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Featured

USWNT Forward Megan Rapinoe Named The Best FIFA Women’s Player Of 2019; Jill Ellis Named The Best FIFA Women’s Coach For Second Time

Rapinoe’s Honor Marks Sixth Time an American Woman Named World Player of the Year; Ellis Also Won FIFA Coach of the Year in 2015; Rapinoe, Alex Morgan, Julie Ertz, Kelley O’Hara and Rose Lavelle Named to FIFA FIFPro Women’s World11
September 23, 2019
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CHICAGO (Sept. 23, 2019) – Megan Rapinoe, the co-captain of the U.S. Women’s National Team that took the world by storm in France this last summer as the USA won the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup, has been named The Best FIFA Women’s Player of 2019, and Jill Ellis, who led the USA to its second consecutive World Cup title, has been named The Best FIFA Women’s Coach for 2019.

Forward Alex Morgan, who was one of the three finalists for The Best FIFA Women’s Player, finished second (42 pts) in the voting, only four points behind Rapinoe (46 pts), while England defender Lucy Bronze finished third (29 pts).

In addition, U.S. players made up almost half of the first FIFA FIFPro Women’s World11 with Rapinoe, Morgan, midfielders Julie Ertz and Rose Lavelle and defender Kelley O’Hara being honored.

  • THE BEST FIFA FOOTBALL AWARDS 2019 U.S. Womens National Team Quote Sheet

  • READ: Ellis Speaks FIFA Football Conference Milan

Rapinoe and Ellis received the awards today at the 2019 The Best FIFA Football Award Ceremony in Milan, Italy, and the FIFA FIFPro Women’s World11 was also revealed as the world’s governing body for soccer held its annual event. Lionel Messi of Barcelona and Argentina was named The Best FIFA Men’s Player for a record sixth time, and Liverpool’s Jurgen Klopp was named The Best Men’s Coach of the Year.

This year marks the sixth time an American woman has been named FIFA Women’s World Player of the Year following Carli Lloyd’s selection in 2015 and 2016, Abby Wambach in 2012 and Mia Hamm in 2001 and 2002, which were the first two years the award was presented.

Rapinoe finished first in voting by coaches and captains of women’s national teams from around the world. Each ballot allowed the coaches and captains to name their top three players, with a first-place nomination worth five points and positions two and three rewarded with three points and one point, respectively.

MEGAN RAPINOE – 2019 The Best FIFA Women’s Player

Rapinoe, 34, made her USWNT debut in 2006 but broke through in 2010-2011, famously lofting the pass to Abby Wambach for her iconic goal against Brazil in the quarterfinal of the 2011 FIFA Women’s World Cup, and has gone on to play 158 times for the USA. She scored her 50th career international goal in the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup Final.

Rapinoe has scored nine goals with four assists in 2019, six of those scores and three of the assists coming during the Women’s World Cup, where she won the Golden Ball as the tournament’s best player and the Golden Boot as the top scorer.

Rapinoe scored in four of the six matches she played at the World Cup and had the game-winning assist against Sweden in the final group game. She famously scored back-to-back braces in the Round of 16 win against Spain and the epic Quarterfinal triumph against France, both of which ended 2-1 in favor of the USA.

She coolly converted a 61st minute penalty against the Netherlands in the World Cup Final to put the USA ahead for good on the way to its fourth Women’s World Cup title.

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JILL ELLIS – 2019 The Best FIFA Women’s Coach

Ellis is the second coach of a U.S. team to win the FIFA Women’s Coach of the Year award, which was instituted in 2010, but the first American and the first U.S. coach to win it twice. She is only the second coach to win the award multiple times after Silvia Neid of Germany, who has won it three times. Swede Pia Sundhage won the award in 2012 after leading the USA to the Olympic gold medal in London.

Ellis, who announced on July 30 that she was stepping down from her post as U.S. Women’s National Team head coach, has led the USA to a 15-1-2 record so far in 2019, losing only the first match of the year against France in Le Havre. Since then, the USA is unbeaten in 17 consecutive games, including the run of seven victories at the 2019 Women’s World Cup, the final five of which came against some of the best teams in Europe on European soil.

At the World Cup, Ellis and her staff deftly managed the U.S. to first place in Group F, resting many players in the second match against Chile before starting the run of victories over European opponents, taking down pre-tournament favorites France and England in the Quarterfinal and Semifinal, respectively, then defeating reigning European champion Netherlands, 2-0, in the title game.

The USA scored a record 26 goals during the tournament and had a near-record nine different goal scorers in the tournament.

Fifty-five players were named as finalists for the FIFA FIFPro Women’s World11, including 14 Americans. Ertz, Lavelle and O’Hara each started all six matches in which they played at the Women’s World Cup and all played crucial roles in the USA’s success in France.

Ertz, 27, was a force in the middle of the field and scored her first World Cup goal in the USA’s second group match against Chile. Lavelle, 24, won the Silver Ball as the second-best player in tournament, scored three times and famously clinched the World Cup Final with a brilliant dribbling run and finish up the middle of the Netherlands defense to make the score 2-0, which is how it ended. O’Hara, 31, who was a forward during her entire youth and college career but switched to outside back for the USA in 2008, was a key part of a U.S. defensive line that allowed just three goals in the tournament.

This is the fourth time a FIFA FIFPro Women’s World11 has been named, but first time that the team was honored on stage at the awards ceremony.

The 2019 FIFA Women’s Coach of the Year, the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Player of the Year, the USA’s FIFA FIFPRo World11 players and their teammates all return to the field Oct. 3 in Charlotte, N.C. and Oct. 6 in Chicago when the USA takes on Korea Republic [Tickets]. The match in Chicago will mark the final game for Ellis as U.S. head coach. She has amassed an overall record of 105-7-18 during her tenure as head coach and is on the cusp of breaking the U.S. record for all-time wins, which she could accomplish in Charlotte on Oct. 3.

Additional Notes:

  • Jill Ellis was named The Best FIFA Women’s Coach of 2019 ahead of fellow finalists Sabrina Wiegman and Phil Neville.

  • In addition to the five Americans on the FIFA FIFPro Women’s World11, Sari van Veenendaal; Lucy Bronze, Nilla Fischer, Wendie Renard; Amandine Henry and Marta were also recognized.

  • van Veenendaal of the Netherlands was voted The Best FIFA Women’s Goalkeeper 2019 ahead of Christiane Endler (Chile) and Hedvig Lindahl (Sweden).

  • The FIFA FIFPro Men’s World11 2019 consists of: Alisson; Matthijs de Ligt, Marcelo, Sergio Ramos, Virgil van Dijk; Frenkie de Jong, Eden Hazard, Luka Modric; Cristiano Ronaldo, Kylian Mbappe, Lionel Messi.

  • Messi was voted The Best FIFA Men’s Player 2019 ahead of Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal) and Virgil van Dijk (Netherlands), while van Dijk’s club teammate at Liverpool, Alisson was voted The Best FIFA Men’s Goalkeeper 2019 ahead of Ederson (Brazil) and Marc-Andre Ter Stegen (Germany).

  • Jurgen Klopp was voted The Best FIFA Men’s Coach 2019 ahead of Mauricio Pochettino (Argentina) and Pep Guardiola (Spain).

  • Daniel Zsori won the FIFA Puskás Award for his bicycle kick goal in the Hungarian top flight, beating out Messi and Juan Fernando Quintero (Peru) for the best goal of 2019.