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Attractive Olympian: Goalkeeper Hope Solo

Olympic athletes often don't get paid to do anything other than look good. In that vein, Attractive Olympians handicaps which athletes may rake in endorsement deals after the Olympics.

Hope Solo has been on the U.S. Women's National Team since 2000 and went to the 2004 Athens Olympics as an alternate on the gold-medal winning team, but she is probably best known for her controversial statements during the Women's World Cup in China last year. Going into the semifinals against Brazil, Solo had recorded three consecutive shutouts and was becoming a breakout star on the team. That's when coach Greg Ryan benched her for 36-year-old Briana Scurry. The U.S. lost 4-0, snapping a 51-game unbeaten streak, and an angry Solo stated that starting Scurry was the "wrong decision" after the game. (Ryan's contract was not renewed.)

Back in the starting spot after a lengthy fallout, Solo will return to China this summer as the American women try for a return to the gold medal podium. The 26-year-old goalie from Washington once recorded 1,054 straight minutes without a goal allowed for the national team, and she's clearly the best female goalkeeper in the country -- and maybe the world.

Oh, and she's kinda hot, too. How hot? You decide. After the jump, peruse more photos, analyze data, and vote in FanHouse's Attractive Olympian poll.

Sorry, Guys: Hope Solo Has a Boyfriend


Those lovable lasses at Kickster have uncovered a video that will greatly disappoint all those guys who saw the word "Single" on Hope Solo's Myspace page. That may not be the case, as it appears she's actually dating one Adrian Galaviz, a Seattle-area party promoter who dons American flags and body paint for his favorite goalkeeper. It's hard to compete with dedication like that, really.

Of course, the fact that Hope isn't so single doesn't change the fact that Greg Ryan was an moron for benching her.

Another picture of Hope and Adrian can be seen here, and it's sure to put that "White Chicks and Gang Signs" song in your head all afternoon.

(H/T: The Offside)

Greg Ryan Out as US Women's Soccer Coach


Greg Ryan lost his job today as the U.S. women's national soccer coach, less than a month after his controversial decision to bench goalie Hope Solo and his team's subsequent meltdown against Brazil.

U.S. Soccer president Sunil Gulati made the announcement, and he said he will be part of a three-person committee (along with Mia Hamm and U.S. Soccer's secretary general, Dan Flynn) that will determine the next coach for Team USA, which needs to regroup for the Olympics next year.

Gulati said there was no specific incident that led to the decision not to bring Ryan back, but everyone knows the loss to Brazil was the final nail in Ryan's coffin. There was no hope that he could continue to coach Team USA after that.

Hope Solo Back on Team USA Roster

Goalkeeper Hope Solo was told not to show up for the Women's World Cup third-place game after she criticized coach Greg Ryan's decision to bench her for the semifinal against Brazil.

But she hasn't been banished for good, and when Team USA begins a three-game series with Mexico in St. Louis on Saturday, Solo will be on the roster. It's not clear whether Ryan will pick Solo or the woman she was benched for, Briana Scurry, in St. Louis, but presumably both of them will get some playing time against Mexico, either in St. Louis Saturday or in one of the following games, in Portland and Albuquerque.

This is a magnanimous gesture from Ryan, but it's also the only move he could make if he wants to salvage his own reputation. As much as Solo was criticized for her comments about Ryan and Scurry, Ryan was criticized more for benching Solo in the first place. He won't be Team USA's coach for much longer, and at least he's not going out holding a grudge.

Women's World Cup: USA Beats Norway 4-1


Everyone who thought the tumultuous last few days for the U.S. women's national team would result in a listless performance against Norway in the third-place game was wrong. Team USA beat Norway 4-1 behind Abby Wambach's two goals.

Wambach scored in the 30th and 47th minutes, and when Lori Chalupny and Heather O'Reilly added goals at the 58 and 60-minute marks, it was 4-0 USA. Obviously, the American women came to play.

But it seems extraordinarily unlikely that today's performance is enough to save the job of coach Greg Ryan, who has been widely criticized for his decision to bench goalie Hope Solo in favor of Briana Scurry prior to Team USA's 4-0 loss to Brazil. Ryan's contract expires at the end of the year, and someone else will almost certainly be coaching the Americans when they return to China for the Olympics.

In the final, Germany beat Brazil 2-0.

Hope Solo Won't Attend Third-Place Game

Goalkeeper Hope Solo was benched for the U.S. women's national team's loss to Brazil in the World Cup semifinals, but she hasn't been benched for the third-place game. That's because "benched" would suggest that she's actually going to be there, sitting on the bench.

In reality, she won't even be in the stadium. Coach Greg Ryan announced that Briana Scurry will start again, and Solo will not be there.

