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GOAL TENDING: Frank (above) and
Villa (below) have their sights set on Olympic success.
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on the top of
her right foot, just above her toes, Brenda Villa has a tattoo
of five interlocking rings. She got
it after
she led the U.S. women’s water polo team to a silver
medal in the 2000 Summer Games, scoring nine goals in
the first Olympic competition for the sport.
While her
mom isn’t fond of the tattoo, to Villa it’s
a reminder of the upcoming 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens.
That’s where she and All-American teammate Jackie Frank
hope to grab the gold with the U.S. team, considered
third- or fourth-best in the world. The two June graduates
have
joined three former Cardinal teammates—Ellen Estes, ’00,
Margie Dingeldein, ’02, and Kate Pettit, ’02—for
a year of intensive training and competition. Of the
15 players on the national team, 13 will be chosen for
the Olympics. “Jackie
is a potentially rising star internationally, and Brenda
is one of the best players in the world,” says Guy
Baker, head coach of the U.S. team. “Jackie’s
position is already secured as one of two goalies, and
it’s
a safe bet that Brenda and Ellen will go.”
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Frank and
Villa powered the top-ranked Cardinal to a 21-3 season
this year, losing to second-seeded UCLA, 4-3,
in the
NCAA championship game. Frank was named Division I
Player of the Year and Mountain Pacific Sports Federation
Goalie
of the
Year; Villa was named MPSF Player of the Year and left
Stanford as the second-leading scorer in school history
(172 career
goals), behind Estes.
“Brenda sees things before anyone, anywhere in the
venue, and she keeps this dialogue going, whether she’s
making a pass or missing a shot,” says Stanford head
coach John Tanner, ’82, the MPSF Coach of the Year. “There’s
so much joy in the way she plays.” Frank, he says,
is at her best when the pressure is greatest: “She
blocks shots she has no business touching.”
Villa
and Frank grew up in Southern California, where they
were swimming against each other—and, often, against
boys—on club teams by age 10. “She doesn’t
remember it, but I do,” Frank says about the first
time they competed. “Brenda’s so outgoing,
and she was talking really loud and laughing—she’s
a pretty memorable person.”
In the years since, the
two women have traveled the world to tournaments in
Australia, Canada, the Czech
Republic, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Spain, the
Netherlands and
New Zealand. “A
lot of players don’t like it when the opposing team
starts cheering, but any cheering is fine with me,” Frank
says. “Sometimes,
when you’re in a foreign country, you listen for
the silence, too, because that means things are going
well for
us. You try to work it either way, so you’ll play
better.” For
Villa, whose parents immigrated to the United States
from Mexico and who speaks fluent Spanish, Cuba has
been the highlight
of her tournament travel. “I went twice and loved
it,” she
says. “You read all the Hemingway books and it’s
like a magical place.”
The 5-foot-4 driver and 5-foot-11
goalie are looking forward to the daily six-hour workouts
at the national
training center
in Southern California, followed by summer competition
at the world championships in Barcelona and the Pan
American Games
in the Dominican Republic. “One of the fun parts
about water polo is always having to read and always having
to adjust
to different situations,” Villa says. The bigger
the crowd and the competition, the better for Frank: “If
we played in the football stadium, and there was a
pool in the middle, I would be so happy.”
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