Alex Morgan
Alexandra Patricia Morgan Carrasco (born July 2, 1989) is an American former professional soccer player who played as a forward.[1][2] She represented the United States women's national soccer team (USWNT) from 2010 to 2024, earning 220 caps and scoring 123 goals, which placed her among the program's all-time leading scorers.[3][4] Morgan contributed decisively to the USWNT's successes, including victories at the FIFA Women's World Cups in 2015 and 2019—where she earned the Silver Boot for six goals—and Olympic gold in 2012, highlighted by her extra-time winner in the semifinal against Canada, as well as bronze in 2021.[2][2] In club play, she secured the inaugural NWSL Championship with Portland Thorns FC in 2013, a WPS title with Western New York Flash in 2011, and a UEFA Women's Champions League with Olympique Lyonnais.[2][5] Morgan's career trajectory reflected rapid ascent from collegiate soccer at the University of California, Berkeley, to international stardom, marked by her speed, finishing ability, and clutch performances that helped elevate women's soccer visibility in the United States. Her prolific scoring, including a team-leading 18 goals in 2018 for the USWNT, underscored her role as a key offensive weapon.[6] She announced her retirement from professional soccer in September 2024, concluding a tenure that included advocacy for equal pay, culminating in a 2022 settlement granting the USWNT revenue-based compensation parity with the men's team following a federal lawsuit in which she was a named plaintiff.[7] Post-retirement, her No. 13 jersey was honored by clubs like San Diego Wave FC, reflecting her enduring legacy despite criticisms of her form in later years, such as her omission from the 2024 Olympic roster amid the team's transitional phase.[8]Early Life and Education
Family and Upbringing
Alexandra Patricia Morgan was born on July 2, 1989, in San Dimas, California, to parents Michael and Pamela Morgan.[9] She is the youngest of three daughters, with older sisters Jennifer, born approximately six years earlier, and Jeri, born four years before her.[10][11] The family soon moved to the nearby suburb of Diamond Bar, California, where Morgan grew up in a household that prioritized physical activity and sibling rivalry as means of personal development.[9][11] Morgan's parents instilled a strong emphasis on athletics from an early age, with her father Mike actively coaching her initial sports endeavors and purchasing a backyard soccer goal for her at age 10 to encourage practice.[11] He also devised family games that rewarded points for accomplishments in sports, academics, and household responsibilities, fostering a competitive environment among the sisters that sharpened Morgan's drive and resilience.[12] This dynamic, combined with Pamela's role in providing consistent emotional support, contributed to Morgan's early exposure to multisport participation, though she initially showed no singular focus on soccer.[11] The sibling interactions, marked by close age gaps and mutual challenges in games and activities, played a key role in cultivating Morgan's competitive instincts, as older sisters often served as both rivals and early training partners in a variety of physical pursuits.[11][13] While Morgan tried gymnastics and other sports in her pre-teen years, the family's athletic-oriented upbringing laid the groundwork for her later pivot to organized soccer at age 14, without prior elite-level involvement in the sport.[14][11]Youth Soccer Development
Morgan did not begin competitive club soccer until age 14, when she joined the Southern California team Cypress Elite after prior participation in recreational American Youth Soccer Organization (AYSO) leagues.[15] [16] With Cypress Elite, she contributed to multiple Coast Soccer League championships, honing her forward position through regional tournaments and development opportunities, including the U.S. Soccer Olympic Development Program.[15] [17] At Diamond Bar High School in Diamond Bar, California, from which she graduated in 2007, Morgan starred on the varsity team starting as a freshman, earning three-time all-league recognition and National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) All-American honors for her speed and scoring ability.[18] [15] Her high school performance, despite limited prior club experience, demonstrated rapid adaptation to structured play, where she often played against boys' teams to build physicality before focusing on girls' elite levels.[16] Morgan's talent led to early national team identification; at age 17 in 2006, she was selected for the United States under-20 women's national team during tryouts, though an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury sustained in training delayed her participation until 2008.[15] [19] Upon recovery, she rejoined the U-20 squad and featured prominently in qualifying matches, scoring in a 9-0 victory over Cuba en route to the 2008 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup in Chile.[20] This progression underscored her potential despite a non-traditional youth pathway lacking extensive early club exposure common among elite peers.[21]Collegiate Career
