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A hero鈥檚 welcome as Krieger, Harris return to Spirit

After two weeks of celebration, like this appearance at the Kids' Choice Awards, Ali Krieger and Ashlyn Harris returned home to Washington this weekend. (AP Photo/Paul A. Hebert)
After two weeks of celebration, like this appearance at the Kids’ Choice Awards, Ali Krieger and Ashlyn Harris returned home to Washington this weekend. (AP Photo/Paul A. Hebert)
The biggest crowd in Spirit history, 5,413, turned out Saturday to watch the Spirit beat the Seattle Reign, 3-0. (海角社区app/Noah Frank)
The biggest crowd in Spirit history, 5,413, turned out Saturday to watch the Spirit beat the Seattle Reign, 3-0. (海角社区app/Noah Frank)
Krieger and Harris聽were honored along with other Spirit players who competed for Canada, Australia and Nigeria in a pregame ceremony. (海角社区app/Noah Frank)
Spirit fans flew flags of all four nations their players represented in the World Cup, along with a D.C. city flag. (海角社区app/Noah Frank)
Spirit fans flew flags of all four nations their players represented in the World Cup, along with a D.C. city flag. (海角社区app/Noah Frank)
After dealing with some rough weather earlier in the season, the Spirit could not have asked for a nicer day Saturday. (海角社区app/Noah Frank)
After dealing with some rough weather earlier in the season, the Spirit could not have asked for a nicer day Saturday. (海角社区app/Noah Frank)
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After two weeks of celebration, like this appearance at the Kids' Choice Awards, Ali Krieger and Ashlyn Harris returned home to Washington this weekend. (AP Photo/Paul A. Hebert)
The biggest crowd in Spirit history, 5,413, turned out Saturday to watch the Spirit beat the Seattle Reign, 3-0. (海角社区app/Noah Frank)
Spirit fans flew flags of all four nations their players represented in the World Cup, along with a D.C. city flag. (海角社区app/Noah Frank)
After dealing with some rough weather earlier in the season, the Spirit could not have asked for a nicer day Saturday. (海角社区app/Noah Frank)

BOYDS, Md. 鈥 On a picture perfect sunny summer Saturday evening just outside of Germantown, Maryland, a crowd of better than 5,400 gathered to welcome their heroes home. The Washington Spirit took the field at home for the first time since the U.S. Women鈥檚 National Team鈥檚 World Cup victory, as a capacity crowd cheered their hometown players.

It鈥檚 the scene about which Ali Krieger and Ashlyn Harris have dreamed, , yes, but also through the conscious sacrifices they have made to put U.S. women鈥檚 soccer on their backs to try to grow the sport professionally here in the states. Winning in Vancouver was about more than a simple title, more than a third star on the jersey. It was a vital element to the growth 鈥 and, even, the very survival 鈥 of professional women鈥檚 soccer around the country, a fact both players seem acutely aware of.

鈥淭his is great for women鈥檚 football, this is great for the club, this is great for the NWSL,鈥 said Krieger before the game, where she was honored but did not play, still recovering from the whirlwind tour of celebrations and media appearances.

鈥淲e wanted to win not only for ourselves, our families, our fans and our country, but also to help this league survive.鈥

Harris, who was also in street clothes for the game, echoed Krieger鈥檚 sentiment.

鈥淭his is huge for our sport right now. We need to enjoy this. We need to continue this momentum. We, from the beginning, knew what we needed to do. We had to accomplish great things to keep this league progressing and to keep it surviving. Is that a lot to carry on players backs in a World Cup? Yes. But that鈥檚 the responsibility we take every day we step on the field,鈥 Harris said.

That is quite a burden, certainly more than most professional athletes are asked to bear聽while competing for championships. But if the early returns are any indication, they鈥檝e been worth the effort.

Saturday鈥檚 sellout marked the first for the Spirit since last season鈥檚 contest against the Portland Thorns, featuring the immensely popular Alex Morgan. The Spirit are home each of the next two weekends as well, with expected near-sellouts for both games.

This Saturday, the Spirit play host to the league-leading Chicago Red Stars, who have lost just once in 11 games. Chicago features National Team stars Shannon Boxx, Julie Johnston and Christen Press, now household names. However, the biggest out-of-town draw likely will come in two weeks, when the Houston Dash come to town.

The Dash feature Morgan Brian and Meghan Klingenberg, two of the USWNT鈥檚 rising stars. But they also have Carli Lloyd, who became a household name across America after her in the World Cup Final against Japan.

And while three straight raucous crowds are a nice building block, neither player is naive to the challenges that lie ahead to continue to build interest and groundswell in what is still a young sport fighting for a foothold in the American professional athletic landscape.

鈥淚 know that this doesn鈥檛 last very long, so we鈥檙e going to ride the wave,鈥 said Krieger. 鈥淲e just need to get those fans out to these games and get these games on TV. That鈥檚 why we were happy that we could win. It meant more to us than a gold medal.鈥

With both teams missing their stars on the field on Saturday (Seattle stars Hope Solo and Megan Rapinoe were also absent), the Spirit took advantage. After a scoreless first 45 minutes, the Spirit rode a trio of second half goals to a 3-0 victory to remain undefeated at home. That only adds weight to their next two games, as they currently hold the third spot in the table, with the top four teams advancing to the playoffs.

While the pace will return to something resembling normal for Krieger and Harris as they return to training and prepare to play next weekend, they hope the dynamic of how their sport is perceived has shifted more seismically, that the impact they made earlier this month in Canada will carry far beyond the foreseeable future. Harris knows now is the time to make sure their hard work won鈥檛 be forgotten.

鈥淭o be able to be here tonight, to shake hands with little girls and high five and sign, to give them dreams of doing the same thing I鈥檓 doing is pretty powerful,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd to be a part of that is pretty special. I鈥檓 very happy that there鈥檚 a sold-out crowd. That means I鈥檓 doing my job.鈥

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