U.S. women’s national team legend Heather O’Reilly announced Thursday that she is coming out of retirement to join Shelbourne Football Club in Ireland.

After the news was announced by O’Reilly herself on the BBC World Football podcast, the reigning Irish Women’s National League champions issued a release announcing her signing through the end of the 2022 season.

O’Reilly, who won a World Cup and three Olympic gold medals with the USWNT through 231 appearances, retired in 2019. But she says that while participating in the Soccer Aid this summer, a conversation with Arsène Wenger, former manager at Arsenal and current chief of global football development for FIFA, convinced her to come out of retirement and join Shelbourne.

While O’Reilly has a résumé roughly a mile long, which included stints and championships in the NWSL and with Arsenal in the WSL, she said that not having played in the Champions League bothered her.

“I am somebody that chases their dreams,” O’Reilly said on the podcast. “It’s a little bit obsessive sometimes when I get an idea because usually I have to see it through.

“I had a long, successful, trophy-ridden career and I am very proud of that, but there was this one hole on my resume that I never played Champions League football. It was a disappointing end to my time over with Arsenal when I wrapped up with them in 2018, it irked me, it bothered me. It was always a thing in the back of my head.”

She initially reached out to Shelbourne FC, partially due to her Irish ancestry and also because she feels she can make an “immediate impact” with the club.

“They’re the champions of Ireland, they had a very successful season last year in order to win the league, but they are still very much a club and a league that needs a lot of growth,” she said.

Her experience playing with former teammates such as Denise O’Sullivan, Louise Quinn and Katie McCabe also drove the decision.

“They are producing some wonderful talent but they need a lot of help with their league in terms of resources and professionalism,” O’Reilly continued. “I think that’s sort of part of why I’m going as well. I feel that I could bring some eyeballs onto this league, bring some eyeballs onto this team and grow the game a little bit whilst living out this dream of mine to play Champions League football.

“A lot of people will look at this, raise some eyebrows and think that this is an interesting career move, but I’m chasing my dream. I had this unchecked box and I’m looking to go do it, and for good reasons. I’m thrilled about it, the club is thrilled about it, and I think it’s one of those situations where it’s just a win-win all around.”

She’ll join manager Noel King as the club opens its qualifying campaign for the Champions League on August 18 against ZNK Pomurje of Slovenia. For King, the signing offers not just a boost to the club but also the league overall.

“Heather is a proven winner, we’re thrilled to bring one of the greatest players to ever play the game to Tolka Park,” he said.

“It’s an amazing moment for the club and for the Women’s National League as a whole to have a player of Heather’s stature. I think in particular, our younger players will flourish sharing the stage with a player who has seen, done and won it all.”

Former U.S. women’s national team stars Carli Lloyd and Heather O’Reilly are set to take part in Soccer Aid 2022 as members of Team World XI, which is captained by Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt.

The charity match will take place at 2:30 p.m. ET Sunday at London Stadium, the site of the 2012 Olympic Games. It’s the 11th edition of the match, which was started in 2006 by singer Robbie WIlliams.

Joining Bolt will be Lloyd, O’Reilly, former France men’s national team member Patrice Evra and more. Team World will be managed by actor Idris Elba, FIFA chief of global football development Arsène Wenger and former Ireland men’s captain Robbie Keane.

Team England, which is headlined by former One Direction member Liam Payne, will feature former English women’s national team members Eni Aluko, Anita Asante and Fara Williams. Four-time Olympic champion runner Mo Farah will also be playing.

The team will be managed by Chelsea women’s club manager Emma Hayes, former England men’s team goalie David Seaman, former Premier League manager Harry Redknapp and actress Vicky McClure.

When Heather O’Reilly joined the North Carolina Courage through a trade in 2018, Meredith Speck couldn’t resist telling her how much she looked up to the World Cup champion 10 years earlier, when Speck was playing youth soccer.

O’Reilly, a longtime midfielder with the U.S. women’s national team, helped establish a standard of excellence in North Carolina. During the two years she was on the team from 2018-19, the Courage won back-to-back NWSL championships and NWSL Shields.

With O’Reilly now retired and in the broadcasting booth, calling her first game as an analyst for North Carolina’s home opener Wednesday night, Speck and the other Courage veterans are carrying on the winning tradition. The team enters the regular season as the winningest club in the NWSL after defeating the Washington Spirit in the Challenge Cup final earlier this month.

Even now, Speck looks up to O’Reilly, influenced by her commitment to putting forth 100 percent effort at all times.

