Lily Nabet’s favorite memories from childhood are of family.
She grew up
in Encino in a tight-knit Persian Bahá’i community alongside two older
brothers, Amin and Matin, surrounded by dozens of cousins, aunts, and
uncles. “My life was based around being outside and being with family,”
says Nabet. “Most of them lived within 10 or 20 minutes, so I always had
that sense of family, wherever I went.”
She’s closest
with her mom, Shadi, who she calls her best friend. “I can tell her
everything,” says Nabet. “She’s also the strongest person I know.”
Nabet feels
indebted to her mom not just because of what she and her family went
through in leaving their whole lives behind in Iran, but because of the
gentle way Shadi nurtured her kids’ talents, always encouraging them to
follow their dreams, but never pressuring them to be something they
didn’t want to be.
“I feel so
proud to be a first-generation Persian woman in the United States,” Lily
says, “and I feel extremely proud and happy to be my mom’s daughter.”
Shadi has
fond, if bittersweet, memories of her childhood in Iran: spending
summers at the family’s oceanside house; eating smoked fish and rice at
her uncle’s house for Nowruz, the Persian new year. She says she misses
Iran.
But
California became home. The corner of Los Angeles Lily grew up in had
Persian shops and restaurants everywhere, and such a concentration of
Iranian expats that it became known as “Tehrangeles.”
That
community was still small when Shadi arrived, but her great-aunt and
great-uncle were already here, and more relatives followed. By the time
Lily and her brothers came along, their annual Nowruz gathering—at her
cousin’s house—had over 30 attendees.
Shadi guesses
that Lily was two or three years old when she was playing outside at
one of these gatherings. “They were bouncing the ball in the backyard,”
remembers Shadi. “And my uncle, he pointed to her and said, ‘she is
going to be big, you know, when she grows up.’”
Lily started
AYSO at age three, but Shadi—and Lily’s dad, Navid, who came to
California for college and stayed—were never the stereotypical soccer
parents, yelling at refs and running their kids through drills in the
backyard. However, her dad has played soccer for many years and still
does every weekend in the valley. When another parent suggested finding
Lily a club team, they didn’t even know what club soccer was.
Nor did they
put pressure on their kids when it came to sports, or push them to keep
doing anything they didn’t love. Lily tried baseball, basketball, and
karate, as well as various non-sport activities (“Did piano,” she says.
“Hated it.”).
“It was their choice to pick,” says Shadi. “I wanted them to be the decision makers.”
Lily
gravitated to soccer. “She just shined,” says Shadi. “She loved it. I
always told her, ‘be competitive, but enjoy what you do.’ Because once
that enjoyment is gone, it doesn't matter anymore. And she's enjoyed it
till this day.”
Far more
important for Shadi than her kids’ achievements was the values she
worked to pass on. “I grew up believing that we are all fruits of one
tree,” she says, referencing a teaching of Bahá’u’lláh, the founder of
the Bahá’i Faith. “That we are one people and one planet. I have always
told my kids to be one with people, no matter their differences.”
“And always be truthful,” she adds. “I told them, ‘the number one rule in this house is truthfulness.’”
Lily took all
those lessons to heart, but from a very young age, Shadi says, her
daughter also had the intense drive and single-mindedness of an
athlete—that part, seemingly, came from somewhere inside. “She’s
competitive,” says Shadi. “All her life, she’s worked super hard for
what she wanted. She had the determination. She was like that since she
was little.”
In the 2022 NWSL Draft, Angel City selected Nabet 36th overall out of Duke University. Her route to Duke, and eventually to draft day, took a winding path.
Back in high
school, as the time to choose a college drew near, Nabet nearly fell
through the cracks of the recruitment system. Because she was a grade
ahead of her club teammates at Real SoCal, the timing of the usual
recruiting cycle was thrown off. “When everyone else was a sophomore, I
was already a junior in high school,” she explains. “So I didn't have
much opportunity for universities to reach out to me.”
Her dream
school was Duke. She pictured herself not just playing soccer there, but
strolling the college’s leafy campus and going to classes in its Gothic
Revival buildings. “Lily was always fascinated by history,” says Shadi.
