As soccer season nears, ASU’s Barbieri remains stranded in Brazil

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By Harrison Campbell
Special for Cronkite News

PHOENIX – When Pac-12 women’s soccer starts play in the spring, Arizona State could be without veteran midfielder Lara Barbieri. The ASU senior is from Monte Mor, São Paulo, Brazil, where she’s currently stranded, unable to return to the United States because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Barbieri has been in Brazil since March, when she flew home after spring break and ASU pivoted to remote learning. For nearly 10 months, she has been waiting and hoping U.S. travel restrictions will be lifted, and she can return to Tempe, her second home. She has even contemplated returning to the U.S. through Mexico, but for the moment all she can do is wait and hope.

There was a period of time where many thought a 2021 women’s college soccer season wouldn’t happen after it was postponed last fall. That changed when the NCAA announced in September that the season would begin Feb. 3. For now, Barbieri is like everyone else – crossing her fingers and scanning for updates.

“I’m hoping that it is going to open up soon, but to be honest I don’t know,” Barbieri said.

Brazil has struggled with the COVID-19 pandemic. In June, its average of 1,000 deaths per day made it, along with the United States and India, one of the countries with the highest amount of deaths.

A second wave hit in December and the government postponed reopening universities until March. Meanwhile, travel restrictions remained firm.

Graham Winkworth, the Sun Devils women’s soccer coach, is optimistic Barbieri will soon be able to return.

“We haven’t seen her since March when the coronavirus began. We’ve missed having her personality around the rest of the group and we look forward to hopefully her border opening up again … because she is a great teammate,” Winkworth said.

Barbieri’s home town in São Paulo is part of the metropolitan region of Campinas and has a population of around 55,000.

“Here everybody basically breathes soccer, it is like everyone is a soccer fan,” she said.

It is there where Barbieri got her beginnings in the sport, playing against boys.

“In Brazil, soccer is made for boys,” she said before adding, “I’d rather play with boys than girls because it is a different type of game, I would say it’s faster. … So at that time I would rather play with boys.”

She didn’t have much of a choice, however, as there were no girls teams for her age group. Barbieri played with boys her age until she was around 13, when she joined a girls club team. By the time she was age 15, she was playing professional soccer in Brazil.

Barbieri played for Associação Atlética Ponte Preta, a team in the second tier of Brazilian football. Founded in 1900, Ponte Preta is also the second oldest soccer club still active in the country. She also played for Ponte Preta’s crosstown rivals Guarani Futebol Clube, who are also in Brazil’s second tier, as well as Valinhos Futebol Clube. She was even called up to play on the U15 and U17 Brazilian national teams.

“It was a dream, it is what all athletes want, they all want to represent their country, so it was a dream to me and it keeps being a dream,” Barbieri said.

By 18, she decided it was time to take her talents to a college in the states. “I see an opportunity to play soccer at a high level and also study and get a degree,” she said.

After getting help contacting college programs, Barbieri began to make connections at various schools.

“Lara was one that was actually found through an agency when I was at my previous institution at South Alabama, I saw her then and we were talking to her briefly (there), and then I came here (to Arizona State) and we continued those conversations,” Winkworth said.

Barbieri began her collegiate career at ASU in the fall of 2017. It took some adjusting, not just moving to a new country and a new city, but transitioning to a whole new style of soccer.

“In the United States it is more physical, the girls are faster, stronger and here in Brazil we are more technical, we keep the ball with freestyle,” said Barbieri, before adding, “It is different but it is cool though. It keeps the game (at a) very high level.”

While she initially had to adjust to the physical aspect of American soccer, her passing ability and skill on the ball shined through. Both are important tools for any central midfielder.

“She’s extremely technically gifted, her passing range is excellent, the short passes, long passes she’s excellent,” Winkworth said of her talents. “She’s very good and comfortable in possession of the ball under pressure, so you’re happy to give her the ball even with opposing players around her because she’s very comfortable with the ball at her feet.”

