U.S. Women’s National Team and San Diego Wave forward Alex Morgan announced she will be retiring as she and her husband Servando Carrasco are expecting their second child. Morgan, 35, will play one final game for the San Diego Wave on Sunday against the North Carolina Courage at home, she announced in a video posted to her social media Thursday.

“I have so much clarity about this decision, and I’m so happy to be able to finally tell you,” Morgan said. “It has been a long time coming and this decision wasn’t easy. At the beginning of 2024, I felt in my heart and soul that this was the last season that I would play soccer.

“Soccer was a part of me for 30 years, and it was one of the first things that I ever loved. I gave everything to this sport, and what I got in return was more than I could have ever dreamed of.”

Morgan played her final game with the USWNT in June before the Olympics, a 3-0 win over South Korea in Minnesota. Coach Emma Hayes made plenty of headlines for leaving her off the Olympic squad, and Morgan remained with the Wave during the summer.

Morgan has been with the Wave since 2022, having previously played for the Orlando Pride and Portland Thorns FC in the NWSL, along with international stints in Lyon in 2017 and with Tottenham during the COVID-19 pandemic.

She will retire a two-time World Cup winner with the USWNT in 2015 and 2019 and a two-time Olympic medalist (gold in 2012 and bronze in 2021). In her 224 USWNT appearances, she scored 123 goals — leaving her ninth on the all-time list for team appearances, and fifth for most goals scored in the program’s history.

Morgan first broke through with the United States U-20 team in 2008, when she was early in her collegiate career at the University of California, Berkeley. She debuted for the senior national team in 2010, picking up her first cap on March 31, 2010, against Mexico.

Morgan was the youngest member of the 2011 World Cup squad at age 22, scoring her first goal in the hallowed competition in a 3-1 semifinal victory before opening the scoring in the final against Japan. The showing made her undroppable for the USWNT for over a decade, as she became a natural heir to Abby Wambach at striker. Morgan also began her club career that year, kicking off a long-nomadic saga with the Western New York Flash, playing for five teams between 2011 and 2017.

Regardless of her club situation, Morgan remained consistent with the national team. She became the face of the program, winning the U.S. Soccer Female Athlete of the Year in 2012 and landing on the FIFA World Player of the Year shortlist that year. In terms of individual honors, she will retire as a four-time CONCACAF Player of the Year, a six-time member of the FIFPro Women’s World 11, the 2022 NWSL Golden Boot winner and a member of the USWNT All-Time Best XI in 2013.

“I grew up on this team, it was so much more than soccer,” Morgan said in U.S. Soccer’s official release about her retirement. “It was the friendships and the unwavering respect and support among each other, the relentless push for global investment in women’s sports, and the pivotal moments of success both on and off the field. I am so incredibly honored to have borrowed the crest for more than 15 years. I learned so much about myself in that time and so much of that is a credit to my teammates and our fans.

“I feel immense pride in where this team is headed, and I will forever be a fan of the USWNT. My desire for success may have always driven me, but what I got in return was more than I could have ever asked and hoped for.”

Morgan also contributed massively off the field, leading the USWNT players’ fight for equal pay — she was one of the five players who put their names to the first Equal Employment Opportunity Commission complaint that kicked off the long battle in 2016 before the team sued U.S. Soccer in 2019.

As important as that fight was, she built a legacy off the field in the NWSL as well, serving as a key witness for Mana Shim, and then Sinead Farrelly, as they went on record with The Athletic in 2019 to share their stories of abuse they had suffered in the NWSL. Morgan, in addition to going on record, was a key figure behind the scenes in pushing the league to add protections for players against harassment and other abuses of power.

She also posted emails between Shim, Farrelly and then-commissioner Lisa Baird proving the league was aware that the two players were trying to come forward with additional information. “If we don’t absolutely claw and fight for ourselves, we’ve seen that we’re not going to get anything,” Morgan told The Athletic in 2021.

Morgan has always been willing to enter that fight, and with her retirement announcement Thursday, has left the game better for it.

Required reading

(Photo: C. Morgan Engel / Getty Images)





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