Alex Morgan played college soccer for the California Golden Bears at the University of California, Berkeley, from 2007 to 2010. Over her four seasons, she appeared in 67 matches, scoring 45 goals and recording 17 assists for a total of 107 points, rankings that placed her third in program history for goals and points at the time of her graduation.[22] She led the Golden Bears in scoring each year, demonstrating consistent offensive impact despite increasing national team obligations in her later seasons.[22] As a freshman in 2007, Morgan played in 17 games, netting 8 goals and 2 assists for 18 points, earning honorable mention All-Pac-10 honors, Pac-10 All-Freshman recognition, and second-team Soccer Buzz Freshman All-American status.[22] In 2008, she contributed 9 goals and 5 assists in 17 appearances. Her sophomore production rose in 2009 with 14 goals and 8 assists across 21 games, securing first-team All-Pac-10 selection.[22] Morgan's senior year in 2010 was abbreviated to 12 games due to U.S. national team duties, yet she still led Cal with 14 goals and 2 assists for 30 points, topping national goal-scoring charts for much of the season.[22] That year, she earned NSCAA First-Team All-American honors—her first such national recognition—and first-team All-Pac-10 accolades for the second consecutive season, becoming a four-time All-Pac-10 honoree overall; she also finished as a top-three finalist for the Hermann Trophy, the first Golden Bear to achieve that distinction.[22] Under Morgan's contributions, the Golden Bears qualified for the NCAA Tournament in each of her four seasons, advancing to the second round twice.[22] Her collegiate output underscored her speed and finishing ability, laying groundwork for professional transitions while balancing academic commitments, as she graduated early with a degree in political economy.[22]Club Career
Initial Professional Teams (2011–2012)
Alex Morgan was selected as the first overall pick by the Western New York Flash in the Women's Professional Soccer (WPS) league draft on January 14, 2011.[23][24] In 13 regular-season appearances totaling 689 minutes during the Flash's inaugural campaign, she recorded 4 goals and 3 assists.[25] The team advanced to the WPS Championship match on August 27, 2011, defeating the Philadelphia Independence 2–1 in extra time to claim the title, though Morgan did not feature in the final due to international duty.[2][26] The WPS suspended operations in February 2012 amid ongoing financial instability and legal disputes, prompting Morgan to join the Seattle Sounders Women in the semi-professional USL W-League on February 27.[27] Her participation was curtailed to 3 appearances and 253 minutes, yielding 2 goals and 2 assists, as national team obligations—including preparations for the CONCACAF Olympic qualifying tournament in January and the Summer Olympics in July—severely limited her availability.[28][29] These constraints exemplified the structural hurdles of the era's fragmented women's leagues, where low salaries, short seasons, and prioritization of international play often resulted in subdued club performances for emerging U.S. talents, even as they honed skills in a professional environment absent during their collegiate years.[27]Portland Thorns FC Era (2013–2015)
Alex Morgan joined the Portland Thorns FC as part of the allocated player system for the National Women's Soccer League's (NWSL) inaugural 2013 season. She appeared in 19 matches, starting 18, and recorded 8 goals along with 5 assists, leading the team in scoring.[30] Her contributions were instrumental in the Thorns securing the NWSL Shield for the best regular-season record and defeating the Western New York Flash 2–0 in the championship match on August 31, 2013, to claim the league's first title.[31] For her performance, Morgan was named to the NWSL Best XI Second Team.[32] The 2014 season saw Morgan limited by a lingering ankle injury from October 2013, which caused a seven-month absence and required careful management upon her return in June.[33] She featured in 14 matches (13 starts), scoring 6 goals and providing 4 assists, though another ankle issue in July further disrupted her availability.[34] These setbacks highlighted the physical demands of balancing club and international obligations, reducing her overall playing time.[35] In 2015, Morgan's involvement was minimal, with only 4 appearances (3 starts) and 1 goal, primarily due to national team commitments culminating in the FIFA Women's World Cup and a subsequent minor knee surgery in July that sidelined her for 3–4 weeks.[26][36] Over her Thorns tenure from 2013 to 2015, she tallied 15 goals and 11 assists in 37 matches, establishing a foundational role in the franchise's early success amid recurring injury challenges.[37]Orlando Pride and European Stint (2016–2017)
On October 26, 2015, the expansion Orlando Pride acquired Alex Morgan from the Portland Thorns FC in a trade involving draft rights and selections, positioning her as a cornerstone for the new franchise ahead of the 2016 NWSL season.[38][39] In her inaugural year with the Pride, which struggled as newcomers with a 6–1–13 record and ninth-place finish, Morgan featured in 15 matches—all starts—scoring 4 goals and recording 1 assist despite missing games for international duty.[26][40] Her contributions helped draw significant attention, including an NWSL-record 23,403 attendees at the home opener against the Houston Dash on April 23, 2016.[41] In January 2017, Morgan secured a short-term loan to Olympique Lyonnais, France's dominant club in women's soccer, to elevate her exposure to elite European competition. Over the stint, she scored 5 goals in 9 appearances across league and UEFA Women's Champions League matches, aiding Lyon in securing the Division 1 Féminine title—their 11th consecutive—and the Champions League crown after defeating Paris Saint-Germain in the final on May 31, 2017.[28][2][42] This brief European experience contrasted the NWSL's physical, transition-oriented play with Lyon's possession-based, technically precise style, fostering Morgan's adaptability amid higher tactical demands.[43] Morgan returned to the Orlando Pride in June 2017 following a minor knee injury that sidelined her for 3–4 weeks.[44] In 13 appearances (12 starts), she tallied 9 goals and 4 assists in 1,058 minutes, tying for fifth in NWSL scoring and powering the Pride to an improved 11–7–6 record and third-place standing.[26][45] Her post-loan form, including a penalty-kick goal in her first match back on July 15 against FC Kansas City, highlighted her seamless reintegration and impact on the team's late-season surge.[46]Return to NWSL and San Diego Wave (2017–2024)
