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How Emily Fox became one of the USWNT’s most reliable players

Six years after making her USWNT debut, Emily Fox is a key starter for the team at the 2023 World Cup. (John Todd/USSF/Getty Images).

For the best in the world, thousands of small decisions go into the final product we see on the field. And for U.S. women’s national team defender Emily Fox, the work beneath the surface begins at her very foundation.

For years, women’s soccer players have had to work overtime to get cleats made for men to fit their feet. Fox has gone down a size, she’s double- and triple-socked a size above her own, and she’s even tried toe socks to get the feel right.

“With the sizing and the fit, [you’re] making sure that you don’t feel like the cleat is like going to slip or it’s too tight and you feel like you can’t move your ankle,” Fox tells Just Women’s Sports on behalf of Under Armour, who will soon release their Magnetico Elite 3 FG Soccer Cleats with women athletes’ feet in mind.

Tinkering to perfect the feel of a cleat for the best first touch could serve as a metaphor for Fox’s career. She’s grown from a college student thrown in the deep end, to sink-or-swim in her first USWNT minutes, to steady starter as the team heads to Australia and New Zealand to compete for a third-straight World Cup title.

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(Courtesy of Under Armour)

Fox is only 25 years old and entering her first World Cup, but on the field she often plays like a longtime veteran of the USWNT. She played her first minutes with the team in 2018, when she was just in her second year at the University of North Carolina, and even earned a start as the team tested the player pool in anticipation of the 2019 World Cup.

Fans will most likely remember Fox’s one cap from 2019, when she started at outside back against France in the USWNT’s first game of the year. In that 3-1 loss, the U.S. took some knocks that became the springboard for necessary growth, paving the way for the team to defeat the host country in Paris in the World Cup quarterfinals later that year.

For Fox, that game was a trial by fire, as she earned crucial international minutes against a team operating on all cylinders.

“I think everyone always talks about, ‘Oh, you’re gonna have ups and downs.’ And then everyone’s like, ‘OK, I’m gonna have ups and downs,’ but then it happens,” she says. “And you’re like, oh, it is really tough. So I think looking back, it was a really good thing for me.”

She went back to work outside the USWNT ranks, captaining the Tar Heels and finishing with two College Cup finals appearances during her NCAA career. She went from there to the NWSL, as the No. 1 pick of Racing Louisville FC in 2021. But Fox’s dream has always been to take her hard-earned experience to the biggest of international stages.

“I remember the last World Cup, watching and really being like, I want to be there next time,” she says.

She’s since returned to her college region, playing for the North Carolina Courage and honing a host of skills that have shaped her into a versatile and reliable defender for club and country. With Louisville, Fox would appear to take on a number of different positions at once — she’d line up at outside-back, but also dip into the midfield, make attacking runs and sub into the central defense when they needed greater numbers.

Fox has settled into an inverted left-back role for North Carolina, where she is encouraged to strategically cut into the middle to join the midfield. She believes some of her skills lend themselves to the No. 6 defensive midfield position.

“I love to cut inside and dribble, whether I’m on the left or right,” she said at USWNT World Cup media day. “Just being able to combine with people and kind of sit in good pockets to change the point of attack.”

The modern outside back has to be able to do many things, playing attacker, midfielder and defender all in an instant depending on the flow of play. Fox relishes the opportunity to take care of business on both sides of the ball.

“With [the U.S.], we have teams that are playing in a low block, and so it is the outside back, it is the No. 6 making a run that the No. 10 would normally make that opens and breaks people up,” she says.

Fox takes to heart the greater responsibility of starting for the USWNT, which requires her to get “high and wide” when switching from left back to right back to allow room for Crystal Dunn on the left. Training with Dunn, Becky Sauerbrunn and a few other U.S. players during the 2023 offseason helped the 25-year-old settle into a defense that she’d been rotating in and out of previously.

“It was really nice being able to train with them because I only see them at camp,” she says. “So seeing them out of camp, it was nice to see that they kind of have the same struggles and stress as I did.”

The World Cup is a stressful process, but it’s also an opportunity for Fox to cement her role as a starter for the No. 1-ranked team in the world by proving her versatility and consistency.

“I think a lot of it has to do with not expecting anything and not taking anything for granted,” she says. “I think having that mentality of always wanting more, and wanting to challenge yourself and not just thinking about success.”

The USWNT has also relied on Fox to carry heavy minutes, something she says has taken time to get accustomed to. It’s difficult to replicate the grueling schedule of a World Cup group stage, but head coach Vlatko Andonovski attempted to mimic it at this year’s SheBelieves Cup.

“I really think this past SheBelieves, playing in all three of those games and the back-to-back-to-back, after that I was like, ‘If I can do this, I can do anything,” she says.