"We have moved forward with 20 players who have stood by each other, who have battled for each other," Ryan said on Saturday. "And when the hard times came -- and the Brazil game was a hard time -- they stood strong. Now it's the 20 who have stuck together who will be ready to go out and compete against Norway."

Given Solo's comments after the loss to Brazil, Ryan may have made the right decision. But he's only in the position to make this right decision because he made the horribly wrong decision to bench Solo in the first place. I hope he enjoys the third-place game, because it will undoubtedly be his last as the national team coach.

Hope Solo on Her Homeless Father

On Monday, could even 1 percent of American sports fans identify Hope Solo? I doubt it. But after this week's benching as the U.S. women's soccer team goalie, followed by the team's debacle against Brazil, followed by Solo ripping coach Greg Ryan, everyone in the sports world is talking about her.

But I don't think many people know much Solo's background, especially her relationship with her late father, who was homeless for most of Hope's life. This great video from ESPN tells the story:

I'm a Hope Solo fan, and that life story is part of the reason. She seems like a tough young woman who's not going to let anything stand in her way. She wanted to dedicate a World Cup title to her dad, and it's a shame that she didn't get the chance.

Hope Solo's MySpace Friends Have Her Back


Hope Solo, the goalie who was benched prior to Team USA's 4-0 shellacking at the hands of Brazil, has been quite vocal about just how wrong coach Greg Ryan was to make that decision. And although she's been criticized in some quarters for calling out Ryan and teammate Briana Scurry, there's one place where everyone seems to agree with Solo: Her MySpace page.

Solo's Friends Comments include:
hey hope!
I'm very upset about the decision your coach have made yesterday!and it's a pity that we can't see a final USA vs. germany I would have really enjoyed this!
I wish you the best for your future and that it was the last time for you sitting on the bench...
:) greetz
And:
I want you to know that I'm 100% behind you. I think Coach Ryan made one of the 2 biggest coaching blunders in the history of sports (right along side Tretiak being benched in the 1980 Olympics in the USA/USSR hockey game, although I'm thankful for that one).
And:
I truly believe that what your coach did was so WRONG!!
The guy who makes the 1980 Olympics comment seems a little old for MySpace, but other than that, I think these comments are RIGHT!! Ryan really did screw this up.

Greg Ryan Has a Much Bigger Mouth Than Hope Solo

While most the post-mortem of the USA's horrific 4-0 loss to Brazil has centered around benched goalkeeper Hope Solo throwing coach Greg Ryan under the bus, Jeff Klein of the New York Times soccer blog Goal is writing that Solo's postgame comments aren't the real story. The real story is Greg Ryan's pregame comments about Brazil's style of play -- comments that became bulletin board material for Marta and Co.

"They'd made comments and wanted to bring people down," the superstar Marta said right after the match. "We heard many comments that tried to belittle us. The United States have a very strong team and tried to impose things in their own favor, but they wound up unhappy."

So what did Ryan say that wound up the Brazilians so much? According to Klein, during a press conference on Monday, Ryan basically called the Brazil side a bunch of thugs.

"Brazil's primary tactic was fouling us to break our rhythm," (Ryan said about) the U.S.-Brazil friendly match played at Giants Stadium in June. "We had more of the ball, and their response to that was just to foul. Brazil has tried to break our rhythm by chopping our players down. The last time we played Brazil, they didn't even try to play football - they just kicked us from behind."

The Brazilian press republished those comments and reported that Brazil head coach Jorge Barcellos called Ryan out for his "provocations," giving his women all the motivation they needed to open a can of whoop-ass on the Americans.

Of course, Ryan's provocations were completely ignored by the American press, which chose to focus on Ryan's reaction to Solo's indictment of him. Don't blame Solo for talking too much, though. At the end of the day, she's really just following her coach's example.

Hope Solo Rips Ryan, Scurry: 'Wrong Decision ... I Would Have Made Those Saves'

Team USA goalkeeper Hope Solo was benched before today's 4-0 loss to Brazil, and she isn't going to hold back on either her coach, Greg Ryan, or the more experienced goalie she was benched for, Briana Scurry.

"It was the wrong decision, and I think anybody that knows anything about the game knows that," she said. "There's no doubt in my mind I would have made those saves. And the fact of the matter is it's not 2004 anymore. ... It's 2007, and I think you have to live in the present. And you can't live by big names. You can't live in the past. It doesn't matter what somebody did in an Olympic gold medal game in the Olympics three years ago. Now is what matters, and that's what I think."

Obviously, we'll never know if that's true or not, and even if she would have made those saves, Team USA might have lost anyway. But Ryan's job is to get his team ready to play, and his team wasn't ready to play today. Solo had tears in her eyes as she was speaking and might regret her emotional comments tomorrow. But that doesn't make them wrong.

Now the question: Who starts for Team USA in the third place game?

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