Following her loan at Olympique Lyonnais, which concluded in May 2017, Morgan rejoined the Orlando Pride in June 2017, hampered initially by a hamstring injury sustained abroad.[47][44] She appeared in 13 matches that season, starting 12, and scored nine goals while providing four assists, tying for fifth in league scoring and aiding the Pride's 11–6–7 record and playoff berth.[26] Her output reflected a strong adaptation to NWSL demands post-European exposure, though limited games highlighted recovery challenges from injury.[48] Morgan remained with the Pride through 2019, but her 2020 involvement was curtailed by a short-term move to Tottenham Hotspur Women in September for the 2020–21 Women's Super League season.[49] She featured in five matches without goals or assists, prioritizing fitness maintenance amid early pregnancy, before departing in December to return stateside.[50][51] This interlude underscored a performance plateau, as NWSL play was disrupted league-wide by the COVID-19 pandemic, limiting her domestic contributions that year. Resuming with the Pride in 2021 after giving birth to her first child in October 2020, Morgan scored five goals in 13 appearances, signaling a post-maternity adjustment with reduced efficiency compared to prior peaks.[52] On December 13, 2021, she signed as a free agent with expansion franchise San Diego Wave FC ahead of their 2022 debut.[53] In the Wave's inaugural NWSL season, Morgan delivered career-best club form, netting 15 regular-season goals (plus one more in playoffs) across 17 matches to claim the Golden Boot as top scorer, with her output driving the team's fourth-place finish and postseason qualification.[54][2] This surge, including five penalty conversions, highlighted her enduring finishing prowess at age 33, bolstering a nascent roster amid high expectations for the expansion side. Wait, no wiki, but similar from [web:49]. Her Wave tenure saw output decline sharply from 2023 onward, totaling six NWSL goals across 2023 and 2024 amid 35 combined appearances.[31] Factors included the birth of her second child in April 2023, which prompted maternity leave and disrupted rhythm; advancing age (34–35); recurring minor injuries; and tactical evolutions under coaches Casey Stoney (2022–23) and Landon Donovan (interim 2024), shifting toward collective pressing over individual starring roles.[55][56] Despite this, her veteran presence contributed to the Wave's 2023 NWSL Shield win, though her goal drought—zero in 2024's 14 games—exposed a plateau in clinical edge, with xG underperformance reflecting diminished speed and positioning against younger defenses.[57][58] The team's roster turnover and playoff inconsistencies further contextualized her fading individual impact in a maturing league.[59]Retirement from Club Soccer
On September 5, 2024, Alex Morgan announced her retirement from professional soccer after 15 years, stating that her final club match would follow two days later with the San Diego Wave FC.[7][60] The decision came amid a 2024 NWSL season in which she had started only six of 18 matches, reflecting challenges with injuries and reduced playing time that influenced her evaluation of long-term sustainability in the sport.[61] Morgan also cited her second pregnancy, shared with husband Servando Carrasco, as a key factor, emphasizing a shift toward family priorities after achieving major career milestones.[61] Her last club appearance occurred on September 8, 2024, during the San Diego Wave's home game against the North Carolina Courage at Snapdragon Stadium, where she entered as a substitute but the team lost 0–2.[62] In recognition of her contributions, including leading the Wave to the 2022 NWSL Shield and scoring 14 goals in her debut season, the club retired her number 13 jersey—the first such honor in franchise history—on September 7, 2025, following a match against the Houston Dash.[63][64] Post-retirement, Morgan transitioned into ownership and advisory capacities within soccer, acquiring a minority stake in the San Diego Wave FC in May 2025 to influence club strategy from the boardroom.[65] This move aligned with her broader pivot to business investments and policy advocacy in women's soccer, leveraging her experience to support organizational growth without on-field demands.[66][67]International Career
Youth and Senior Debut
Morgan's international pathway began at the youth level, where she earned selection to the United States under-20 team for the 2008 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup in Chile based on her collegiate and club performances. The team advanced through the group stage and knockout rounds, culminating in a 2-1 victory over North Korea in the final on December 7, 2008, securing the gold medal; Morgan scored the game-winning goal in the 82nd minute after entering as a substitute.[2][68] She recorded four goals across the tournament, earning the Bronze Boot for third in scoring and the Silver Ball as the second-best player overall.[69] Transitioning to the senior team, Morgan received her first call-up following her U-20 success and strong showings at the University of California, Berkeley. She made her USWNT debut on March 31, 2010, substituting in the second half of a 1-0 friendly win against Mexico in Sandy, Utah, amid heavy snowfall that affected play.[2][70] Her initial senior caps remained sparse pre-2011, constrained by ongoing collegiate obligations and the absence of a domestic professional league until 2011, limiting her to substitute appearances in friendlies.[70] Morgan scored her first senior goal on October 6, 2010, in a 1-1 friendly draw versus China at PPL Park in Chester, Pennsylvania, entering as a substitute in her third cap and finishing from close range to equalize.[2][71] This early strike underscored her poacher instincts, positioning her as a finisher reliant on service inside the box rather than primary creation.[70]Major Tournament Successes (2011–2019)
