“I wasn’t necessarily bad when I was younger, I just wasn’t very strong technically and I wasn’t very fast,” said Flynn. “But I always loved soccer and I worked really hard. It just didn’t click for me for a while.”
It’s true that every player has a different path, and Flynn’s unfortunately took her through an ill-fated session of batting practice.
Her dad, wanting to see if there were perhaps some other sporting options for young Lauren, took her to the batting cages near her house. “I have a strong memory of going and trying to hit some softballs. But I asked my dad, ‘why are we here? I love soccer.’”
And that was the end of that. When she reached high school, she had a growth spurt, kept working hard, started improving and -- motivated by her older sister Meghan, who played soccer at the University of Tennessee -- decided soccer was her future. (In a bit of kismet, her current coach at Florida State, Brian Pensky, was Meghan’s head coach for the Lady Vols).
By her own admission, she was not highly recruited and had trouble choosing a college.
Flynn visited Florida State for a soccer camp, loved it, felt comfortable with the coaches, and even though it was far from home in Arlington, Va., made her choice.
When Flynn entered college in the fall of 2020, she had never played defender. She was a forward -- a winger, to be exact. After COVID cancelled the traditional fall soccer season, then Florida State head coach Mark Krikorian called Flynn into his office before the start of the adjusted spring season to gauge her temperature on switching to center back.
“It was a hard transition to college in general and to center back in particular,” Flynn admitted. “But the coaches at Florida State taught me so much and playing with fantastic players was the perfect experience to help me grow. I was very surprised when they asked if I wanted to change positions, but I was like ‘of course,’ I wanted to do anything to get on the field. It was very different seeing the field from different angles, but I spent so much time going over film with the coaches and working on it, and they were patient with me.”
Flynn is what you might call “a late bloomer” and during the spring season, in which Florida State made it to the National Championship game before falling to Santa Clara, she began to blossom.
She saw action in 15 games, starting just six, in what was her freshman year. As a sophomore, playing next to U.S. Under-23 international Emily Madril, perhaps the top defender in all of college soccer that year, she started all 25 games, was second on the team in minutes played (behind only Madril) and helped the Seminoles win the NCAA title.
She was now blooming like an orchard of American dogwood (which is Virginia’s state flower, BTW).