Brandi Chastain
Member of the Olympic and World Champion Gold-Medal-Winning U.S. Womens National Soccer Team
SPEAKER FEE RANGE: $18,000–$24,000 [FEE NOTE]
TRAVELS FROM: California
RELATED TOPICS: Celebrity, Inspiring Personal Stories, Misc. Sports Star, Olympian, Women's Equality
Brandi Chastain has excelled for the past 20 years as being one of the most famous female soccer players in the world. Brandi became a part of history as she joined the U.S. Women’s Soccer Team and competed in the first World Championship. In 1996 she led the United States to a Gold Medal at the Centennial Olympic Games in Atlanta, a feat she repeated in 2004 in Athens, Greece. She has been featured around the world as a spokesperson for Nike, Volvo, Powerbar, Gallery Furniture and 24-Hour Fitness, among others. Brandi is also cofounder of the nonprofit BAWSI (Bay Area women’s sports initiative).
When Brandi Chastain famously stripped off her jersey to celebrate her World Cup-winning penalty kick, the gesture represented not only the essence of athletic triumph but the joy of a competitor who knows how to play hard and still have fun. One of the most recognizable figures in women’s sports, Chastain has been a member of the U.S. national team soccer team since 1988. Her team won the first women’s world soccer championship in 1991 as well as Olympic gold medals in 1996 in Atlanta and 2004 in Athens.
She is a consistent threat offensively for the WUSA CyberRays and is currently an assistant coach at the top-five-ranked women’s soccer team at Santa Clara University. She has recently started to deliver speeches at high schools and businesses and has been featured around the world as a spokesperson for Nike, Volvo, Powerbar, Gallery Furniture, and 24-Hour Fitness, among others.
In her book, It’s Not About The Bra: How To Play Hard, Play Fair and Put the Fun Back into Youth Sports, Brandi uses the experiences from her storied career to discuss leaderships skills, role models, and giving back to one’s team and community. Chastain also discusses both the good and bad ways she’s personally dealt with adversity and reminds us what it truly means to be a “class act” on and off the field. Chastain is also an active advocate for Title IX, gender equality in sport and empowering young girls to find their voices through soccer.
Chastain began her college career at Cal, where she was Soccer America’s national freshman of the year, and then transferred to Santa Clara, where she led the Broncos to two NCAA final four appearances and was named all-American and player of the year in 1990.
She played her first national team match against Japan on June 1, 1988 and scored her first national team goal on April 18, 1991 against Mexico (she scored five goals in that match, a team record for one game). From 1988-93, she was a reserve forward for the team, but was soon cut from the team in 1993. She appeared in two games in the 1991 FIFA Women’s World Championship in China, starting one. She was recalled to the team in 1996 during a dispute between players and U.S. Soccer over working conditions and converted to defender. She was a starter and played every minute of all five matches at the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games. In 1998, she played 24 matches and was third in minutes played with 1,894. This same year she earned her 100th cap on July 4 in the World Cup semifinal victory over Brazil. Her left-footed penalty kick in the World Cup final came after missing a right-footed penalty kick against China earlier in the spring in the Algarve Cup in Portugal. In the year 2000, her penalty kick defeated Norway for United States’ first title in the Algarve Cup. She was also a member of silver-medal winning team in the Sydney Olympic Games. She has career totals of 140 Caps which is 8th on the USA National Team as well as 24 assists also 8th on the team.
She is married to Jerry Smith, the women’s soccer coach at Santa Clara University. She graduated from Santa Clara with a Bachelor of Arts, majoring in Television Communication.
She is a consistent threat offensively for the WUSA CyberRays and is currently an assistant coach at the top-five-ranked women’s soccer team at Santa Clara University. She has recently started to deliver speeches at high schools and businesses and has been featured around the world as a spokesperson for Nike, Volvo, Powerbar, Gallery Furniture, and 24-Hour Fitness, among others.
In her book, It’s Not About The Bra: How To Play Hard, Play Fair and Put the Fun Back into Youth Sports, Brandi uses the experiences from her storied career to discuss leaderships skills, role models, and giving back to one’s team and community. Chastain also discusses both the good and bad ways she’s personally dealt with adversity and reminds us what it truly means to be a “class act” on and off the field. Chastain is also an active advocate for Title IX, gender equality in sport and empowering young girls to find their voices through soccer.
Chastain began her college career at Cal, where she was Soccer America’s national freshman of the year, and then transferred to Santa Clara, where she led the Broncos to two NCAA final four appearances and was named all-American and player of the year in 1990.
She played her first national team match against Japan on June 1, 1988 and scored her first national team goal on April 18, 1991 against Mexico (she scored five goals in that match, a team record for one game). From 1988-93, she was a reserve forward for the team, but was soon cut from the team in 1993. She appeared in two games in the 1991 FIFA Women’s World Championship in China, starting one. She was recalled to the team in 1996 during a dispute between players and U.S. Soccer over working conditions and converted to defender. She was a starter and played every minute of all five matches at the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games. In 1998, she played 24 matches and was third in minutes played with 1,894. This same year she earned her 100th cap on July 4 in the World Cup semifinal victory over Brazil. Her left-footed penalty kick in the World Cup final came after missing a right-footed penalty kick against China earlier in the spring in the Algarve Cup in Portugal. In the year 2000, her penalty kick defeated Norway for United States’ first title in the Algarve Cup. She was also a member of silver-medal winning team in the Sydney Olympic Games. She has career totals of 140 Caps which is 8th on the USA National Team as well as 24 assists also 8th on the team.
She is married to Jerry Smith, the women’s soccer coach at Santa Clara University. She graduated from Santa Clara with a Bachelor of Arts, majoring in Television Communication.
- WIN TOGETHER
Brandi brings the theme of WIN TOGETHER to life with stories of teamwork, resilience and what it takes to build and be on a winning team. - The Game is Never the Same Twice: Winning Teams Have Agility and Flexibility
Brandi’s keynote on winning, leadership, teamwork and agility is engaging, impactful and memorable. In this inspirational session, the audience learns about the importance of agility, flexibility and the winning mindset. Brandi uses the experiences from her storied career to discuss leaderships skills, role models, and giving back to one’s team and community. Chastain also discusses both the good and bad ways she’s personally dealt with adversity and reminds us what it truly means to be a “class act” on and off the field. - Dreams Do Come True: Persevering, Setting Goals, and Doing What It Takes to Achieve Them
“I recently had the opportunity to host an engaging virtual discussion with Brandi Chastain. She is a fierce advocate for promoting gender equality and empowering women in sports – it was a true privilege to learn from her unique experiences and perspectives as an elite athlete. We covered a variety of topics – the 50-year anniversary of Title IX, leadership, role models and ways to foster strong community... One hour together wasn’t nearly enough time! Brandi’s stories and insights reminded me that we all play the roles of both leader and player. Sometimes we need to provide encouragement as a leader and other times we need to receive and accept feedback as a player.”
--Senior Vice President, Biopharmaceutical Company
--Senior Vice President, Biopharmaceutical Company
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