USWNT’s Alyssa Naeher was unflappable in Olympic gold medal match

PARIS – Alyssa Naeher might as well change the nickname on her Wikipedia page to “Captain America” or “Secretary of Defense” herself.  

The USWNT goalkeeper’s one-handed stop – like a basketball defender blocking someone at the rim – on a header from Brazil’s Adriana in the fourth minute of stoppage time saved the day and preserved the Americans’ 1-0 win in the Olympic gold medal match at the 2024 Paris Games. Minutes later, her teammates pounced on her after the referee blew the final whistle, ending more than 10 minutes of stoppage time. 

Naeher was unflappable all match. 

In stoppage time of the first half, the 36-year-old leapt off her line, skyward and to the right. She pawed at the ball floating toward the back of the net and deflected it to the side, her body crashing down, the hopes of a gold medal still intact. Brazil’s Gabi Porthilo had come within inches of breaking a scoreless tie. 

‘We would not be here right now without Alyssa,’ forward Sophia Smith said after the win. ‘And we just wanna remind her that every day because she’s so special.’

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

For much of the Paris Olympics tournament, the USWNT’s defense excelled at a level that allowed Naeher to hardly break a sweat. 

That was not the case in the first half against Brazil. The Americans needed their keeper to be at her best in the gold-medal match Saturday. She was. 

Naeher’s first clutch save of the day came in the second minute of the match. Ludmila, who caused problems for the U.S. back line all afternoon, slithered through the defense and fired the match’s first shot on net. But Naeher was there to swallow up the weakly hit attempt.

And Naeher was there when it mattered most.

Alyssa Naeher saves vs. Brazil

The USA TODAY app brings you every Team USA medal — right when it happens. Download for full Olympics coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and much more.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY