World Cup winner Rose Lavelle eyes FA Cup glory with Manchester City

Like most sporting stars Rose Lavelle longs for the stadiums to be opened again so she can play in front of the fans. (Supplied by Manchester City)
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Updated 30 October 2020
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World Cup winner Rose Lavelle eyes FA Cup glory with Manchester City

  • The American midfielder will face Everton at Wembley just over two months after moving to England
  • On Sunday, Lavelle and her team-mates take on Everton at Wembley in the delayed 2020 FA Cup final

DUBAI: For a second or two, the World Cup winner was left speechless.

“No way, wait really? Your name is my name?” she asks the star-struck little fan standing in front of her just weeks after playing a major role in the US Women’s National Team triumph at the 2019 Women’s World Cup in France.

Rose Lavelle had just met Rose Lavelle. 

The video of the Manchester City’s new American star meeting her mini-me namesake went viral, confirming her own popularity on the back of the wildly successful World Cup.

“That was so cute, I thought I was being pranked for a second,” Lavelle, preparing for the FA Cup final on Sunday, told Arab News. “It was so cool, and I think it’s so special to be able to give back to the sport that same way that it gave to me. I know how huge it was for me to have role models that I looked up to, that I tried to envision myself being in their shoes one day. So I think it’s so cool now that I’m able to hopefully serve that same inspiration and motivation for younger players to be in my shoes one day.”

(When Rose Lavelle met Rose Lavelle: YouTube video)

Lavelle is being modest, playing down her own astonishing rise over the last few years.

At last year’s World Cup, she scored her nation’s second goal in the final against the Netherlands and was named in the tournament’s best 11. She also claimed the Bronze Ball as the third best player in the tournament. Later she was ranked sixth in the The Best FIFA Football Awards 2019. In August this year, having been transferred from Washington Spirit to NWSL rivals OL Reign, she made the move to Manchester City.

Lavelle joined a team bursting with some of the game’s best players including England captain Steph Houghton, 2019 UEFA Women's Player of the Year Lucy Bronze, England stalwart Jill Scott, former Olympique Lyonnais left-back Alex Greenwood and fellow USWNT World Cup winner Sam Mewis.

“I’ve obviously played against a lot of these girls at international level, but I think coming here I have even more respect for them because I see how talented they are and how much they know the game,” Lavelle said. “It’s been awesome to come here and play with them, and not against them, and also to be able to learn from them every single day. I feel like I’m constantly learning and getting better every day.”

For obvious reasons, the move could not have come at a more complicated time, and Lavelle had to quarantine for two weeks on arriving in England. Still, the 25-year-old has taken the disruptions in her stride.

“It’s been pretty good being on the team and there was definitely a little bit of adjustment,” she said. “To be fair, I still feel like I’m kind of adjusting and learning. But it’s something that’s making me so much better. It’s great to be in this environment, I’m really grateful to have this opportunity especially with everything that’s going on, having this avenue to play every single day.”

Manchester City’s women’s team are now fifth in the FA Women’s Super League (WSL) standings, having won two, drawn two and lost one of their early season matches. They also beat Everton 3-1 in the FA Women’s League Cup, a match in which Lavelle scored a brilliantly kicked equalizer.  All have been played to the backdrop of empty stadiums.

“Obviously the fans make the atmosphere so fun and incredible, and I would love to experience playing in front of an English crowd,” she said. “I’ve never played in front of a crowd in England before. I’ve only ever trained in England, I’d never played a game. But obviously health and safety are the most important things, so it’s understandable. I think whenever sports allow fans again, something that we all know and take for granted, it’ll be a fun time.”

On Sunday, Lavelle and her team-mates take on Everton at Wembley in the delayed 2020 FA Cup final, the competition’s 50th, with Manchester City having beaten West Ham 3-0 in the 2019 edition. There will also be an opportunity to reach the 2021 FA Cup final later this season. 

“One of the reasons I wanted to come here was there were so many different opportunities to win different titles, so it’s so exciting to have this opportunity to play in a final, a final so early in the season,” Lavelle said. “And also, potentially to play in another FA Cup final this [season], that would be unprecedented.” 

A win on Sunday will come just 16 months after the finest moment of Lavelle’s career, a winning role in the USWNT’s triumph at the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup in France.

“Winning the World Cup was such an incredible moment, we had put so much work the past three years during that cycle into it,” she said. “So when the whistle blew, oh my gosh, thank God we had a team that accomplished what we set out to do, it was such an amazing thing seeing how hard we worked and how much we pushed each other. It was that much more rewarding because we knew how much we put into that moment. So to see it come to fruition, I don’t even have words for it, it was incredible.”