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(Brad Smith/USSF/Getty Images)

The U.S. is going to rely on Fox as a player who can both carry the ball forward and make the necessary recovery run against international opponents stacked with winger talent.

“It is just another challenge. And obviously, it’s at the world stage, so it’s going to be more intense, it’s going to be loud,” she says. “But I think just doing my role and locking down my side, and no matter who I’m playing against, how can I lock down my side but also make them chase and defend?”

When Fox steps out on the field in New Zealand starting next week, she’ll be capitalizing on six years of work within the U.S. first team, and living out a dream that started much earlier.

“My parents are coming,” she says with a smile. “So I think it’ll be pretty surreal when I get to see them in the crowd, and obviously it’s such a trek to get there, and they’ve made so many sacrifices for me to be here. So, I think that is probably a moment when I’ll be like, ‘Oh my gosh.’”

Claire Watkins is a Staff Writer at Just Women’s Sports. Follow her on Twitter @ScoutRipley.

US Tennis Stars Advance as Wimbledon Field Narrows

Italy's Jasmine Paolini celebrates her first-round win over Latvia's Anastasija Sevastova at the 2025 Wimbledon Championships
World No. 4 Jasmine Paolini fell in the second round of the 2025 Wimbledon Championships on Wednesday. (Daniel Kopatsch/Getty Images)

The 2025 Wimbledon Championships wrapped its second round on Thursday, with the grass court Grand Slam seeing just 15 of the tournament's 32 seeded players advance to the Friday and Saturday's third round.

A full half of the WTA's Top 10 players did not survive the week, with 2024 Wimbledon finalist and world No. 5 Jasmine Paolini joining four first-round star exits by falling to unseeded Kamilla Rakhimova in a three-set, second-round battle on Wednesday.

At the same time, unseeded fan favorites like Japan's No. 53 Naomi Osaka and England's own No. 40 Emma Raducanu secured third-round spots at the London Slam, joining top surviving contenders like No. 4 Iga Świątek and defending Wimbledon champion No. 16 Barbora Krejčíková.

Notably, a full five US players managed to move ahead, tied for the largest national contingent still standing at the tournament.

Led by 2025 Australian Open champion No. 8 Madison Keys, the US group also includes No. 10 Emma Navarro and No. 12 Amanda Anisimova, as well as unseeded players No. 54 Danielle Collins and No. 55 Hailey Baptiste.

With matches against Świątek and No. 7 Mirra Andreeva, respectively, Collins and Baptiste have a tough third round ahead — though Navarro's battle against the 2024 champ Krejčíková arguably headlines Saturday's slate.

US tennis star Emma Navarro eyes a return during a 2025 Wimbledon match.
US star Emma Navarro will face 2024 champ Barbora Krejčíková in Wimbledon's Round of 32. (Rob Newell/CameraSport via Getty Images)

How to watch Wimbledon this weekend

While world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka is still holding strong in the dwindling field, this year's Wimbledon play is proving that the London Slam is anyone's to take, as the grass court humbles even the sport's top stars.

Expect the twists and turns to continue as tennis's best battle for spots in Sunday's Round of 16.

Round-of-32 Wimbledon play kicks off at 6 AM ET on Friday, with live continuous coverage of the tournament airing on ESPN.

Finland Opens Women’s Euro 2025 with Upset Upset Win Over Iceland

Finland's Katariina Kosola and Emma Koivisto celebrate a goal during their opening 2025 Euro match.
Finland earned a surprise 1-0 win over Iceland in their 2025 Euro opener on Wednesday. (Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)

The 2025 European Championship is officially underway, as Euro action kicked off with a group-stage upset on Wednesday.

Though the 2025 UEFA tournament's opener was a sweltering affair amid a European heat wave, world No. 26 Finland prevailed, earning a 1-0 upset win over No. 14 Iceland in Group A.

Finnish winger Katariina Kosola played hero, curling in the winning goal in the match's 70th minute — just 12 minutes after Iceland midfielder Hildur Antonsdóttir picked up the competition's first red card.

"The result is important for our confidence," Kosola said after Finland's first major tournament win since the 2009 Euro. "It was the kind of goal I have been practicing a lot."

"It's terrible to lose and we feel frustrated," said Iceland head coach Thorsteinn Halldórsson. "It is an even group and we knew Finland were good, but our first half wasn't good enough."

Elsewhere, No. 16 Norway closed out Wednesday's slate on top of Group A, taking three points by defeating host No. 23 Switzerland in day's second match.

Led by captain and 2018 Ballon d'Or winner Ada Hegerberg — who pulled the match even with a second-half strike — Norway battled to a 2-1 comeback win, despite the Swiss side outshooting and out-possessing the Norwegians.

