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Emma Hayes aims to replicate her Chelsea success with U.S. women's soccer

Kevin Baxter, Los Angeles Times on

Published in Soccer

NEW YORK — The women's national soccer team hasn't won an Olympic championship in 12 years, its longest drought ever. Yet for Emma Hayes, the woman tasked to get the U.S. back to the top of the medal podium, memories of the 2012 tournament have little to do with gold medals.

The Games were played in England that year and Hayes' father, Sid, became enamored with the Americans. So much so that when Hayes took the head coaching job with the Chelsea women's team that same summer, he urged her to remake the English game in the U.S. model.

She did, hoisting 16 trophies. So with little left to win in England, Hayes became a candidate for the U.S. coaching job when it came open last year — and that led to another conversation with her father just before he died in September.

This time he urged her to remake the American team in the Chelsea model.

"I have a 23-minute voice note, my last conversation with my father, and it was all about 2012," Hayes said Thursday, midway through her first official day as coach of the national team. "At the end of it he goes, 'You're going to take it, won't you?'"

"I almost talked to him like I had the job, even though I didn't, because I wanted him to go with that thought. By the time October rolled around and I interviewed for the job, I just thought I could hear him in my head the whole time. 'You've got to do it,''" she said.

 

She did, although she had to wait for her contract at Chelsea to run out, which it did last weekend with Hayes winning her fifth straight Women's Super League title. Now she has less than 10 weeks to prepare the U.S. for another Summer Games, this one in France, where it will face the best field in Olympic history.

Her work will begin in earnest next week when Hayes gathers her first U.S. team in suburban Denver for training camp and the first of two friendlies with South Korea. After that, the she'll have to choose her 18 player team for Paris.

And after her success in England, she said the challenges of her new job have re-energized her.

"Working at Chelsea took my whole life for the past 12 years and I really wanted a change," said Hayes, 47, who will reportedly earn close to $2 million a year with the USWNT, making her the best-paid women's soccer coach in history. "Just driving into the same workplace six days a week, the game every three days, the intensity of all of those things. I couldn't do that again. Not at this moment in time."

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