“She said, ‘the campus is beautiful, there's so much history, and it's a
good school.’”
Plus the
school had a strong soccer program, with three ACC championships and
four College Cup appearances to their name. Under Head Coach Robbie
Church, the team has produced a number of professionals, including
current NWSL players Imani Dorsey and Quinn, both of whom were drafted
into the league the spring of Nabet’s senior year in high school.
Nabet says there was another reason she wanted to go to Duke: to prove she could.
“I had a
counselor at my high school who I did not like, and he was like, ‘I
don't think you should go to Duke,’” she remembers. “‘There's not many
people like you there.’”
It wasn’t
clear exactly what he meant, but the implication—that she might somehow
not belong there because of her race—stung. “I was like, I don't know if
he meant that the way it sounded, but it really pissed me off,” she
says. “So that was actually a big reason why I went. I was just like,
‘no, you're not going to put me in a box.’”
There was one problem. She hadn’t been recruited to play soccer there.
So she
followed the advice of her club coaches and reached out. Again and
again. “I talked to Duke so many times,” she remembers. “I was like,
‘just give me a chance, just come see me play.’”
Shadi
remembers that it took a year and a half for Church to come watch her.
Lily was about to give up and commit to the University of Pennsylvania,
where she had an offer, but fate had other plans. “That day I
got a call from Duke and they said, ‘you have the opportunity to earn a
scholarship, but as of right now we don't have any money for you,’” she
says.
In other words, she was being invited to come to Duke—as a walk-on.
The issue was
less the money itself than about what an athletic scholarship
represents. Scholarship athletes are sought out and recruited by coaches
who see them fitting into their specific system; Nabet, on the other
hand, would get the chance to train with the team and potentially earn a
spot, but there were no guarantees she’d see the field.
To a lot of
high school athletes, the UPenn offer—a scholarship for an Ivy League
university and a spot on a Division 1 team—would have been impossible to
pass up. But Nabet had already made up her mind.
“Duke was
such a big opportunity,” she says. “A lot of people said, ‘you're not
going to play, you're not strong enough.’ I was like, ‘no.’”
As
advertised, Nabet’s freshman year was a challenge. “It was definitely a
shock to my system,” she says. “Academics were hard. Soccer was hard.
And being a walk-on, you basically have to do everything right to even
get a chance.”
Her life that
first year was soccer and school. “There were people on the team who
would study for an hour and do well, but that was not me,” she says.
After
training, she would go home and study until midnight, then get up for
class the next morning and do it over again. “I didn’t even have time to
shower after training,” she remembers. “There were definitely days
where I was like, ‘I don’t think I’ve slept.’”
“It was awful,” Nabet admits. She also says she never thought about quitting.
In addition
to the academic challenges, there was an element of culture shock. In
stark contrast to the sprawling Persian community she grew up in, in
college, Nabet met one other person with an Iranian parent, in the
three-person Farsi class she took for her language requirement.
“I didn’t
feel any type of alienation or isolation, but I will say that nobody
knew what [ethnicity] I was,” she says. “There were times where people
would ask me and I would tell them, and it didn’t, like, process.”
When
she told classmates where her family was from, they sometimes made
assumptions about what that meant, not knowing that many different
ethnic and religious groups call Iran home. “I’d tell them I’m not Muslim and they’d be like, ‘oh my god, I’m so sorry!’ and I’d say, ‘don't apologize! Being Muslim isn’t a bad thing! It's
just that being from Iran doesn't automatically mean I am Muslim’” says
Nabet. Ultimately, she says, “I learned a lot about myself. It only
made me love myself more, honestly.”
She found her
feet in the classroom, too. After earning a 2.7 GPA in a difficult
first semester, her constant studying paid off, and she graduated with a
3.5.
In soccer,
she worked similarly hard. “I didn’t want to let off in any capacity,
whether it was academics or soccer,” she says, “Because I didn’t want to
have any room to blame myself [if I didn’t succeed].”
She played
just 17 minutes her freshman year, all as a substitute. She wasn’t
fazed. “There were times where I went in for two minutes, or a few
seconds,” she remembers. “But every time I was on the field, I got so
excited.”