Barbieri plays the classic style of Brazilian soccer, often described by the locals as creative, spontaneous and skillful. Its beauty can be seen today by players such as Neymar Jr. and Roberto Firmino, who help keep the Ginga style of play alive.

According to El Arte de Futbol, “Ginga is a blend of Brazilian culture that seeped into the football fields. The first ingredient that influenced Ginga was a martial art called Capoeira. The second part of Ginga involves the principles of Samba dance. Combining these two strong and versatile styles of the Brazilian culture gave birth to the quick-witted, swaying and fast-flowing movements of Ginga. The style is a dominant flavour of football in the country and focuses on an attack-minded game.”

“The attacking flair side of the game … that’s very prevalent in the Brazilian game. The area of the game that is not as prevalent in Brazil is the defensive side of the game,” Winkworth said, adding Barbieri has focused on the lesser emphasized side since she arrived in Tempe.

“One area she is working hard at … is the defensive side of the ball. Her understanding of how to defend as a midfield player has improved dramatically,” he said. ”The strength and conditioning side of the game is very important in the U.S. and I think that’s another area she enjoys working with the staff that we have and the facilities that we have, that’s another area she’s shown some growth.”

Barbieri has communicated with ASU coaches and staff while she’s been stranded in Brazil and has been given a conditioning plan to do while at home.

This upcoming season, whenever it may happen, will be Barbieri’s senior year at Arizona State. Luckily the journey will not end once she graduates, as the NCAA has granted an extra year of eligibility for many athletes because of the global pandemic.

Barbieri said her biggest goal for the 2021 season is to “get into the tournament,” meaning the Women’s College Cup, a 64-team March Madness-style tournament to determine the Division I women’s national champion. Stanford has won the title two of the last three years. But Stanford is not the only challenge in the Pac-12 for ASU. A total of eight teams from the conference made the 2019 Women’s College Cup, with UCLA and Washington State joining Stanford in the Elite Eight. This doesn’t change a thing for the Sun Devils.

“Not only my goal but the entire team, that is what (we have been) looking for the past three years, and it would be awesome to end my senior year getting in the tournament,” Barbieri said.

Along with dealing with all new COVID-19 protocols put in place by the NCAA, the Sun Devils will be playing in a newly renovated stadium. During the pandemic, plans moved forward for renovations to the soccer and lacrosse team fields and the project was completed in September.

With the new field will hopefully come new success for the program. In the 2019-20 season, Arizona State finished 6-11-3 and, after opening with five straight victories, failed to pick up a win in Pac-12 play. The goal now is to grow from last year’s campaign.

Assuming Barbieri can make it back in time for the season, she will be one of three seniors on the squad looking to lead the young Sun Devils.

“I’m hoping since March she’s had the opportunity back home to make sure she’s running a lot, make sure she is getting fit,” Winkworth said. “If she (has) then she can certainly unlock an opposing team’s defense with her vision, her composure, and her technical skills.”

For the moment, Barbieri plays the waiting game, hoping she can re-enter the country before the season kicks off. While entering the United States directly from Brazil currently isn’t possible because of government restrictions, Barbieri has a backup plan.

“If it doesn’t open up soon, I will have to go through Mexico because for Brazilians to get back in the United States we have to quarantine in another country,” she said. “I’m looking for a big group of Brazilians that need to go back to the United States.”

There is still time before the season is slated to start, but there is no indication as to whether or not the U.S. border will be open to Brazil anytime soon.

In a time where nothing is sure, the Sun Devils simply have to hope they can get a skillful dribbler and veteran presence in Barbieri back to Tempe for the spring season. That’s all they can do. Hope and patiently wait.

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Lara Barbieri said that in her home country of Brazil, “everybody basically breathes soccer.” (Photo courtesy of Sun Devil Athletics)
Lara Barbieri, one of Arizona State’s veteran midfielders, is stranded in Brazil because of travel restrictions but hopes to return before the start of the season in February. (Photo courtesy of Sun Devil Athletics)