Club Pali Blues, 2009 During the summer of 2009, Holiday joined Southern California team
Pali Blues, in the
W-League. Throughout the entire
regular season, the Blues did not lose a match and finished first in the Western Conference with a 9–0–3 record. After defeating the
Hudson Valley Quickstrike Lady Blues 4–0 in the championship semi-final in which Holiday scored a goal in the 65th minute, the Pali Blues clinched the championship title in a 2–1 defeat of the
Washington Freedom Reserves on August 7, 2009.
Boston Breakers, 2010–2011 . On January 15, 2010, Holiday was selected by the
Boston Breakers as the second overall pick in the
WPS Draft. She played in 23 games for Boston during the
2010 season, starting in 21 matches and scoring five goals with two assists. After Boston finished in second place during the regular season with a , the team advanced to the playoffs. Holiday was named as a starter in the
2010 WPS All-Star Game and scored in the 79th minute. During the
2011 WPS season, Holiday made ten appearances for the club. The Breakers finished the regular season in fourth place with a The team was defeated 3–1 by
magicJack during the playoff semifinal.
FC Kansas City, 2013–2015 In 2013, Holiday was one of three national team players along with
Becky Sauerbrunn and
Nicole Barnhart to be allocated to
FC Kansas City for the inaugural season of the
National Women's Soccer League as part of the
NWSL Player Allocation. In June 2013, she was named NWSL Player of the Month after scoring six times in five games and becoming the league's leading scorer with eight goals. FC Kansas City finished second during the regular season with an 11–6–5 record. The team advanced to the playoffs but were defeated 2–3 by
Portland Thorns FC during the semi-finals. Following the
2013 NWSL season, Holiday was awarded the Golden Boot, an award given to the player who scores the most goals (12) and was named the league's
Most Valuable Player (MVP).
In 2014 NWSL season, FC Kansas City finished the regular season in second place, with Holiday providing a team-leading 7 assists, and finished second in goals scored with 8 behind
Amy Rodriguez's 13. In the post-season playoffs, Holiday scored the second goal in a 2–0 victory over the Portland Thorns FC in the semi-final, and provided both the assists for Rodriguez's two goals, as they beat
Seattle Reign FC 2–1 in the 2014 Championship game, to clinch the club's first NWSL title. Holiday was voted
the match's MVP. As of 2015, Holiday was the leading goal scorer (20) and assist leader (12) all-time in the NWSL. She retired from the NWSL at the end of the 2015 season as Kansas City repeated as champions, allowing Holiday to retire holding world and league titles. Her number 12 jersey was retired in her honour.
International in San Jose, California, 2015 Holiday made her first appearance and start for the
U.S. women's national soccer team on January 26, 2007, against
Germany. She earned her second cap and scored her first goals against
Mexico on April 14, 2007.
2008 Beijing Olympics Holiday was named to the U.S. roster for the
2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing after
Abby Wambach was forced to withdraw with a broken leg. She appeared in three games as a substitute In 2010, Holiday was the second-leading scorer on the team with seven goals in 13 total matches, starting seven. The U.S. defeated China 2–0 in the final to clinch the tournament title. At the
2011 Algarve Cup in March, she scored a goal against
Iceland during the final helping the U.S. win 4–2 and clinch their 8th title at the tournament. Holiday started in all six
2011 FIFA Women's World Cup matches, scoring two goals and leading the team with three assists. Her performance earned a spot on the
Women's World Cup All-Star Team. Holiday scored the first tournament goal for the U.S. during the team's first group stage against
North Korea on June 28 helping the U.S. win 2–0. During the team's next group stage match against
Colombia, Cheney served the assist to
Megan Rapinoe's first World Cup goal who had just subbed into the match. It was the quickest goal for a U.S. substitute in history of the tournament. Despite losing to
Sweden 2–1 during the team's third group stage match, the U.S. advanced to the
knockout stage where they faced
Brazil on July 10. The U.S. won the dramatic match after equalizing the match in the 120th minute and winning 5–3 in the resulting
penalty kick shootout. During the semi-final match against
France on July 13, Holiday scored the game-opening goal in the ninth minute. In the 79th minute, her cross to
Abby Wambach lifted the score to 2–1 and an eventual 3–1 win to advance to the
World Cup final against
Japan. In front of a sell-out crowd of 48,817, the United States tied Japan 1–1 during regulation time and 2–2 in overtime advancing to a penalty kick shootout where they were defeated. Despite spraining an ankle early in the first half of the match, Holiday continued playing until being subbed off at the start of the second half.
2012 London Olympics Holiday led the United States team with seven assists in five games at the
2012 CONCACAF Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament in
Vancouver, British Columbia including four assists during the U.S.'s 14–0 rout of the
Dominican Republic. She played in all six games at the
2012 Summer Olympics, starting five. She came off the bench in the gold medal match to play the final 23 minutes after suffering a minor injury in the semifinal. On July 7, 2015, following the
2015 FIFA Women's World Cup, Holiday announced her retirement from her international career.
Career statistics International goals ==Honors and awards==