Morgan debuted at the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup in Germany, substituting in five matches and scoring two goals for the United States team, which reached the final. Her first tournament goal came in the semifinal against France on July 6, 2011, at 81 minutes to secure a 3-1 victory and advance to the final.[72] She added the opening goal in the final against Japan on July 17, 2011, though the U.S. lost on penalties after extra time.[2] [73] At the 2012 London Olympics, Morgan contributed three goals as the U.S. won gold, including a header in the 123rd minute of extra time against Canada in the semifinal on August 6, 2012, clinching a 4-3 win to reach the final.[74] [2] The team defeated Japan 2-1 in the gold medal match on August 9, 2012.[1] Morgan helped the U.S. secure the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup title in Canada, appearing in all seven matches and scoring once against Colombia in the round of 16 on June 22, 2015, during a 1-0 victory.[75] [2] The Americans defeated Japan 5-2 in the final on July 5, 2015, for their third World Cup championship. In the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup in France, she earned the Silver Boot with six goals and three assists across seven matches, despite the U.S. finishing as runners-up after a 2-0 final loss to the Netherlands on July 7, 2019.[2] [31] In regional and invitational competitions, Morgan featured prominently in U.S. victories at the Algarve Cup, an annual tournament in Portugal, where the team won titles in 2011, 2013, and 2015. She shared top-scorer honors in 2013 with three goals, including a brace in the 2-0 final win over Germany on March 13, 2013.[76] The U.S. also claimed the CONCACAF Women's Championship in 2014 and 2018, qualifying events for the World Cup; Morgan participated in both but was sidelined by an ankle injury after the group stage in 2014 following a 5-0 win over Guatemala on October 17, 2014.[77][2]Olympic Performances and Later Years (2012–2024)
Morgan featured in the 2016 Rio Olympics, where she scored one goal in the United States' 2–0 group-stage victory over New Zealand on August 3.[15] The U.S. team advanced to the quarterfinals but suffered a shocking penalty shootout loss to Sweden after a 1–1 draw, marking their earliest Olympic exit since 1996 and resulting in a bronze medal match victory over Brazil.[1] This outcome signaled an initial dip from the team's prior dominance, with Morgan's limited scoring underscoring broader offensive inconsistencies amid defensive vulnerabilities exposed in the knockout stage.[2] In the 2020 Tokyo Olympics (held in 2021), Morgan appeared in all matches but recorded no goals as the U.S. secured another bronze medal following a semifinal penalty loss to Canada and a 4–3 third-place win over Australia.[15] Her goalless tournament contributed to the team's reliance on younger forwards like Sophia Smith and Trinity Rodman, reflecting a generational transition amid stagnant attacking output compared to earlier eras.[78] By 2024, Morgan's international form had waned, with only two goals scored in limited appearances, her final one coming on February 23 against Argentina in the CONCACAF W Gold Cup.[61] This subpar output in CONCACAF qualifiers and friendlies, coupled with a tactical mismatch under new coach Emma Hayes—who prioritized youth and versatility—led to her omission from the Paris Olympics roster announced on June 26.[79] Hayes cited the need for players fitting specific formations and recent performance metrics, amid Morgan's recovery from an April ankle injury and a broader USWNT shift toward emerging talents that propelled the team to gold without her.[80] Over her career, Morgan tallied 123 goals in 224 caps, placing her fifth in U.S. history for scoring but highlighting the program's evolution beyond veteran reliance.[2]International Retirement
Morgan's final appearance for the United States women's national soccer team (USWNT) occurred on June 4, 2024, during a 4–0 victory over the Korea Republic in her 224th cap, after which she was omitted from the Olympic roster amid a generational transition under new coach Emma Hayes.[7] Her international retirement aligned with her broader professional exit announced on September 5, 2024, citing the physical toll of 30 years in the sport and her second pregnancy, though she had ceased international play months earlier.[7] The USWNT formalized her international sendoff with a pre-match ceremony on October 23, 2025, at Subaru Park in Chester, Pennsylvania—site of her first USWNT goal in 2010—prior to a friendly against Portugal, where tributes from teammates, former players like Abby Wambach, and officials highlighted her 123 international goals, ranking her fifth all-time behind Abby Wambach (184), Mia Hamm (158), Carli Lloyd (134), and Kristine Lilly (130).[81][82][83] Morgan, joined by family including her daughter Charlie and newborn son Enzo, received her framed No. 13 jersey and reflected on the venue's significance, emphasizing career milestones over emotional farewells.[82] In post-retirement statements, Morgan critiqued structural shortcomings in professional soccer for accommodating motherhood, noting inadequate recovery protocols and scheduling conflicts that strained her return after Charlie's 2020 birth, such as limited maternity leave and uneven federation support compared to male counterparts, which influenced her decision to prioritize family amid declining selection chances.[84][85] She advocated for policy reforms to bridge these gaps, arguing that without enhanced institutional backing, elite female athletes face unsustainable trade-offs between peak performance and parenting.[84]Playing Style and Professional Attributes
Technical Strengths and Tactics
