If you win games, at the top, there's no pressure to change. You change when you have to change. You change when you don't win anymore.
The tremendous honor of playing on the world stage is even more rewarding when I am able to use my accomplishments to help others.
I would like to fight as hard as I possibly can in each and every game and win or lose, leave it at that, and move forward. I know in my heart that that is the mindset I need to be a successful and happy athlete.
I've spent a lot of time being insecure about my body, but it's done so much for me. It's my tool, my vessel for my job.
I'm very grateful for the way that I feel when I play. I feel very powerful, I feel fast, I feel unstoppable, and that's because of my body.
In the U.S., my whole life, I felt like I had to be the best and score more goals and run with more fitness so I could be the one in the limelight. I think that when I went to Sweden, I found the joy of being part of a team and contributing to everybody's success.