Hi John, my name is Ted Hunt and I am Alexandra’s father.
Growing up in a household where her father was a former college soccer player and a lifelong coach, I suppose that it was inevitable that she would gravitate to the “beautiful game.”
Not surprisingly, though, she chose to follow her own path as she developed as a soccer player and I still remember the night that she told me that she preferred that I not serve as her club coach. But I admired her forthrightness and her desire to create her own identity in this area. And, boy, did she develop her own identity.
By the time she had risen to our school’s varsity team, she had become the team’s “Number Ten.” In the world of soccer, if one is identified as a “Number Ten,” it is about more than a uniform number. It means that the player is in the center of all activity on the field- the defense, the attack, the leadership. I have often thought of the Number Ten as the “hub of the wheel.”
Alexandra always played that position exactly the way that it was designed to be played. She was the first defender to attempt to break down the other team’s attack, she moved the ball around to her teammates so that everyone was involved. She scored goals, she tallied assists. Even in her sophomore year in high school, she was the team’s leader, and her teammates looked to her for guidance and inspiration, both on and off the field.