down at dinner and just start dropping shit.
Like, this is like my friend who records Jeopardy's,
and then she turns it on with her husband,
and like, like it's in real time,
and she just answers all the shit,
and she never tells him.
But she already memorized the whole thing.
This is what you get to do.
My problem is I wouldn't be able to remember it. I wouldn't be able to remember it either. And the worst, no, I need to say the whole thing. This is what you did too. My promise, I wouldn't be able to remember it.
I wouldn't be able to remember it either.
And the worst, no, I need to say one more thing.
Okay.
I need to just note the genius of Kristen and Tobin,
because what I want to say about the values-led brand
that I have been thinking about this whole time,
is that you are even looking at the game and analyzing it
and picking your players of the match
and looking at everything through the values of your brand.
Like choosing the player based on the selfless runs,
choosing the, it's like such a gorgeous 360 approach
to the whole thing and I see it and I love it.
All I wanted to say.
I wanna end with this.
Kristin and Tobin, before we got on this,
Amanda and Glennon were like,
okay, can you like give us a little like thing to end on?
Something like go and they were both trying to tell me
to give like the speech and Kristin and Tobin both know how terrible I was
in the huddle part of games.
I would fumble, I would stutter,
and then we all knew we were gonna have a good game.
But what I wanna take our pod squad through
is can we do an OOSA cheer with the pod squad
and with Glennon and with sister
so that they know what it is?
Okay, but what is it?
So before every game, the US national team says, Oosa, Oosa, Oosa, ah.
You say, Oosa on three.
One, two, three.
Oosa, Oosa, Oosa, ah.
Okay, that was like a three out of a ten.
I give you a three out of a ten.
The excitement and energy.
Love it.
This is the most patriotic I've ever been in public
and I'm kind of nervous about it.
I'll just be over here.
Kristin won't even be on screen.
She's like, oh, it's definitely kind of in the exterior
of this like huddle because I just don't really like
all the people.
Yeah.
I think we should leave it at this, you guys.
Yeah, we're going to leave it at this.
Usa, usa, usa on three. One, two, three.
Thanks for coming, you guys. We love you so much.
We love you.
Thank you.
Love you.
Bye.
Thank you. Love you.
Bye.
If this podcast means something to you, it would mean so much to us.
If you'd be willing to take 30 seconds to do these three things.
First, can you please follow or subscribe to We Can Do Hard Things?
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We Can Do Hard Things is created and hosted
by Glennon Doyle, Abby Wambach, and Amanda Doyle
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Our executive producer is Jenna Wise-Burman,
and the show is produced by Lauren Legrasso,
Alison Schott, Dina Kleiner, and Bill Schultz.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandi Carlisle.
I walked through fire
I came out the other side
I chased desire, I made sure I got what's mine
And I continue to believe that I'm the one for me And because I'm mine
I walk the line
Cause we're adventurers
And heartbreaks on map
A final destination
We laugh, we stopped asking directions To places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known We'll finally find our way back home And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do our thing
I hit rock bottom, it felt like a brand new start
I'm not the problem, sometimes things fall apart And I continue to believe The best people are free
And it took some time But I'm finally fine We're adventurers and heartbreaks on that
Our final destination with that
We've stopped asking directions
To places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain That our lives bring
We can do hard today
We're adventurers and heartbreaks on map We might get lost but we're okay now We've stopped asking directions To places they've never been And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things