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No. 3 Carli Lloyd

By her own admission, U.S women's national soccer team star Carli Lloyd was almost written off earlier this year. Heading into the Olympics, Lloyd suddenly found herself out of coach Pia Sundhage's starting lineup. As her 30th birthday arrived in mid-July, there were questions as to whether the Delran, N.J., native could be out of the picture entirely.

By her own admission, U.S women's national soccer team star Carli Lloyd was almost written off earlier this year.

Heading into the Olympics, Lloyd suddenly found herself out of coach Pia Sundhage's starting lineup. As her 30th birthday arrived in mid-July, there were questions as to whether the Delran, N.J., native could be out of the picture entirely.

Instead, Lloyd flipped the script. She stepped up when her team needed her most, and ended up playing a big role in the U.S.' gold-medal run.

By the time she and her teammates stood on the podium at Wembley Stadium, there were no doubts left about what Lloyd brings to the field.

She has scored 15 goals this year. That's more than in any other year of her eight with the national team. Her total of 32 games played is the second-highest of any year in her career.

Of course, the spotlight shone brightest - and the pressure was highest - during the Olympics. In addition to the usual media frenzy, the U.S. came to London as reigning Olympic champions. And to top that off, the U.S. had revenge on its mind, after losing the 2011 World Cup final to Japan.

It was a perfect scenario for Lloyd to thrive in. But just weeks before the Games began, Sundhage decided to bench her. Not because of anything Lloyd had done, but only because Sundhage wanted to play a different style.

"When something like that happens - you put in all this work and dedication to something you love . . . I didn't understand it," Lloyd said. "Why was it happening now? What had I done to deserve it? I worked so hard, probably harder than anyone else on the team, and now I'm faced with this challenge a couple months before leaving for London. It was a really hard thing."

Lloyd turned to her longtime trainer, James Galanis. Together, they sketched out a plan.

"He could see it on my face," Lloyd said. "He said look, you can't sit here and worry about the reasons why - you have to just dig deeper."

When the U.S. squad got to London, Lloyd met with Sundhage to try to get a better understanding of what was expected.

"I've had a lot of obstacles throughout my career, and I can honestly say that I have persevered through all of them," Lloyd said. "I told her that I will win this battle, and I will win my spot back, and I will help the team win a gold medal."

Sundhage smiled, as she so often did in her time in charge of the U.S. team.

"She was happy to hear my response and to know I wasn't going to give up," Lloyd said. "She appreciated the respect that I had to dig deeper and not crumble. After a week and a half over there, she said to me, 'You're playing really well. We're going to need you.' "

It didn't take long for Lloyd to get her chance. Shannon Boxx, the U.S. starting defensive midfielder, came to the Olympics carrying an injury. She lasted only 15 minutes of the team's opening game against France before having to leave the field with hamstring trouble.

That was Lloyd's chance to step up. To say she did so would be an understatement.

Lloyd helped spark a U.S. rally from an early 2-0 deficit, scoring what turned out to be the winning goal in a 4-2 victory. She scored three more goals in the Olympics, including both U.S. tallies in the 2-1 gold-medal game triumph over Japan.

The winning strike was one for the ages. Early in the second half, Lloyd ran nearly half the length of the field before smashing in a shot from long range.

"I was going to pass the ball to Abby [Wambach] or Alex [Morgan], as they kept bending their runs out - they did a great job of clearing the space," Lloyd said. "But no one [from Japan's defense] was coming to me. So I said to myself, 'I'm just going to unleash this.' Sure enough, it went in the back of the net, and it was one of the greatest feelings of my life."

If that's not clutch enough for you, consider this: That was the second consecutive Olympic gold-medal game in which Lloyd scored the winning goal for the United States.