How This Olympic Star and 麻豆社 Survives Brutal Disappointments: ‘We’re Forever On Trial’
Before retiring in 2024, this soccer player became a two-time Olympic medalist.
Key Takeaways
- Alex Morgan, 36, is an Olympic gold medalist and former professional soccer player.
- Morgan faced getting cut from the Olympic team in the summer of 2024, months before her retirement.
- Morgan is the co-founder of Togethxr, a women鈥檚 sports-focused media and commerce company, and Trybe Ventures, a venture capital firm.
In the summer of 2024, Alex Morgan faced a devastating public rejection.
The star soccer player, who had led the U.S. national team to Olympic gold at the London 2012 Games and in Tokyo 2020, had been cut from the 2024 Olympic team. The global stage that had showcased her rise would go on without her.听
Morgan had been one of the most celebrated figures in U.S. women鈥檚 soccer for well over a decade, so seeing her name absent from the roster sent shockwaves through the sports world. Fans scrambled for explanations: Was it the that had sidelined her for a month earlier that year? Or was the cut due to an emphasis on younger, more versatile players?聽
Speculation swirled, but when Morgan finally spoke, she made herself clear. She didn鈥檛 hide behind niceties.听
“Today, I’m disappointed about not having the opportunity to represent our country on the Olympic stage,” Morgan in June 2024.
That single word鈥斺渄isappointed鈥濃攈inted at how deeply the decision stung. Emma Hayes, the head coach of the U.S. Women鈥檚 National Team, that it was a 鈥渢ough decision鈥 to cut Morgan from the team, but she wanted 鈥渢o go in another direction鈥 and select other players.
A few months later, Morgan retired from professional soccer (announcing she was pregnant with her second child). It isn鈥檛 how she would have chosen to end her illustrious 15-year career. But by that time, Morgan had also learned a thing or two about coping with disappointments鈥攊n both sports and business.听
Now, in a new interview with 麻豆社, she shares the mindset that got her through it.听 “I didn’t value myself as an athlete over me as a human,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 knew my strengths and what I brought to the table. I just kept going and thought of their loss instead of my loss.”

Believing in the human behind the skills
Most entrepreneurs know what it鈥檚 like for your self-worth to be completely wrapped in your goals鈥攖o the point that if you fail, it鈥檚 easy to feel like you are a failure. But on and off the field, Morgan鈥檚 work has channeled an important message: You are not the sum of your wins. You are a human being with strengths you can and will bring to new endeavors, long after this singular loss.听
Three years before her Olympic disappointment, in 2021, Morgan cofounded , a platform to tell women鈥檚 sports stories. She had long believed there wasn鈥檛 enough mainstream coverage of women鈥檚 sports, so she created Togethxr to fill the gap. By June 2024, Togethxr had broken through as a symbol of the women鈥檚 sports boom, largely thanks to its 鈥溾 line of t-shirts, tote bags and hoodies, which went viral. By mid-2024, Togethxr鈥檚 sales of sloganed apparel had already reached .
In 2022, Morgan also cofounded a venture capital firm, , with her husband Servando Carrasco, who is also a former U.S. professional soccer player. The firm invests in early-stage companies, with a focus on health tech, sports tech and media. Some of its notable investments include the women鈥檚 basketball league Unrivaled and the Women鈥檚 Team Golf League.听聽
Both of Morgan鈥檚 companies are about finding value in the skills, ideas and strengths of organizations and people who may be overlooked by others. Whether it鈥檚 Togethxr’s coverage highlighting the wins of an up-and-coming basketball star, or Trybe seeing the potential in a new business concept, Morgan recognizes the greatest value is in the person behind the headline-making buzzer moments or the next big tech platform.听
鈥淎t the end of the day, what I look for in founders and small business owners is how much passion a person has behind what they’re putting forward,鈥 she says. 鈥淪ometimes that means more than the actual product鈥攈ow much someone believes in themselves and what they’re putting forward.鈥
The tough realities of being a leader
Of course, running a business and investing in other businesses also means saying 鈥渘o.鈥 For Morgan, these decisions are difficult, but she鈥檚 played on a team long enough to know that you must move in the direction that serves the larger organization.
Last year, Togethxr , tripled its revenue and announced a global reach of more than 3.5 million users across social media platforms. It also brought in a company-record $6 million in 2024 revenue from merchandise sales. A source told that Togethxr had achieved revenue of $30 million in the first half of 2025.
Togethxr has grown from a startup media brand into a profitable women鈥檚 sports company with significant reach. The company has expanded beyond content in recent years into commerce and major brand partnerships, including with and health insurance company . Morgan is also personally partnering with Intuit QuickBooks, an accounting software for small businesses, on their .听
Morgan says that growing Togethxr from a four鈥憄erson startup to a company with dozens of employees brought the kind of 鈥済ood problems鈥 that test a young business. 鈥淵ou outgrow a model that worked at a certain time,鈥 Morgan says. 鈥淎 lot of what we set out to do was be a storyteller for women, and as we looked over the last couple of years, the studio business is actually not a massive revenue generator as much as showing up in the women’s sports space for live events, doing things with fans, and partnering with brands to enter the women’s sports space. So there have been certain pivots that have been natural.”
Some of these pivots require eliminating positions, which Morgan doesn鈥檛 take lightly. “We are a startup where we are continuing to maximize each position,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd unfortunately, there are times where some positions just don’t make sense anymore, when they were the most important position a year or two previously.鈥
That鈥檚 another way that sports and business aren鈥檛 so different. 鈥淲e鈥檙e forever on trial,鈥 she says of life as a professional athlete. “You鈥檙e always trying out, and you can be cut at any time.鈥
But ultimately, as a boss and as an investor, Morgan leads from the compassionate place of knowing what it鈥檚 like to be down and out. 鈥淲hen people think of myself or some big鈥憂ame athletes, they think of just an upward trajectory in terms of their career, but it鈥檚 really anything but that,鈥 she says. 鈥淧eople love to talk about the wins and the successes and the championships, but I鈥檝e had a lot of major losses. I鈥檝e missed shots, I鈥檝e missed passes, I鈥檝e done poorly. My team has picked me up. Resiliency is what鈥檚 important.鈥
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Key Takeaways
- Alex Morgan, 36, is an Olympic gold medalist and former professional soccer player.
- Morgan faced getting cut from the Olympic team in the summer of 2024, months before her retirement.
- Morgan is the co-founder of Togethxr, a women鈥檚 sports-focused media and commerce company, and Trybe Ventures, a venture capital firm.
In the summer of 2024, Alex Morgan faced a devastating public rejection.
The star soccer player, who had led the U.S. national team to Olympic gold at the London 2012 Games and in Tokyo 2020, had been cut from the 2024 Olympic team. The global stage that had showcased her rise would go on without her.听
Morgan had been one of the most celebrated figures in U.S. women鈥檚 soccer for well over a decade, so seeing her name absent from the roster sent shockwaves through the sports world. Fans scrambled for explanations: Was it the that had sidelined her for a month earlier that year? Or was the cut due to an emphasis on younger, more versatile players?聽