Winning the World Cup was a big moment in Rose Lavelle's career, but she's too humble to take all the praise. (AFP)

It takes a lot to get Lavelle to talk about her wonderful goal in that final, a run, shimmy and left-footed shot from the edge of the penalty area to seal the 2-0 win on 69 minutes. But when she does, it is typically to shower praise on her colleagues with a forensic description of the team’s move that led to her big moment. 

“Honestly that goal was a testament to our whole team I think,” she said. “When you look at the play, so much had unfolded because of so many other players on the field. It started with Crystal (Dunn) winning a great tackle stopping their transmission, she passed it off to Sam [Mewis] in midfielder, and I was able to take up the space I needed. In the final couple of seconds leading up to that, Alex was holding up their center back the whole time, and I was waiting to slip to her but she was occupying them, so I was able to get a shot in because of that. More than anything it was testament to our team, the relationship we have on the field.”

The USWNT have now won the World Cup a record four times, producing some unforgettable final moments along the way.

Michelle Akers dramatically slicing through Norway’s stumbling defenders in 1991. Brandi Chastain’s iconic celebration in 1999 after scoring the winning penalty in the shootout win over China. Carli Lloyd’s devastating first-half hat-trick against Japan in the 5-2 win in 2015. And now, the image of Lavelle, fists pumping in pure elation after her goal had finally floored the Netherlands.

You’d never hear her say it, but she has now earned the right to be mentioned alongside USWNT heroes like Akers, Chastain, Lloyd, Mia Hamm, Abby Wambach, Megan Rapinoe and Alex Morgan.

“I always say that I was obsessed with the US Women’s National Team growing up,” Lavelle said. “That was the team that I watched religiously, I was just the biggest fangirl. They were such an inspiration to me and I wanted to be in their shoes so bad that it inspired me to keep working and to keep playing.”

On the horizon will be the 2023 World Cup in Australia and New Zealand, and a chance of a fifth American title, and before that plenty of opportunities to win the trophies Lavbelle craves with Manchester City. In the immediate future, Manchester City face Liverpool in the League Cup three days after the FA Cup final, before a double header of WSL and League Cup matches against local rivals Manchester United later in November.

But for now, the FA Cup final at Wembley, and another winner’s medal, is all that matters.

“Obviously I’ve never played in an FA Cup final, but I think it will be something I’m going to remember forever,” Lavelle said.

The list of unforgettable Lavelle moments is growing by the day.


Injuries a blessing in disguise for Australia as new Ashes heroes emerge

Updated 15 January 2026
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Injuries a blessing in disguise for Australia as new Ashes heroes emerge

  • The absence of key bowlers did not hamper the home team’s determination to win the series

LONDON: Before the recently concluded Ashes series between Australia and England began, I mused on the potential impact which injuries to two of Australia’s fast bowlers may have on the outcome.

There was a sense, at least amongst England’s supporters, that they had a chance of winning the series or, at least, running Australia very close. As those supporters are now well aware, any such hopes were dashed in disappointing fashion.

England’s performances have been raked over ad infinitum in the media and on social media. It seems almost unnecessary to add to this welter of views and analyses.

However, it is worth going back to my pre-series thoughts about the potential impact of injuries and whether they did have an impact on the outcome.

One of the triumvirate of Australian quicks, Josh Hazlewood, was ruled out of the series before it began. Doubts over a second member, Pat Cummins, the team captain, were confirmed before the first Test. Ongoing back problems restricted him to one Test, the third.

This placed significant responsibility on the third member, Mitchell Starc, as well as the replacements for Hazlewood and Cummins and the stand-in captain, Steve Smith. Starc rose to the occasion magnificently.

At lunch on the second day, England sat in the box seat, 100 runs ahead and nine second innings wickets standing. By the end of the day, Australia had won the match. This was thanks to a seven-wicket haul by Starc and a swashbuckling 123 by Travis Head that left England “shellshocked,” according to its captain, Ben Stokes.

Head had been promoted to open because of injury to regular opener, Usman Khawaja. In the second Test at Brisbane, Starc reduced England to five for two in its first innings, going on to claim six wickets. It was a replacement quick bowler, Michael Nesser, who took the honors in the second innings with five wickets in Australia’s victory.

