What opportunities
exist for American women to compete and excel in
world class soccer? The story of Carla Werden Overbeck
proves just how wonderful the opportunities can
be for athletes who are willing to work for them.
Thirty-two years young at the time she is being
inducted into the Hall of Fame, Carla is one of
the most respected and decorated international players
in the world. Her appearance for the U.S. National
Team in their match against Japan on December 16,
2000, was her 167th and final international game.
Now it’s time for her to retire, sit back,
and relax. So what will she do? She’s planning
to play for the Carolina Tempest in the upcoming
inaugural season of the Women’s United Soccer
Association.
Carla Werden grew
up in Dallas, Texas, and started playing soccer
for the Dallas Sting at age 11. She blossomed as
a youth player and led the club to two national
titles. By the time she graduated from Richardson
High School where she played volleyball and basketball,
Anson Dorrance, the coach of most dominant college
program in the country – the University of
North Carolina - had identified her as a blue-chip
soccer recruit. She accepted a scholarship and became
a Tar Heel. After receiving a degree in psychology
from UNC in 1990, she married Greg Overbeck in 1992,
with whom she resides in Chapel Hill. Their son
Jackson was born in 1997. Carla is presently an
assistant soccer coach at Duke University. Her impact
on soccer in North Carolina and on the international
stage has been and continues to be impressive.
Carla Overbeck’s
outstanding career as an amateur and U.S. National
Team player have earned her the distinction of being
selected as a member of the fourth class of inductees
of the North Carolina Soccer Hall of Fame on this,
the twenty-seventh day of January, 2001.
While playing for
Carolina, Carla helped the Tar Heels earn four NCAA
championships. She was named to the Soccer America
All-Freshman team and was a three-time NSCAA All-American.
Her first appearance for the U.S. National Team
against Japan in June of 1988 began a thirteen-year
career with that program. She started every game
for the U.S. in the 1991 FIFA Women’s World
Cup when the USA captured U.S. Soccer’s first
world championship. A defender, she led a group
that allowed just five goals in the six games played
in that World Cup. In 1993 she became the captain
of the U.S. National Team, an honor she held until
she retired from the national team program. She
scored her first goal in international play on August
19, 1994, when she scored twice in the USA’s
10-0 win over Jamaica. In 1995 Carla was a finalist
for the Women’s Sports Foundation Athlete
of the Year in a group that included Bonnie Blair,
Steffi Graff, Picabo Street, and Rebecca Lobo. In
1996 she captained the gold medal winning USA team
in the Olympics in Atlanta, earning her 100th cap
for the USA in the gold medal game. By 1996 she
had played in 63 consecutive international games,
a record for any U.S. player, man or woman. She
also set a record by playing 3,547 consecutive minutes
between August 4, 1993 and January 18, 1996. During
that stretch, she faced teams from 19 different
nations and played in seven different countries.
Her consecutive games streak ended only because
she took time off after the Olympics to have her
baby, Jackson.
The unstoppable Overbeck
was slowed by a diagnosis of Graves’ disease,
a condition in which the thyroid gland produces
excessive amounts of hormone. After undergoing radiation
treatment to shut down her thyroid, she now functions
normally with the help of medication. None of that
got in the way of Carla’s commitment to physical
fitness and resilience. She played every minute
of all six games in the 1999 FIFA World Cup and
nailed the opening penalty kick in the shootout
victory in the final against China. Along the way,
she set standards for conditioning that raised the
bar for other would-be national team players. According
to former U.S. coach Tony DeCicco, “Carla
developed the culture of the national team. She
had a tremendous winning mentality.”