“I remember the moment Abby went down really clearly,” said Hucles, who starred in college at the University of Virginia from 1996-1999 and debuted for the U.S. Women’s National Team in 2002. “I remember the feeling standing on the sideline, not wanting to start bawling, but the emotions were welling up and I was trying to stifle that. We all knew that Abby was badly injured. It was almost as if you could drop a pin on the grass and we would have heard it on the bench. I could see the panic and concerned look in Pia’s eyes, and then Jill waved to me to get warmed up. In that instant, I was able to transition to focusing on what I was being called to do, but we all knew what was going on. It was an eerie feeling.”
Jill Ellis, who would take the reins of the WNT program in 2014 and eventually win two World Cups, was an assistant to Sundhage on that Olympic Team and an advocate for Hucles. Sundhage would later be quoted as saying Ellis’ recommendation played a big part in her giving Hucles a shot up top.
“I remember telling Pia I felt Angela gave us some real positive qualities and that she was a good option,” said Ellis. “We felt she was a player who could hold the ball and get in behind. She was a hard worker, skillful and at that time, a really good option. From the beginning of the Olympics, you couldn’t take her out. She was phenomenal for us.”
“When Abby got hurt, I didn’t have any thoughts of my role changing into what is was going to become. I had no idea,” said Hucles. “We had other forwards who were playing and had played that position. I was playing primarily midfield at the time.”
After one of the first practices on the ground in China, Sundhage, who had also coached Hucles in the WUSA for the Boston Breakers, pulled her aside and outlined a new tactical plan. They would deploy her as a forward.
“Pia explained how I was going to work within the team and play that position using my skill set, being that it was extremely different from Abby to say the least,” added Hucles. “We got to China and we hit the reset button. I’m not sure we had a Plan B before Abby got hurt, but Pia was like, ‘here is new the game plan and here is how you fit into it.’”
And that’s how it came to pass that Hucles found herself in the starting lineup of the USA’s first 2008 Olympic match against Norway in Qinhuangdao, China, just 21 days after Wambach’s injury. She had started just one match in 2008 leading into the Summer Games.