USWNT players get real about what went wrong at the 2023 World Cup in Netflix's new doc
- Netflix's new docuseries following the USWNT's 2023 World Cup journey debuted on Netflix Tuesday.
- The four-episode series peeks behind the curtain at what went wrong in the US' effort to three-peat.
Netflix's new docuseries, "Under Pressure," follows the US Women's National Team as the two-time reigning World Cup champions look to secure an unprecedented third-consecutive title.
Spoiler alert: it did not go according to plan.
The Stars and Stripes suffered their earliest-ever World Cup exit after a lackluster group stage and a gutting Round of 16 loss to rival Sweden in penalty kicks. And Netflix's cameras were down in Australia and New Zealand to capture it all.
Stunning cinematography captures the magnitude and raw emotions of the moment, while interviews with current and former players shed light on what went wrong for the once-indomitable USWNT.
Injuries, inexperience, and roster discontinuity all complicated the USWNT's path to victory
The series begins well before the team touches down in New Zealand for the tournament, with much of the first and second of four episodes focusing on how then-head coach Vlatko Andonovski built the roster and how players navigated the uncertainty of their roles on the team.
Andonovski was forced to find replacements for several key players, namely star striker Mal Swanson (neé Pugh) and veteran defender Becky Sauerbrunn, after injuries kept them off the field. For "bubble" players — those whose spots on the roster were particularly uncertain — that reality represented both a blow to the team's strength and an opportunity to step up.
"Knowing how important Mal [Swanson] is to the team is devastating," forward Lynn Williams says in Episode 2. "But on the other hand, you recognize that as a forward, there is now a spot that is opened up and needs to be filled."
Due in part to those injuries, Andonovski selected a final roster featuring 14 first-time World Cup players. One such player, Savannah DeMelo, describes her shock at learning she'd be making the trip Down Under without having previously played in a single game for the national team.
"When I find out, I'm like, 'Oh my gosh, are you sure? Me?'" DeMelo says. "Being an uncapped player going into a World Cup, that never really happened."
While inexperience may have contributed to the USWNT's downfall, many voices featured in the docuseries suggested that the lack of roster continuity was a more significant factor in dooming the two-time reigning champs. From the very beginning of the competition — the USWNT's less-than-dominant 3-0 win against Vietnam to open the group stage — the team's chemistry was called into question.
As clips of the USWNT's missed opportunities in that first game flash across the screen, an unnamed announcer speculates that "maybe the team hasn't had enough time to gel." In the following episode, as the Stars and Stripes narrowly avoid an upset against Portugal in the final match of the group stage, USWNT captain Lindsey Horan notes that, unlike the US, the opposing side has "played together for a really long time, so they know each other really well."
Mismanagement and 'playing not to lose' doomed the USWNT when it mattered most
Andonovski's reluctance to make strategic adjustments during and between games only added to the team's dysfunction. He publicly came under fire for failing to use substitutes throughout much of the group stage — particularly during the USWNT's draw vs the Netherlands.
"This is the best 23 players that the US has to offer," one commentator notes during that second group-stage match. "And in this moment, when winning the game would make a big difference in winning the group, Vlatko Andonovski came to the conclusion that there is nothing there on that bench that is going to change the game for the better."
The apparent lack of trust in his reserves undoubtedly impacted the confidence of those 12 players who did not receive the starting nod. Williams explains that even though she knew she "could be going into the game" against the Netherlands, she started to doubt herself as time kept "ticking on."
"You're like, 'Is it gonna happen? It is not gonna happen?'" Williams says. "There was that moment of like, 'I don't know where my role is just yet,' and that's where it's hard."
Abby Wambach — the USWNT's all-time leading scorer — suggests early in the third episode that both the coaching staff and the players themselves had approached the group stage with fear rather than the voraciousness emblematic of national teams past. The boldness necessary to win games, she explains, is inherently risky.
"When you have the expectation that I know all these players have of going deep into this tournament, there is a fear factor that comes into the group stage games," Wambach says. "They don't wanna be the first ones sent home; they don't want that embarrassment."
"When you're playing from a little sense of that fear — when you're playing not to lose — it's really difficult to figure out who you are and identify yourself," she adds.
Perhaps that explains why, in the opening game of the knockout round, Andonovski opted against changing the team's formation to one more conducive to scoring goals. The USWNT players managed to create more offensive opportunities against Sweden than in any of the prior three matches of the tournament, but they still couldn't find the back of the net when it mattered most.
Three weeks after the USWNT's heartbreaking 0-0 (5-4) loss to Sweden, Williams describes mulling over what went wrong and questioning whether she could've done something different.
"You have this dream of what the World Cup is going to be like," Williams says. "And I think it's one thing to be playing well and it just doesn't work out, but if you didn't play well, I don't think we were set up to have the success to go on and win it."
4 months later, the team and its players are still charting their path forward
It didn't take long for the first chip to fall in the wake of the USWNT's stunning and historic disappointment; less than two weeks after the loss to Sweden, Andonovski stepped down.
The decision came as no surprise to anyone close to the team, including its players. Williams explains in the final episode that the USWNT's standard of excellence leaves no room for the team to only win "three out of the 10 games that we've played" in the past two major tournaments — the Tokyo Olympics and 2023 World Cup.
"At any given moment, my career could be taken from me; my spot can be taken from me," she said. "When we're held to this standard, the coaching staff also has to be held to that standard."
Still, a change in the team's top brass doesn't necessarily give players like Williams answers to the "What ifs?" inevitably swirling through their heads. They all flew home on different flights to different final destinations immediately after the loss, leaving no time to commiserate and debrief.
Alyssa Thompson, the wunderkind who made her way onto the World Cup roster at 18 years old, told Business Insider that "going home and just literally not talking about it with anyone was very hard."
"I think we all just wanted to kind of forget about it for the moment because it hurt so much, but then we didn't really talk about it as a team," Thompson added. "We might've talked about it with family friends, but they don't really understand what we went through, the team does."
When the USWNT next gathered for camp ahead of a pair of September friendlies, the group finally spoke about the World Cup experience. They analyzed what had gone well, what could've gone better, and where they could implement changes going forward.
For Thompson, that group discussion was enough to help her "really just let it go" and "think about the next steps and wanting so much more for ourselves in the next tournament."
But as Williams noted ahead of the docuseries' release, that group didn't include everyone who had joined her in the locker room Down Under. Some players retired, while others didn't get called back in for that camp. And, of course, Andonovski was no longer with the team.
"So on that level, you are getting some closure and you're getting some sense of connectedness again," Williams told BI. "But then on the other hand, you're just like, but all my questions can't be answered because of all these reasons of not everybody being in the room."
"I've come to realize you don't get all of the closure that you want," she added. "Sometimes in life, you just don't get it, and you just have to be able to move on."