Current:Home > MyEngland's Sarina Wiegman should be US Soccer's focus for new USWNT coach -Elevate Capital Network
England's Sarina Wiegman should be US Soccer's focus for new USWNT coach
View
Date:2025-04-19 11:34:41
Now that Vlatko Andonovski is gone, U.S. Soccer’s next move needs to be opening the vault for Sarina Wiegman.
England’s current coach is not only the best in the women’s game. She’s one of the best in the game, period, alongside Pep Guardiola, Jürgen Klopp, Carlo Ancelotti and Didier Deschamps.
The World Cup final Sunday is Wiegman’s second in a row, having taken the Netherlands there four years ago. And she accomplished this despite losing three of her best players to injuries before the tournament and Lauren James for the last two games because of a red-card suspension. Her teams have won the last two European championships, England last year and the Dutch in 2017.
FAST FIX:USWNT doesn't have four years to fix flaws exposed at World Cup
“Going to a final feels really good. I’m the lucky one in that, now, in the two past tournaments I’ve went to the final,” Wiegman said Wednesday. “You don’t take anything for granted. It’s so hard to reach a final even though we might be the favorite. There are many favorite teams that are really good who, in the group stage, already had finished."
WORLD CUP CENTRAL: 2023 Women's World Cup Live Scores, Schedules, Standings, Bracket and More
Or, like the U.S. women, were finished after the round of 16, their earliest exit ever at a World Cup or an Olympics.
Prying Wiegman away from England will not be easy. She’s under contract through 2025, and Football Association chief executive Mark Bullingham said any inquiries, from U.S. Soccer or elsewhere, would be “100% rejected.”
“We’ve seen lots of rumors, and look, she is a special talent. We know that,” Bullingham said. “From our side, she’s contracted through until 2025. We think she’s doing a great job. We’re obviously huge supporters of her and I think, hopefully, she feels the same way. She’s someone we’d like to have with us for a very long time.”
There are other candidates who might be easier get, including OL Reign’s Laura Harvey, who was the runner-up to Andonovski four years ago. Or Australia coach Tony Gustavsson, an assistant to Jill Ellis at both the 2015 and 2019 World Cups.
Emma Hayes, who has led Chelsea to six Super League titles and five FA Cups, also would be a solid choice. Same for San Diego Wave coach Casey Stoney, who was on Phil Neville’s England staff for the 2019 World Cup. And there was a report from Spain this week that U.S. Soccer had already reached out to Lluís Cortés, who made Barcelona into a powerhouse.
But U.S. Soccer should settle for nothing less than the best for the USWNT. That’s Wiegman.
The challenge of taking the USWNT back to the top might be enough to appeal to Wiegman. But U.S. Soccer can —and should — make a pitch that Wiegman will help move the game forward by taking this job.
Wiegman currently makes a little over $500,000 a year, according to The Times of London. That’s about $60,000 more than U.S. Soccer paid Andonovski in 2021, the most recent information available, but less than the $718,000-plus Jill Ellis made in 2019, after winning her second World Cup title.
It’s also a fraction of the $6.3 million England is playing men’s coach Gareth Southgate.
Bullingham blamed the massive gap between Wiegman and Southgate’s salaries on “the market,” and said women’s salaries will catch up “over time.” That, however, is just another way of telling women to wait their turn. The market is whatever the players involved want it to be, and U.S. Soccer has shown willingness to turn the market on its head in the name of equality.
If U.S. Soccer offers to make Wiegman the first million-dollar coach, she will show other coaches — and countries — what’s possible. Just as North Carolina coach Anson Dorrance showed Wiegman what was possible all those years ago, when she played alongside Mia Hamm and Kristine Lilly as the Tar Heels won the 1989 NCAA title.
“I still use some things I learned that year in terms of how to get the best out of others, and myself,” Wiegman told The Athletic last year. “But the biggest thing I took away was the determination that what I experienced in the US, I wanted in the Netherlands too.”
As its sub-par performances at the World Cup and the Tokyo Olympics showed, the USWNT needs an exceptional tactician who will utilize his or her players’ strengths rather than trying to shoehorn them into a specific system. But U.S. Soccer also needs to make a bold move to let the rest of the world know that, recent results aside, the USWNT has no intention of ceding its spot at the top of the game.
Hiring Wiegman would accomplish both of those things.
The USWNT has the talent to be the best in the world. U.S. Soccer needs to do everything it can to make sure its coach is the best, too.
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.
veryGood! (74694)
Related
- British golfer Charley Hull blames injury, not lack of cigarettes, for poor Olympic start
- Black pastors see popular Easter services as an opportunity to rebuild in-person worship attendance
- Civil rights icon Malcolm X gets a day of recognition in Nebraska, where he was born in 1925
- Logan Lerman Details How He Pulled Off Proposal to Fiancée Ana Corrigan
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- California law enforcement agencies have hindered transparency efforts in use-of-force cases
- A look at where Caitlin Clark, Paige Bueckers and others are headed when season ends
- Longtime Kansas City Chiefs cheerleader Krystal Anderson dies after giving birth
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- The Bankman-Fried verdict, explained
Ranking
- American news website Axios laying off dozens of employees
- Tank complex that leaked, polluting Pearl Harbor's drinking water has been emptied, military says
- Truck driver convicted of vehicular homicide for 2022 crash that killed 5 in Colorado
- Avril Lavigne, Katy Perry, Meryl Streep and More Stars Appearing at iHeartRadio Music Awards
- What polling shows about Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Harris’ new running mate
- Excavation at French hotel reveals a medieval castle with a moat, coins and jewelry
- Beyoncé called out country music at CMAs. With 'Act II,' she's doing it again.
- Underage teen workers did 'oppressive child labor' for Tennessee parts supplier, feds say
Recommendation
Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
US economic growth for last quarter is revised up slightly to a healthy 3.4% annual rate
Love Is Blind's Brittany Mills Reveals the Contestant She Dated Aside From Kenneth Gorham
Israel and Hamas war rages despite U.N. cease-fire demand, as U.N. envoy accuses Israel of genocide in Gaza
Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
A mail carrier was among 4 people killed in northern Illinois stabbings
GOP-backed bill proposing harsher sentences to combat crime sent to Kentucky’s governor
Under threat of a splintering base, Obama and Clinton bring star power to rally Dems for Biden