Spain jersey hang in lockers ahead of the team's 2025 Euro opening match against Portugal.
Reigning World Cup champions Spain will open their 2025 Euro account against Portugal. (Aitor Alcalde - UEFA/UEFA via Getty Images)

How to watch this week's 2025 Euro action

Group B steals the 2025 Euro spotlight on Thursday.

While No. 13 Italy snagged a 1-0 opening win over No. 20 Belgium to kick off the day, 2023 World Cup champions and tournament favorite No. 2 Spain will face No. 22 Portugal at 3 PM ET.

Friday's Group C slate will pit No. 12 Denmark against No. 6 Sweden at 12 PM ET, before No. 3 Germany contends with No. 27 Poland at 3 PM ET.

Closing out the first group-stage matches will be arguably the toughest draw of the 2025 Euro pool.

Saturday's Group D slate features major tournament debutants No. 30 Wales against the No. 11 Netherlands at 12 PM ET, with No. 10 France taking on defending champions No. 5 England to cap the day at 3 PM ET.

Live coverage of 2025 Euro matches will air across Fox Sports platforms.

USWNT Caps Summer Friendlies with 3-0 Canada Shutout

Yazmeen Ryan, Michelle Cooper, Claire Hutton, Mandy McGlynn, and Izzy Rodriguez and the rest of the USWNT huddle after their July 2025 friendly win over Canada.
The USWNT finished the summer international window with 11 goals, conceding none, across three matches. (Brad Smith/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images)

The world No. 1 USWNT ruled the pitch on Wednesday night, shutting out North American rivals No. 8 Canada 3-0 to finish the international window on a high note.

Catching the Canada backline sleeping, US midfielder Sam Coffey opened the scoring at the 17-minute mark before 19-year-old Claire Hutton claimed her first-ever USWNT goal by heading in a Rose Lavelle corner kick in the game's 36th minute.

Houston Dash forward Yazmeen Ryan then padded the US tally in the waning minutes of the match, finding the back of the net just eight minutes after subbing onto the field.

Despite fielding a young roster, the US overpowered a veteran-heavy Canada side in almost every category, topping their Northern neighbors in shots, shots on target, possession, and — most notably — set pieces.

Canada ultimately couldn't match the game's mental pace or physical battle, as the USWNT scored all three goals off dead ball situations — a free kick, a corner kick, and a throw-in.

"It's not about the opponent," US head coach Emma Hayes said after the match. "It's about what we do, and I felt that was extremely dominant."

With Wednesday's contributions, the USWNT finishes the summer window with 11 goals scored across the three friendlies — and zero goals conceded.

The US now enters an extended break before reconvening for another as-yet-unannounced friendly series in October — but players will be expected to perform in the meantime.

"I said to the players in the end in the huddle, if you want to compete to win the biggest things, it's not what you do here that matters," said Hayes. "It's what you do when you go back to your club."

Seattle Storm Looks to Climb the WNBA Standings in Weekend Gauntlet

Seattle Storm star Nneka Ogwumike high-fives teammates as she's introduced before a 2025 WNBA game.
The No. 5 Seattle Storm will face No. 4 Atlanta and No. 3 New York this weekend. (Soobum Im/NBAE via Getty Images)

The 2025 WNBA regular season returns on Thursday night, with teams at the top of the league standings looking to prove their mettle against close competition across the long holiday weekend.

The No. 5 Seattle Storm have arguably the toughest weekend assignments, taking on the No. 4 Atlanta Dream on Friday before tackling the No. 3 New York Liberty on Sunday.

Four middle-of-the-pack teams will look to close in on a double-digit season win tally while the league's frontrunners strive to maintain their advantage in this weekend's slate:

  • No. 7 Las Vegas Aces vs. No. 8 Indiana Fever, Thursday at 7 PM ET (Prime): Though still without star Caitlin Clark, the Fever hope to harness their 2025 WNBA Commissioner's Cup victory momentum against an Aces side tied with Indiana with an 8-8 season record.
  • No. 5 Seattle Storm vs. No. 4 Atlanta Dream, Thursday at 7:30 PM ET (WNBA League Pass): Seattle will look to make strides against a strong Atlanta side while putting last Sunday's stinging 84-57 loss to up-and-comer Golden State in their rearview.
  • No. 6 Golden State Valkyries vs. No. 1 Minnesota Lynx, Saturday at 8 PM ET (WNBA League Pass): The rising Valkyries must face a Lynx side hunting redemption, as the league-leaders look to bounce back from their stifling Tuesday Commissioner's Cup upset loss.
  • No. 5 Seattle Storm vs. No. 3 New York Liberty, Sunday at 1 PM ET (CBS): With injured Liberty center Jonquel Jones still sidelined, the Seattle Storm will have a chance to steal a weekend game against the reigning champs, as New York struggles to re-find their footing.

With the 2025 WNBA All-Star break looming, early top performers must keep standards high if they want to hold the line when the season crosses the midway point.

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