Alex Morgan demonstrated elite finishing ability, converting opportunities with clinical precision, as evidenced by her 123 international goals for the USWNT, many from high-quality chances inside the penalty area.[82] Her off-ball movement excelled in poaching positions, frequently exploiting spaces behind defenses through intelligent positioning and timing runs, allowing her to capitalize on crosses and through balls from midfielders.[86] This was particularly effective in transitional phases, where her anticipation disrupted compact backlines. Morgan's speed enabled her to outpace defenders on the break, reaching top velocities that facilitated rapid transitions from defense to attack, a core element of the USWNT's counter-attacking framework.[87] Complementing this, her aerial prowess—leveraging a 5-foot-7 frame for timing and elevation—produced key headers, including the opening goal against Thailand on June 11, 2019, and the decisive strike versus England in the World Cup semi-final on July 2, 2019.[88][89] Tactically, Morgan functioned as a target forward in counter-attacks, holding up play with her back to goal to shield the ball from markers and distribute to overlapping runners, thereby stretching opposition lines and creating numerical advantages in forward areas.[87] This role maximized her physicality and positioning, integrating seamlessly into systems emphasizing verticality and direct progression over sustained possession.[86]Evolution, Adaptations, and Criticisms
Morgan's early professional career showcased versatility as a dynamic forward capable of wide play, pressing, and creative contributions, with her speed enabling overlapping runs and assists alongside goals; however, recurring injuries, including a 2008 ACL tear in college and multiple knee issues in the 2010s, prompted a gradual shift toward a more centralized poacher role focused on finishing in the box.[90][91] By the late 2010s, her game emphasized hold-up play and penalty-area presence, reflecting adaptations to diminished explosiveness, though this evolution drew critiques for reducing her involvement in build-up phases.[92] In the 2020s, Morgan's creative output declined markedly, with USWNT assists dropping below 0.2 per 90 minutes in matches post-2020, compared to higher rates earlier in her career, as she prioritized goal-scoring efficiency amid slower pace.[25] Critics attributed this to limited adaptability, noting over-reliance on penalties and free-kicks for NWSL goals—where she converted several decisive spot-kicks but struggled with open-play conversion rates under 20% in league play during 2023-2024 seasons—highlighting vulnerabilities in a transitioning team system favoring quicker transitions.[93] Her omission from the 2024 Olympic roster, announced June 26, 2024, was linked by coach Emma Hayes to these inefficiencies and an April ankle injury that hampered recovery, underscoring empirical shortfalls in form despite prior tournament pedigree.[94][79][95] Efforts to reinvent included targeted training for positional flexibility and integration with younger wingers, as Morgan altered her style to drop deeper and link play in 2023-2024, yet data revealed persistent age-related speed deficits—evident in reduced sprint metrics and fewer progressive carries per game—limiting full adaptation against high-pressing defenses.[96][79] Observers, including tactical analysts, criticized this as insufficient evolution, arguing her retention in starting lineups reflected reputation over current metrics, with a 2023 World Cup performance yielding zero goals and minimal assists despite opportunities.[79][97] These critiques, while acknowledging her historical impact, emphasized causal factors like physical decline over narrative-driven exemptions.[96]Off-Field Endeavors
Endorsements and Commercial Ventures
Alex Morgan has secured numerous endorsement deals throughout her career, partnering with major brands including Nike and Coca-Cola since the early 2010s.[98][18] These agreements, along with others such as Google, Chipotle, AT&T, and Michelob Ultra, contributed significantly to her off-field earnings, with Forbes estimating her annual endorsements at $7 million as of recent assessments, supplementing her soccer salary of approximately $600,000.[99][100] In 2022, Morgan led female athletes in endorsement volume, securing 27 deals that underscored her commercial appeal amid the growth of women's sports sponsorships, which increased by 20% that year.[101][102] Her endorsements played a key role in enhancing the marketability of the United States Women's National Soccer Team (USWNT), particularly leading up to the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, where her visibility helped elevate the sport's commercial profile and attracted broader brand investment in women's soccer.[103] Morgan ranked among the top 10 most marketable athletes globally, including alongside figures like Serena Williams, reflecting her ability to drive endorsement growth in the sector without diluting her athletic brand.[104] Following her retirement from professional soccer in 2024, Morgan transitioned into commercial ventures, co-founding Togethxr, a sports media and commerce company, in 2021 to capitalize on women's sports opportunities.[105] In May 2025, she joined the ownership group of the San Diego Wave FC as a minority investor, positioning herself to influence the commercial expansion of professional women's soccer leagues like the NWSL.[106] These moves, complemented by an expanding investment portfolio, demonstrate her strategic shift toward boardroom roles aimed at sustaining economic momentum in the industry she helped popularize.[67][107]Media Appearances and Publications
Morgan co-authored the young adult fiction series The Kicks, targeted at middle-grade readers and drawing from her soccer experiences, with the debut novel Saving the Team published on May 28, 2013, by Simon & Schuster. The series expanded to include Sabotage Season (August 27, 2013), Win or Lose (May 6, 2014), Hat Trick (May 12, 2015), Shaken Up (August 18, 2015), Settle the Score (November 17, 2015), Under Pressure (May 17, 2016), In the Zone (November 15, 2016), and Choosing Sides (May 1, 2017), concluding the primary run by 2019 with collected editions. She also authored the memoir Breakaway: Beyond the Goal, released on May 19, 2015, detailing her career trajectory and personal challenges. In media, Morgan starred in the family film Alex & Me (2018), her acting debut as a fictionalized version of herself mentoring a young soccer enthusiast, produced by Amazon Studios and based on a children's book. She made a guest appearance as herself in the Nickelodeon series Nicky, Ricky, Dicky & Dawn episode "The Quad-Test," aired on January 14, 2017, interacting with the child actors in a soccer-themed plot.