A day at a
time, her focus never wavering, she proved herself. Sophomore year, she
got 788 minutes across 22 games, including six starts. The year after
that, she started all 20 games, recording four assists—and earned a
scholarship. In her senior year, she was a co-captain and was named to
the ACC Academic Honor Roll. She also co-captained her fifth year as a
graduate student.
Back home,
Shadi never stopped missing her youngest. “Every time I came back from
North Carolina, I missed her,” she says. “I would think that after a
year or two years, it would be easy, but it was never easy. I would come
home, I would close her bedroom door…” she trails off before finishing
the sentence.
The
then-23-year-old didn’t have high expectations for draft day. “I really
didn’t think I would get drafted. I watched the draft on my phone by
myself in my living room because everyone told me I wouldn’t get
drafted. I really only watched because I knew my friends from Duke were
getting drafted.”
Angel City
First Assistant Coach Eleri Earnshaw is straightforward about where
Nabet was expected to fall: “We knew she likely wouldn't get drafted [by
another team], but could be a diamond in the rough,” she says.
The coaches
liked Nabet’s technical ability and versatility. “She can play any
position in the midfield, and her college coaches said great things
about her as a person,” Earnshaw continues.
Nabet had told her mom she didn’t have to stay home through the whole draft, which runs for several hours.
“I remember
that day, I had gone to one of my friends’ houses,” Shadi says, “and
Lily called me. She was screaming and yelling, and she said, ‘Mom, I got
drafted!’ I said, ‘where?’ She said, ‘Angel City.’ I said, ‘where's
Angel City?’
“She said, ‘Mom, it’s in LA!’
“It was like the best day of my life. I thought, ‘God, you love us so much that you made this happen. My baby’s home.’”
Coming home
to play professionally just a few miles from where she grew up was a
dream come true for both of them, but for Lily, it meant being back in a
similar situation to her freshman year at Duke: she’d have to prove
herself.
She didn’t mind.
“My life now, every day is a grind,” says Nabet. “And I’m in a perfect spot.”
“Since the
day she's got here, she's been such a mature pro, even though she was
one of the youngest players here” in 2022, says Earnshaw. “There are
players in the league that have been pros for ten, 15 years that don't
have her level of self-awareness and willingness to persevere.”
Nabet’s work ethic was apparent from the beginning.
Fitness-wise,
she wasn’t ready to play a consistent role in the NWSL her rookie
season. “We knew that it wasn't going to be a year-long project,”
Earnshaw says. “It was going to take time. And she really bought into
that. She just got down to work and she's made improvements every single
week.” Now, after two years of training, Nabet is consistently one of
the top performers in the club’s fitness metrics.
Earnshaw also says that in her third year as a pro, Nabet is coming into her own on the field.
“When the
internationals were gone, she was driving every session,” says the
coach. “Every session we would leave saying, ‘Lily was good today!” We
played against the LAFC boys in the international window, and she
smashed it. She did everything we asked her to do. She looked so
confident, she wanted the ball. That's what she's developed this
season—she's imposing herself on the game.”
That
assertiveness has earned Nabet two starts this season—both wins—but she
doesn’t plan to lose focus anytime soon. “She does film every week,
almost twice a week,” Earnshaw adds. “She does extra work on the field
every week, like it's a prescription. It's like this internal, quiet
fire that is always on.”
Shadi’s not
surprised. She’s watched her daughter make sacrifices for the game she
loves since she was little. “When she was in high school, she missed a
lot of dances, being with her friends and things, for games,” she says.
“I would ask her, ‘are you okay with this? You know, there's a dance and
you don't want to go to that?’ And she would say ‘no, mom, I want to do
this.’”
Asked where
she thinks her daughter got that drive, she says she’s not sure. It’s
always been a facet of Lily’s personality. “But,” Shadi adds, “She has
another side to her that is full of friendship, compassion and unity.
Healing people.”
“I admire
both sides of it,” she continues. “As a mother, it's an honor. I always
tell her, I don't know how lucky I was to have you, you know, because
you have taught me so much as your mother, as myself, just through who
you are. It's been a special ride.”
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
Comments
Post a Comment