Lorrie Fair

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Full name Lorraine Fair Allen
Birth name Lorraine Ming Fair
Date of birth (1978-08-05) August 5, 1978 (age 47)
Place of birth Los Altos, California, U.S.
Lorrie Fair
Lorrie Fair in 2013.
Personal information
Full name Lorraine Fair Allen
Birth name Lorraine Ming Fair
Date of birth (1978-08-05) August 5, 1978 (age 47)
Place of birth Los Altos, California, U.S.
Height 5 ft 3 in (1.60 m)
Position(s) Midfielder
College career
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1996–1999 North Carolina Tar Heels
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2001–2003 Philadelphia Charge 53 (1)
2005 Olympique Lyonnais Féminin 11 (0)
2008 Chelsea
International career
1996–2005 United States 120 (7)
Managerial career
2006 North Carolina (Volunteer Assistant Coach)
Medal record
Women's football (soccer)
Representing the  United States
Olympic Games
Silver medal – second place2000 SydneyTeam
FIFA Women's World Cup
Gold medal – first place1999 USATeam competition
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

Lorraine Fair Allen (born Lorraine Ming Fair; August 5, 1978) is a retired American professional soccer midfielder who was a member of the World Cup Champion United States women's national soccer team in 1999. Over the span of ten years, she was a part of one World Cup Team and three Olympic teams, and retired from international play in 2005.

Her twin sister, Ronnie Fair, (now Ronnie Fair Sullins) was also a member of the national team. When Ronnie was called in to participate in a game against England on May 9, 1997 at San Jose, California, it became the first time a pair of sisters played together on the USWNT.

In 2023, Fair was named to the San Jose Sports Hall of Fame.[1]

Lorrie and Ronnie both participated on Los Altos High School's female soccer team in Los Altos, California, where they grew up. They were born at Stanford Hospital, but moved to New York for three years before returning to the Bay Area in 1982. While Ronnie chose Stanford to go to college, Lorrie decided on the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill instead, but not before being a two time NSCAA all-American and Parade magazine all-American. At UNC, she was picked as one of Soccer America's freshmen of the year, and she helped lead UNC to the NCAA championship in 1996, 1997, and 1999.[2] She also won the Honda Sports Award as the nation's top soccer player.[3][4]

National team career

She joined the United States women's national under-20 soccer team in 1994, playing in the Nordic Cup (amongst other events). In 1995, she was a member of the West Team at the US Olympic Festival, and she was invited to train with the National team. While a senior in high school, at the age of 17, she was named an alternate for the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games team (which won gold at the tournament). Fair rejected the chance to travel as an alternate because she was upset at being cut from national coach Tony DiCicco's main 16 player squad.[5]

Fair had made her senior international debut against Norway in February 1996. In March 1998 she scored her first international goal against New Zealand at RFK Stadium.[6]

After sitting out the 1996 Olympic games, she earned a more permanent spot on the team and in 1999, she was the youngest member of the team that won that year's FIFA Women's World Cup. She played every minute of the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, taking home a silver medal after an overtime loss to Norway in the championship game. In her last world event, she was an alternate on the gold medal-winning Olympic team in 2004 and then retired in 2005 with 120 international appearances.

International goals

No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
1.14 March 2000Faro, Portugal Denmark1–12–12000 Algarve Cup
2.5 May 2000Portland, United States Mexico7–08–02000 Women's U.S. Cup
3.23 June 2000Hershey, United States Trinidad and Tobago2–011–02000 CONCACAF Women's Gold Cup
4.3–0

Club career

Personal life

References

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