Take your best shot: Life Lessons with soccer star Alex
Morgan
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[March 27, 2019]
By Chris Taylor
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Everyone has a dream
of making it to the top, but what happens when you actually get there?
Only a handful of people even know what that is like.
One of them is Alex Morgan, the soccer phenom and forward for the U.S.
women's national soccer team - ranked #1 on the planet, by the way -
heading into the World Cup in France starting this June.
For the latest in Reuters' "Life Lessons" series, the 29-year-old idol
for young girls worldwide reminisces about how she dribbled her way to
global stardom - and talks about what will come after the final whistle.
Q: Did you have a backup career in mind, in case soccer didn't work out?
A: I had a dream that I wrote down on a yellow sticky note when I was
seven years old. It said, 'Dear mom, my dream is to be a professional
soccer player. Love, Ali.' My mom kept that for years.
At the time there wasn't even a professional league, and I had never
even seen the women’s national team play. So I never even thought about
a Plan B, even though I went on to study political economy in college.
Q: When you did make it as a pro, how did you handle fame and wealth?
A: For two years after I started on the national team, I couldn't
receive any checks because I was playing for the NCAA. They have very
strict rules about that. So my bank account in college was pretty grim,
and my diet involved ramen noodles or finding the cheapest takeout.
Since I was a student-athlete, they did let me eat at the university
cafes, so I would usually be there for breakfast, lunch and dinner. A
lot of times I would be down to a few bucks, wondering how to get
through the next couple of days before my food card was replenished.
So when I did become a professional player and started getting paid,
that was a nice change. Nowadays I manage to save around 70 percent of
what I make.
Q: What have you learned about managing money?
A: As a professional athlete, your income isn’t steady. Sometimes you
get big checks and then sometimes you don’t get much for a couple of
months. Lump sums come in randomly, since a lot of what I make is
through partnerships with sponsors. So it’s been a learning curve for me
to navigate that.
Q: You have started numerous side ventures, so what lessons about
entrepreneurship can you share?
[to top of second column] |
Soccer star Alex Morgan is seen in this undated photo released to
Reuters on March 25, 2019. Courtesy Ryan Pfluger/Handout via REUTERS
A: For me, with my book series and the movie I did for Nickelodeon, I like to
take chances when the pressure is on. When I control things as much as possible,
that is when I want to bet big, because I have a good sense of what I am able to
do. So how I act in the business world is quite similar to how I act on the
soccer pitch. I am happy betting on myself, and I tend to achieve more when my
back is against the wall.
Q: Where do you spend your philanthropic time and money?
A: The main focus is kids and animals. I do a lot of work with Boys & Girls
Clubs, and I’m an ambassador for UNICEF. I also support the ASPCA, because I am
passionate about giving animals a voice. I even adopted a vegan diet, because it
didn’t feel fair to have a dog I adore, and yet eat meat all the time.
Q: Have you envisioned what your retirement from soccer is going to look like?
A: I would love to start a family, and live in southern California, maybe in San
Diego. My husband (LA Galaxy midfielder Servando Carrasco) definitely wants to
stay in the soccer world, and I am enjoying dipping my toes into new areas, like
books and movies. It is an exciting time.
Q: For that future family, what life lessons would you like to pass along?
A: Something I would want for my kids is to be confident and dream big,
regardless of what obstacles are in the way. That is what I did when I was
seven, not even knowing that professional soccer was a possibility. I would love
for that message to hit home with them.
(Editing by Beth Pinsker and G Crosse)
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