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US women have task cut out in quest for record fifth gold

PARIS : The United States women's soccer team have won four golds at the Olympics since the sport's introduction in 1996 but they have not been on the top step of the podium in 12 years, with a record-extending fifth gold no longer a foregone conclusion.

Once the most dominant nation in women's soccer, reaching five consecutive Olympic finals, U.S. teams have since fallen behind as their European counterparts caught up with the famed American program and even surpassed it.

Germany won the 2016 gold while the U.S. also had to watch on as their neighbours Canada, who beat them in the semi-finals at the last edition in Tokyo, went on to claim the gold. But the biggest reality check came at the women's World Cup last year.

Having never finished outside the top three at the World Cup, a U.S. side that failed to impress were knocked out in the last-16 in 2023, marking the end of a glorious era as the likes of Megan Rapinoe retired from international duty.

A young core was ready to take the torch from the older generation but they needed the right coach to take them forward and U.S. Soccer wasted no time in hiring someone with a proven track record in Europe - Emma Hayes.

The English coach left Chelsea after making the London side the most dominant team in the Women's Super League, but she has her task cut out with the American team.

Hayes was a pundit for the last World Cup where she highlighted how the Americans are no longer the big guns in women's soccer and after the 47-year-old took over in May, she said there was work to do to make the U.S. dream of gold again.

Alex Morgan - one of the last vestiges of the all-conquering U.S. team with 123 international goals - was left out of the Olympic squad, but eight players that won

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