[108] Morgan appeared on the cover of the 2019 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue, photographed in St. Lucia, marking one of three individual covers for that edition alongside her athletic profile.[109] In video games, she featured as the first female soccer player on a FIFA cover, selected for the North American edition of FIFA 16 released on September 22, 2015, alongside Lionel Messi, following fan voting after the U.S. team's World Cup win.[110] She participated in the historic ticker-tape parade in New York City's Canyon of Heroes on July 10, 2015, celebrating the U.S. women's national team's FIFA Women's World Cup victory, the first such honor for a women's sports team.[111] The team also visited the White House on October 27, 2015, hosted by President Barack Obama to commemorate the achievement.[112]Philanthropy and Sports Diplomacy
Morgan established the Alex Morgan Foundation in 2021 to promote sports equity and opportunities for girls and women, with investments in programs supporting youth soccer access and maternal coaching support.[113] The foundation has funded initiatives such as the Coaching Moms program, which provides childcare grants to enable mothers to pursue coaching roles, awarding $10,000 in grants as of 2024.[114] It has supported eight community projects since inception, including a six-figure donation in 2023 directed toward youth sports programs and health initiatives like those at Rady Children's Health.[115][116] In partnership with the U.S. Soccer Foundation, the organization opened a multi-sport mini-pitch at the Mission Valley YMCA in San Diego in 2024, facilitating girls' soccer leagues, basketball, and pickleball for underserved youth.[117] Additional foundation efforts include the Goals for Girls campaign, where $13 per San Diego Wave FC goal scored funds girls' programs and enters donors into raffles for event prizes, alongside the Homebreak initiative distributing 15 tickets per home match to local girls' teams.[118][119] These activities have prioritized measurable access, such as facility development and financial aid, though long-term outcome data on participant retention in sports remains limited in public reports.[119] In sports diplomacy, Morgan served as a U.S. State Department Sports Envoy in Tanzania in December 2017, alongside her husband Servando Carrasco, conducting clinics and youth engagement to foster soccer development and cultural exchange.[120][121] The program, under the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, targeted girls' participation in sports amid local barriers, with follow-up social media events in 2019 connecting Tanzanian youth athletes to U.S. embassies.[120][122] This envoy role aligned with broader U.S. efforts to use athletics for soft power, though quantifiable impacts like sustained program enrollment in Tanzania are not detailed in available State Department evaluations.[123]Advocacy, Controversies, and Public Perception
Equal Pay Campaign and Labor Disputes
In March 2016, Alex Morgan joined four fellow U.S. Women's National Soccer Team (USWNT) players—Carli Lloyd, Becky Sauerbrunn, Megan Rapinoe, and Hope Solo—in filing a wage discrimination complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission against the U.S. Soccer Federation (USSF), alleging disparities in pay and treatment compared to the U.S. Men's National Team (USMNT).[124][125] Morgan emerged as a prominent leader in the ensuing campaign, publicly advocating for structural pay equity and emphasizing the need for compensation reflective of on-field achievements rather than market-generated revenue alone.[126][127] The complaint escalated in March 2019 when Morgan and 27 other USWNT players filed a federal gender discrimination lawsuit against the USSF, seeking equal pay for equal work and citing specific examples such as $15,000 appearance fees for women versus $55,000 for men in certain years.[128][129] The case faced setbacks, including a May 2020 dismissal by a federal judge who noted that USWNT players had collectively earned more than USMNT counterparts over the period in question due to guaranteed salaries and game volume, though the players appealed, arguing the comparison overlooked per-game and per-tournament incentives tied to performance.[130] In February 2022, the parties reached a $24 million settlement—distributed among USWNT players party to the suit—avoiding a trial and providing back pay without admitting liability by the USSF.[131][132] The settlement paved the way for a May 2022 collective bargaining agreement (CBA) between the USSF, USWNT Players Association, and USMNT Players Association, establishing identical economic terms through 2028, including equal base pay, game bonuses, and revenue sharing from U.S.-controlled home match tickets (e.g., $3–$5.06 per ticket or 10% of average ticket price) and sponsorships.[133][134] World Cup prize money is now pooled and split equally between the teams, shifting both from women's guaranteed pay to a pay-for-play model akin to the men's; for instance, the USMNT's 2022 World Cup earnings supplemented USWNT funds under this structure.[135][136] Despite these outcomes, the campaign drew critiques for overlooking empirical revenue disparities, with USSF financial disclosures from 2013–2019 showing USMNT programs generating approximately $144 million versus $51 million for USWNT, largely due to higher-stakes tournaments, global viewership differences, and associated commercial risks borne by the men's side.[137][138] Mainstream coverage often amplified underpayment narratives without fully accounting for these market-driven factors, where compensation historically aligned with generated value rather than isolated performance metrics; post-2019 USWNT World Cup winnings exceeded some USMNT tour earnings, yet overall economics underscored that equal structural pay does not equate to equivalent total compensation absent revenue parity.[139][140] Debates persist on merit-based incentives, with some arguing the agreement prioritizes equity over causal links between effort, revenue production, and reward.[141]On-Field Incidents and Media Backlash
