Lo’eau LaBonta made history on Saturday by becoming the oldest player to debut for the United States women’s national soccer team in its 40-year history. The midfielder entered the field in the 70th minute of the match against China, which ended with a 3-0 victory for her team. With 32 years and 74 days, LaBonta has a decade of professional experience in the NWSL. Her call-up to the USWNT came earlier this month.
You have to have short-term memory, whether of victories or defeats. And when there is a defeat, you let it sink in, but you learn from it and move on. And that’s what I’ve done with every obstacle in my life.
Lo’eau LaBonta
The player is the captain of the Kansas City Current of the NWSL and was a key piece in the team’s attack in 2024, as well as in their performance at the top of the NWSL table mid-season.
In the current season, LaBonta has scored three goals in 10 matches with the Current, who leads the league. In the previous year, she recorded six goals and one assist in 24 matches, contributing to the team’s record of 57 goals scored.
She is the second player of Hawaiian descent to be called up to the USWNT, after Natasha Kai, a 2008 Olympic gold medalist.
LaBonta expressed her excitement about her first call-up to the USWNT: “It’s a dream come true. If you’re a professional soccer player, or even if you’re a soccer player in general, you always dream of playing for the United States women’s national team. I’ve had this dream for over 20 years. So, finally getting the call, I had to pinch myself. I thought, ‘It can’t be real because throughout this year they’ve been calling up the young players, the young prospects, and here I am receiving this call-up.”