At Adelaide in the third Test, Starc was relatively quiet, claiming four wickets, as Cummins returned to claim six, along with spinner Nathan Lyon, who added five to take his total Test wickets to 567. He would not add more because of a hamstring injury. Cummins also sat out the rest of the series.

Although England won the fourth Test at Melbourne, in another two-day contest, Australia claimed the fifth Test at Sydney, where Starc took five wickets to take his series total to 31 and become player of the series. It may be safely concluded that injuries to key Australian bowlers did not hamper Australia’s determination to win the series.

One English broadcaster of considerable experience opined that England had played Australia’s second XI for most of the time. Although, in addition to key bowlers, Australia was without opening batter, Khawaja, for 1.5 Tests, this seems to be pushing the impact of injuries too far.

It also begs the question of why England could not take advantage. Three quick bowlers left the series due to injury, dealing a blow to a strategy based on fast bowlers.

Both Mark Wood and Jofra Archer have had their careers blighted by injury in recent years and it was little surprise that Wood’s tour ended after the first Test and Archer’s after the third.

Gus Atkinson followed them in Melbourne, whilst the super-human efforts to which Ben Stokes insisted on subjecting his body, finally got the better of him in the final Test. None of the batters got physically injured sufficiently to cause them to miss a Test.

The postmortems on where it all went wrong for England have intensified since the fifth Test was concluded. There are myriad views ranging from ex-players, to broadcasters, print and press media and anyone who loves the game.

The England and Wales Cricket Board will conduct an internal review. It will not be the first one and probably not the last. At the heart of any review should be a central question: If the two teams were judged to be close in ability prior to the series, as they were by most pundits, how did that judgement translate into a 4-1 advantage for Australia?

All manner of accusations have been levelled at England’s players and management.

Amongst these are inadequate preparation, poor technique, inferior mental toughness, arrogance, an unwavering belief in the aggressive, fearless, strategy adopted over the last three years, a laissez-faire culture that has led to a lack of discipline, and a drinking culture. This is a long charge sheet.

There is an old saying that cricket is played in the head. The strategy adopted by England over the last three years has put into the players’ heads the need to be positive and aggressive. Some have been confused by this mantra and have moved away from playing their natural game.

Joe Root has been an example. His class and technique do not need him to be any more aggressive than his talent naturally facilitates. The best opponents — India and Australia — have prepared themselves for England’s approach.

In this last series Australia effectively nullified it, except for several sessions. One of these was at Adelaide, where England made a bold attempt to chase down a target of 424 runs. The consensus view is that Australia outplayed England in the basics of the game.

Glenn McGrath, who took 563 Test wickets for Australia between 1993 and 2007, said that he “bored” people out. He aimed to hit the top of off stump with every delivery, saying that “it is pretty simple stuff, but the complicated thing is to keep it simple.”

This requires a combination of mental discipline and technical skill. Australia’s bowlers followed this approach more successfully than England’s. Australia’s batters scored faster than England when they needed to do so. When conditions changed, they adapted, as in the first innings in Brisbane where they ground out a total of 511 to gain a lead of 177 runs.

In the aftermath of the series defeat, Stokes reflected that “we’re at an interesting place as a team. What we managed to achieve in the first two-and-a-half years was very good.

“We wanted to grow as a team and we wanted to be even more consistent. If anything, we’ve done the opposite. We've started losing more. When that is happening on a consistent basis … you need to look at the drawing board and make some adjustments to get you back on the path of success.”

This suggests an acceptance that there is a problem and that a revised strategy may be implemented in which a return to the basics of the game and an acceptance that the match situation needs to be better assessed might be expected.

It also suggests that Stokes is thinking along different lines to the coach, who has said that he is “open to progress, open to evolution and some nipping and tucking,” but wants “ultimately to be able to steer the ship.”

In the first innings on day two of the third Test at Adelaide, with England reeling on 71 for four, Stokes played an innings which was the antithesis of the team’s attacking strategy.

In 41 degrees Celsius, he was targeted relentlessly by Australia’s attack, taking blows to his body and head, scoring 45 from 151 by the close of play. The following day he was finally dismissed for 83 from 198 deliveries. It was as if he was saying to his fellow batters, there are times when it is acceptable to adopt a different approach, according to the circumstance of the match.

It remains to be seen if there will be a change of approach or personnel when England’s next Test series is played against New Zealand in June. The next action is the T20 World Cup in India and Sri Lanka, a format which demands attacking approaches.

A failed campaign will place even greater pressure on England’s management. They are low on credit, having left behind a feeling of disappointment and anti-climax in Australia, for whom injuries proved to be a blessing in disguise.