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Abby Wambach collects goal, black eye in U.S. soccer victory

Abby Wambach lay on her stomach, kicking the turf in pain from a freshly minted black eye. Had she been somewhere other than a soccer field, she might have responded differently to her aggressor.

Published: July 29, 2012 at 12:05 a.m. PDTUpdated: July 29, 2012 at 12:38 a.m. PDT
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Abby Wambach of the United States, on ground, scores against Natalia Gaitan (3) and Colombia during the Group G women’s soccer match in Scotland. (CHRIS CLARK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS)

GLASGOW, Scotland — Abby Wambach lay on her stomach, kicking the turf in pain from a freshly minted black eye. Had she been somewhere other than a soccer field, she might have responded differently to her aggressor.

Instead, she merely broke the U.S. women’s soccer record for goals at the Olympics.

Wambach’s second-half goal put her atop the all-time list Saturday as the Americans dominated feisty Colombia, 3-0, guaranteeing a spot in the quarterfinals of the London Games soccer tournament.

Megan Rapinoe scored in the first half and celebrated by wishing injured teammate Ali Krieger a happy birthday, and Carli Lloyd had a late goal in her return to the starting lineup.

But niceties were otherwise few and far between in a game that included 30 fouls – with no altercation more painful than when Lady Andrade hit Wambach in the face in the 39th minute.

“I’m running toward the goal to get position, and I got sucker-punched,” said Wambach, sporting a black semicircle under her swollen right eye after the game.

Wambach said Andrade kept on taunting in the second half and attempted another blow to the face – but missed and hit Wambach’s neck instead. When Wambach scored in the 74th minute to make the score 2-0, the achievement felt particularly sweet.

“This is Olympics and I can’t risk getting a red card, I can’t risk getting a yellow card,” Wambach said. “We like to call it ‘ice’ – stay ice cold. They’re trying to get me to retaliate, and I’m proud of myself for not doing that.”

Andrade called the play an accident.

“Nothing happened,” she said through an interpreter. “It was just a normal part of the game. We were both running, she ran across me and we collided.”

Told that Wambach wants Andrade disciplined by the governing bodies, the Colombian said: “I think they should be, too, because they’re the United States. The whistle always goes in their favor. They were hitting us and hitting us, but there was never a whistle.”

Wambach looked like her younger self on her goal, sliding onto Tobin Heath’s pass to beat two defenders. The 32-year-old striker joked that she was using her “blazing speed.”

“Nobody puts balls to me like that anymore,” Wambach said. “And she put it through. And I’m like, ‘I’ve got to get there.’”

It was Wambach’s sixth Olympic goal, moving her past Mia Hamm and Tiffeny Milbrett, an especially notable achievement given that Wambach missed the 2008 Games with a broken leg. It was also her second score of the tournament and her 140th career international goal, within striking range of Hamm’s world record of 158.

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