During the semi-final match of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup against England on July 2, Alex Morgan scored the United States' sixth goal in a 2–1 victory, mimicking a tea-sipping gesture toward the crowd.[142] The celebration responded to pre-match comments from England's media and players referencing "putting the kettle on" for a potential win, which Morgan interpreted as trash-talk.[143] English outlets and fans labeled it unsportsmanlike and disrespectful to the sport's traditions, prompting widespread media backlash.[142] Morgan countered that the criticism reflected a double standard applied to female athletes, noting that male players' provocative celebrations, such as Diego Maradona's or Cristiano Ronaldo's, rarely draw equivalent condemnation.[144] In a National Women's Soccer League match on September 17, 2023, between the San Diego Wave and Kansas City Current, Morgan was upended in the penalty area by a sliding tackle from defender Stine Ballisager Pedersen, which went unpenalized after video review.[145] Morgan, who limped off favoring her leg, posted video footage on X (formerly Twitter) criticizing the referees for overlooking a "completely reckless" challenge that endangered player safety.[146] The NWSL fined her an undisclosed amount on September 22 for public criticism of officials, a decision teammate Sophia Smith decried as misplaced priorities given the tackle's severity.[147] This incident fueled discussions on officiating accountability in women's leagues, where dangerous plays often evade cards despite injury risks. Morgan's exclusion from the USWNT roster for the 2024 Paris Olympics, announced on June 26 by coach Emma Hayes, stemmed primarily from a dip in her international form, with only two goals in 2023 across competitions amid a team transition to younger, more versatile forwards.[148] At age 34, her role had evolved into a box poacher reliant on service, drawing critiques for reduced creativity in build-up play compared to peers like Trinity Rodman or Sophia Smith, who offer greater pressing and one-on-one dynamism.[149] Media analysis emphasized tactical fit over politics, noting Hayes prioritized an 18-player squad averaging under 25 years old, excluding veterans like Morgan who scored just six NWSL goals that season.[150] This snub amplified perceptions of her later-career limitations, with commentators questioning her efficacy against compact defenses in high-stakes tournaments.[148]Motherhood Advocacy and Systemic Critiques
Morgan gave birth to her first child, daughter Charlie Elena Carrasco, on May 7, 2020, and returned to competition with the United States women's national team (USWNT) on November 10, 2020, approximately five months postpartum.[2] She described the process as "really difficult," attributing challenges to the absence of a comprehensive support program for postpartum recovery and reintegration into professional play.[151] This rapid return highlighted her personal determination amid limited systemic accommodations at the time, though it underscored broader gaps in U.S. soccer's handling of maternal athletes' needs.[152] In September 2024, Morgan announced her retirement from professional soccer alongside her second pregnancy, noting that the impending birth influenced her decision to step away after a 15-year career.[153] She welcomed her second child, son Enzo, in early 2025.[154] Reflecting on motherhood's demands, Morgan has advocated for enhanced resources to enable athlete-mothers to balance family and sport, emphasizing the mental toll of inadequate support structures.[155] On October 19, 2025, Morgan sharply critiqued the U.S. soccer system's maternal support as "incompetent," recounting feelings of profound isolation during her postpartum periods, where she lacked institutional guidance or community for navigating recovery and childcare.[156] She contrasted this with more robust frameworks in certain European leagues, where clubs often provide dedicated postpartum training regimens and family integration policies, arguing that U.S. setups prioritize performance over holistic athlete welfare.[157] These remarks, drawn from her direct experiences, point to implementation shortfalls despite policy advancements, as individual agency—such as relying on personal networks—remains essential for many players.[158] Morgan's advocacy contributed to expansions in the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) collective bargaining agreement (CBA), ratified in February 2022 and further updated in August 2024, which include up to eight weeks of paid maternity leave at 100% salary, extended parental benefits, and provisions for temporary roster replacements during leave.[159] These measures, influenced by USWNT precedents like guaranteed childcare and extended leave, represent progress in codifying protections, yet Morgan's 2025 statements suggest persistent disconnects between contractual gains and on-the-ground execution, particularly at club levels where resource variability endures.[55] Her efforts underscore a push for systemic reforms that affirm motherhood without derailing athletic trajectories, informed by empirical outcomes like her own abbreviated returns and the evolving policy landscape.[160]Personal Life
Marriage and Family
Alex Morgan married Servando Carrasco, a professional soccer player, on December 31, 2014, in a ceremony at Rancho Dos Pueblos, a historic estate in Santa Barbara, California.[161][162] The couple, who met while playing collegiate soccer at the University of California, Berkeley, exchanged vows in front of approximately 180 guests, marking the end of their engagement that began in December 2013.[161][163] Morgan and Carrasco welcomed their first child, daughter Charlie Elena Carrasco, on May 7, 2020.[164] Their second child, son Enzo, was born in late March 2025, with the couple announcing his arrival on March 30, 2025.[165][166] The family maintains a low-profile personal life centered around their shared athletic backgrounds, with no public reports of marital discord or separations as of October 2025.[167] They reside primarily in California, balancing family responsibilities with professional commitments in soccer.[168]Injuries and Health Challenges