“I think sometimes people think it’s cool to not try your hardest, because if you’re not trying your hardest, then you can’t necessarily fail,” Speck said. “And what I love so much about Heather is she’s never too cool to work her hardest, and if she trains her hardest every day and doesn’t make the lineup, that’s just not embarrassing for her.”

Speck has been with the Courage since 2017, but she hasn’t always been a consistent starter. In four seasons with the club, excluding Challenge Cups, the midfielder has started 12 of the 45 games in which she’s played. But the Courage are a winning team not only because of the players they field on game day. Speck and her teammates fight for their starting spots in training.

“Game day is one day a week, and the other five days of training are so imperative to preparing the team,” she said. “So for myself, I’m not necessarily looking at preparing for a game in that moment — I’m looking for, how can I be my best every day? Because every day that I’m my best, my teammates are going to be able to be their best and whoever gets to go on the field, whatever 11 that is, they’re going to be the most prepared. If the team wins, we all win.”

The Courage are known for their player-driven, highly competitive culture. Speck, tied with teammate Abby Erceg as the winningest field players in the NWSL, sets the example for the younger players. She cited rookie midfielders Haleigh Stackpole and Frankie Tagliaferri as standard-bearers of that mentality in training.

“Everyone needs a Meri Speck,” said Courage head coach Sean Nahas. “She’s a massive glue piece for us. She’s a piece that keeps everything together. She’s that lightheartedness but focus as well. She’s a true pro, and I say that because for five years she never saw the field, but Meri never complained. Meri never lost her way. She never thought, ‘I’m not coming back because I don’t approve of my role.’”

Speck, 29, is part of a Courage veteran group that includes Erceg, Debinha, Carson Pickett, Denise O’Sullivan, Merrit Mathias, Katelyn Rowland, Kaleigh Kurtz and Ryan Williams. They have had to ramp up their energy since the Challenge Cup ended on May 7, helping the team overcome a stretch that included a seven-player COVID-19 outbreak and a postponed match against Gotham FC. With smaller numbers at practice, they’ve focused on specific parts of their game and kept the intensity high.

After dropping their regular season opener 2-1 to Angel City FC, the Courage are riding the momentum from their Challenge Cup win into Wednesday’s match against the Orlando Pride. Their early success came as a surprise to some people after all of their roster changes in the offseason, including losing U.S. women’s national players Lynn Williams and Sam Mewis in trades with the Kansas City Current, but the Courage had their eyes set on the trophy from the beginning.

“This team has been, from day one, super focused and ready to get down to business, and that’s why we won the Challenge Cup,” Speck said.

“We proved so many people wrong,” said Nahas.

After dealing with last September’s bombshell report in The Athletic detailing allegations of emotional and sexual abuse against former head coach Paul Riley, Nahas wanted the team to experience winning again, especially the veterans.

“It’s revitalized some players,” Nahas said of the Challenge Cup title. “It’s brought a new light to some things. It’s allowed the veterans to have a new sense of energy because they have other players around them working and representing the crest the way we want it to be represented.”

For an example of what that representation looks like, the players need look no further than Meredith Speck.

Jessa Braun is a contributing writer at Just Women’s Sports covering the NWSL and USWNT. Follow her on Twitter @jessabraun.

Former USWNT star Heather O’Reilly is speaking out amid the reckoning inside the NWSL, telling the BBC that women’s football “swept a lot of bad things under the rug because we want the league to succeed.”

The NWSL, and women’s soccer more broadly, has been shaken up following an explosive report from The Athletic detailing allegations of sexual coercion and emotional abuse by former North Carolina coach Paul Riley.

Riley has since been fired from his coaching position, NWSL commissioner Lisa Baird has resigned from her post, and Portland Thorns GM Galvin Wilkinson has been placed on administrative leave pending an investigation into Riley’s 2015 dismissal from the club.

O’Reilly says NWSL players felt pressure to “just take” misconduct in order to keep the league alive and their careers afloat.

As far as her time playing under Riley for the Courage, O’Reilly calls the power structure at the club “just dangerous.”

“He was in control of every facet of the club. He was the manager but if you had a complaint about ownership or the physio, you went to Paul.”

The former North Carolina defender blames a “lack of checks and balances” for Riley’s ability to abuse his power as a coach.

“In the NWSL there’s not a ton of HR employees at clubs, there’s not a hotline for players to call, so that’s why so many things happen time after time and aren’t disciplined.”

The NWSL didn’t have an anti-harassment policy in place until 2021, a point of contention for many of the league’s players.