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Keeping
An Eye on the Goal
If you're a fan of women's soccer, you don't have to wait for the
pros to come back next year. A great group of female athletes are
around and kicking in the Washington area this summer.
The Washington
Freedom is playing 15 games in the W-League, the highest level of
women's soccer in the country. The Freedom won its first two games,
and the team opens its home schedule this weekend with games in
Germantown. The games are fun, fast-paced and let kids get close
to the players as well as the action on the pitch.
The team is
loaded with top stars including forward Christie Welsh, the high
scorer on the 2005 U.S. women's national team. Lots of the Freedom
players are local stars who also coach area teams.
Forward Ali
Andrzejewski, 22, began playing in Lutherville, Maryland, when she
was 4 years old.
"First
I was on the white team," she said, remembering the color of
her first soccer shirt. "Then I moved on to the yellow bumblebees."
Andrzejewski went on to play at the University of Maryland and Loyola
College, where she set a season scoring record of 18 goals in 2004.
When she is not scoring goals for the Freedom, Andrzejewski is busy
coaching and training about 80 athletes in the Baltimore-Washington
area.
Anabel Jimenez,
25, played for the Bullis School in Potomac and several area classic
teams. She starred at American University and played professional
soccer in Germany.
"Playing
in another country helped me learn another culture and a different
style of play," forward Jimenez said. She uses that international
experience coaching the Renegades in the Washington Area Girls Soccer
(WAGS) League and a classic league.
Because the
players in the W-League are not paid, local college stars can play
on the Freedom without losing their college eligibility.
Melissa Whitley,
21, is a defender and rising senior at Princeton University who
grew up in Silver Spring. She first wanted to play basketball in
the WNBA, but Whitley chose soccer over hoops. She starred for Good
Counsel High School and the Bethesda Strikers. Whitley says the
Freedom is a great place to stay in top soccer shape. "It's
a very competitive environment," she said. "Everyone is
totally serious about playing."
Jimenez agrees.
"It's great because we have good coaches and good players and
you are always getting better with every practice." Everyone
on the Freedom, Jimenez says, "has a passion for soccer."
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