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Home » ‘Triple Espresso’ led the USWNT to Olympic gold. Now, they must move forward | USA women’s football team
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‘Triple Espresso’ led the USWNT to Olympic gold. Now, they must move forward | USA women’s football team

Savannah HeraldBy Savannah HeraldMay 29, 20257 Mins Read
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‘Triple Espresso’ led the USWNT to Olympic gold. Now, they must move forward | USA women's football team
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The first time we saw the free-flowing force of Mallory Swanson, Sophia Wilson (née Smith) and Trinity Rodman starting together was 1 June 2024 – Emma Hayes’ first match in charge of the national team, with little more than a month to go before the Olympics.

Their mutual arrival to the US frontline was delayed by injuries and other uncertainties, but they emerged just in time for a blistering gold medal run. The self-styled ‘Triple Espresso’ trio combined for 10 of the USA’s 12 goals in Paris. They were dynamic. They were fun. They were each capable of match-saving heroics, sparks of individual radiance that propelled the team to the next round: Rodman’s heroic quarter-final strike in the 105th minute against Japan; Wilson’s goal 95 minutes into a grueling semi final against Germany; then Swanson with the decisive gold medal goal against Brazil.

That was the last time we’d see them together for quite some time.

On 5 March (one week after the US lost to Japan in the SheBelieves Cup final), Wilson announced she was expecting her first child. On 8 May, Swanson shared news of her first pregnancy as well. Rodman dealt with back issues, making her first appearance for the US since the Olympics in April (she took just five minutes to score). The winger has since has stepped away, focusing on rehabbing her chronic back pain.

Given their youth and unique talents (Rodman, Wilson and Swanson will be just 25, 26 and 29, respectively, at the next World Cup) it seems improbable they won’t eventually return as a trio. But the adage Steinbeck made famous from a Robert Burns poem certainly rings true in soccer: the best laid plans of sports and its stars oft times go awry.

Right now, Hayes is focused on building the team she’ll need to make a trophy-contending run at the 2027 World Cup. We’re two years out, wading through the ‘build depth’ and ‘experiment’ phase, but Hayes can’t wait too long to prepare the team she’ll need to contend with the world’s elite on the most competitive international stage in soccer. Nor can she hang her managerial hat on the expectation that Triple Espresso will be available and healthy when Brazil 2027 arrives.

Last week, Hayes named the 24-player training camp roster that will face Fifa’s No 17-ranked China this Saturday, and No 40 Jamaica next Tuesday. The squad includes an interesting array of goal threats aspiring to stick around while Triple Espresso is unavailable.

In this way, the trio’s absence can be seen as a good thing. It forces a talented player pool to identify and perfect replicable goalscoring moments, while whittling down a wider range of players who can provide those goals. It also provides a young, emerging generation of players the opportunity to accrue valuable minutes against top competition, and potentially claim a lasting role.

Nobody has taken firmer hold of that opportunity than Alyssa Thompson. After missing the ‘24 Olympic team, the 20-year-old winger played her way back into the national team picture with a series of statement performances with Angel City in the NWSL. She’s kept up the pace in 2025, scoring five goals with two assists in nine matches for ACFC, averaging 0.8 goal contributions per 90, the highest such mark any NWSL player in camp.

Alyssa’s 19-year-old sister Gisele joins her this window, and though she plays fullback for Angel City (and was placed there in previous call ups) the younger Thompson sister that loves to get forward is listed as one on this roster. Given Gisele’s ability to contribute in the attack (the right back has three assists and one goal in 10 appearances for Angel City, with the highest assists per 90 of any NWSL player present) it seems Hayes’ penchant for helping to mold young players could be in effect with the younger Thompson.

Rodman, Wilson and Swanson were a key part of the US success at the 2024 Olympics. Photograph: Brad Smith/ISI/Getty Images

Of the seven forwards on this US roster, four are aged 22 or younger. The Thompson sisters are joined by 22-year-old Michelle Cooper, who returns to camp with two goals and one assist in five games for first-place Kansas City, and 21-year-old Utah Royals midfielder/forward Ally Sentnor. Cooper and Sentnor both collected their first USWNT goals in the SheBelieves Cup. 24-year-old Emma Sears also returns to the roster with five goals in ten games for Racing Louisville, one among many examples that club output matters a lot for Hayes in this era.

Trusted veterans like 32-year-old Lynn Biyendolo are also present, bringing the intrepid experience of 78 appearances and 22 goals for the USWNT with her, alongside 25-year-old Cat Macario, who was coached by Hayes at Chelsea, where she scored 11 goals across all competitions this year.

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It seems likely Hayes will deploy those one of those two more experienced forwards as strikers atop her preferred 4-2-3-1, with some degree of rotation among the wingers around them while she experiments.

Of course, replicating the output of Triple Espresso will be a team effort. In midfield, Kansas City veteran Lo’eau LaBonta has earned her first USWNT callup at the age of 32, where she is joined by three teenagers (Claire Hutton, Lily Yohannes, and Olivia Moultrie) and gold medalists Sam Coffey and Lindsey Heaps. A mix of athleticism and ball skills pervades that midfield group, where perhaps even bigger questions linger than among the Espresso-less forward formation.

With multiple outside backs present that like to play an attacking role (including veterans like Emily Fox or Crystal Dunn, as well as first time callup Kerry Abello and Houston Dash defender Avery Patterson, who has two goals for the Dash this season), we can expect them to play a part in what looks like an aggressive attack that may need to unlock compact defenses.

By no means are any of these players secure in their spots. Hayes has emphasized the importance of club form; that seems evident in this camp. Olympians Korbin Albert and Jaedyn Shaw, as well as Mia Fishel (who recently returned from ACL injury) have all been semt to the concurrent U23 camp, but are each notable talents that can return to the senior squad. Other players in the U23 camp, like NWSL rookie standout Riley Tiernan – who is tied with her teammate Alyssa Thompson for seven goal contributions, the second-most in NWSL – have plenty of time to work their way in through the league or youth national team performances.

Hayes noted in her roster drop that, “As has been one of our focuses this year, this camp and the following camp are going to be two amazing opportunities to develop squad depth.”

There’s nothing quite like Triple Espresso. But the coming week of tests promises continuation of the year’s theme: experimentation, rotation, and essential experience for a broader player pool that will help form the foundation of any trophy-contending team.

Read the full story from the original source


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