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Player's Own Voice podcast: Jessie Fleming ready to roll in the NWSL

Though she is still only 25 years old, Jessie Fleming has already enjoyed a full decade of being named player of the year, top college player, top Canadian, CONCACAF all star, and enough adulation to convince a less modest midfielder of her own greatness.

But that is not Fleming's way.

She has a "do the work, and do it well," attitude that has carried her to the apex of soccer, and at the same time, helped her become a well-rounded, highly educated, self-aware young leader.

Player's Own Voice podcast host Anastasia Buscis connected with Fleming shortly after she signed a deal to move from the English Super league's Chelsea to the Portland Thorns, a top-tier club in the NWSL. Fleming's transfer is the richest in American women's soccer. Fleming herself is thrilled to play closer to home, for a team with a terrific fanbase.

In Portland, she'll reunite with Team Canada buddies Christine Sinclair and Janine Beckie, and club president Karina LeBlanc. Jokes about a stealthy Canuck invasion aside, the presence of Canadians on top international teams does raise a question about this country's evolution as a soccer nation.

Fleming is realistic about that. She has played in European and South American nations where footie traditions run at least as deep as this nation's hockey culture. For Canada to get there is going to take more time than casual fans might appreciate, but Fleming sees signs that we're on our way.

Learning to take disappointment in stride was one of the takeaways from the last FIFA Women's World Cup. Fleming came out of that tournament with a new appreciation for how the margins have tightened in the international women's game. Traditional favourites are being bounced by newly competitive teams. Luck

Read more on cbc.ca