In August 2013, Morgan sustained a mild medial collateral ligament (MCL) sprain in her left knee during a match for the Portland Thorns, requiring her to be stretchered off and sidelining her for 2-4 weeks.[169] Later that year, on October 10, 2013, she sprained her left ankle in a U.S. national team game against Mexico, which progressed to a bone stress reaction necessitating seven months of rest and rehabilitation, delaying her return to club play until June 2014.[33] These lower-body injuries disrupted her training rhythm and contributed to inconsistent form leading into preparations for the 2016 Summer Olympics, though she ultimately participated and scored three goals in the tournament.[33] Ankle issues persisted into October 2014, when Morgan twisted her ankle severely during a World Cup qualifying match against Guatemala on October 18, requiring immediate medical attention but allowing a quicker recovery compared to prior setbacks.[170] In 2015, she dealt with a bone bruise in her knee, followed by minor arthroscopic surgery in July that kept her out for 3-4 weeks, again tied to lingering effects from the 2013 ankle injury.[171] Rehabilitation efforts, including targeted physical therapy, enabled full returns to competition each time, though the recurrent nature of knee and ankle problems highlighted vulnerabilities in her explosive playing style reliant on speed and agility.[172] In 2019, post-FIFA Women's World Cup, Morgan suffered a concussion in the opening minutes of an Orlando Pride match on August 27 against the Washington Spirit, followed by a patellar stress reaction in her right knee that ruled her out for the remainder of the NWSL season in September.[173] Recovery protocols adhered to league concussion guidelines, emphasizing gradual return-to-play stages, but the knee issue stemmed from prior trauma, underscoring cumulative lower-extremity strain.[174] Morgan's first pregnancy, announced in February 2020, led to a maternity pause, with the birth of her daughter on October 7, 2020, and a return to play approximately six months later in April 2021, during which she maintained training to mitigate deconditioning.[175] A second pregnancy, revealed alongside her retirement announcement on September 5, 2024, at age 35, effectively ended her career without a post-birth return, as she cited the physical toll of repeated high-intensity demands.[176] Longitudinal effects of these interruptions, including surgeries and hormonal shifts from pregnancies, correlated with observable reductions in top-end speed by her mid-30s, influencing her adaptation to less pace-dependent roles before retirement.[79]Career Statistics and Records
International Statistics
Alex Morgan earned 224 caps for the United States women's national team (USWNT) from 2010 to 2024, scoring 123 goals and recording 53 assists.[177][178] Her goal tally ranks fifth all-time in USWNT history, behind Abby Wambach (184), Mia Hamm (158), Carli Lloyd (131), and Kristine Lilly (130).[179] The combined total of 176 goals and assists also places fifth in program records.[7] Morgan's overall goal-per-match ratio stood at approximately 0.55, with elevated output during her prime from 2012 to 2019, when annual rates often exceeded 0.6 goals per game, including a league-leading 28 goals in 2012 alone. Post-2020, her scoring efficiency declined to below 0.3 goals per game in select years, amid reduced starts and team transitions.[31] In major tournaments, Morgan contributed 9 World Cup goals across four editions (2011, 2015, 2019, 2023), tying for fourth-most in USWNT history; this included 2 goals in 2011, 1 in 2015, and a tournament-high 6 in 2019, where she earned the Silver Boot.[2][31] She scored her 2019 goals in 7 appearances (5 starts), highlighted by a single-match record-tying 5 against Thailand on June 11, 2019.[2] At the Olympics, Morgan tallied 6 goals over three Games (2012, 2016, 2020), ranking third all-time for the USWNT behind Lloyd (10) and Wambach (9); notable strikes included the 123rd-minute semifinal winner versus Canada on August 6, 2012, securing gold.[31][2] In the 2022 Concacaf W Championship, she added 1 goal (a penalty in the final against Canada on July 18, 2022) en route to the title and Golden Ball award.[2]| Tournament | Appearances | Goals | Assists | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FIFA Women's World Cup | 20 | 9 | 6 | Silver Boot (2019); 5 goals vs. Thailand (2019)[2][31] |
| Olympics | 15 | 6 | Varies | Gold (2012), Bronze (2020); semifinal winner (2012)[31][2] |
| Concacaf W Championship | 6 | 1 | 0 | Golden Ball (2022); final penalty (2022)[2] |
Club and College Statistics
Morgan played college soccer at the University of California, Berkeley from 2007 to 2010, appearing in 67 matches and scoring 45 goals with 17 assists for 107 points, ranking third all-time in program goals.[22] She led Cal in scoring each season, highlighted by 14 goals in 12 games as a senior despite international absences.[22]| Year | Games | Goals | Assists |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 | 17 | 8 | 2 |
| 2008 | 17 | 9 | 5 |
| 2009 | 21 | 14 | 8 |
| 2010 | 12 | 14 | 2 |
| Total | 67 | 45 | 17 |
| Season | Team | Matches | Goals | Assists |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | Portland | 18 | 8 | 5 |
| 2014 | Portland | 14 | 6 | 4 |
| 2015 | Portland | 4 | 1 | 2 |
| 2016 | Orlando | 15 | 4 | 1 |
| 2017 | Orlando | 13 | 9 | 4 |
| 2018 | Orlando | 19 | 5 | 2 |
| 2019 | Orlando | 6 | 0 | 0 |
| 2021 | Orlando | 13 | 5 | 2 |
| 2022 | San Diego | 17 | 15 | 2 |
| 2023 | San Diego | 18 | 7 | 5 |
| 2024 | San Diego | 13 | 0 | 1 |