The United States U-19 became active as the primary youth-level national team in 2001 when the
United States Soccer Federation decided to change the age limit from the
U-18 to U-19. The move was in preparation for
FIFA's introduction of the first ever
FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship (which has since changed to U-20). The new U-19 squad won the inaugural
2002 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship in Canada, where they beat
the hosts on a
golden goal by captain and future
United States women's national team mainstay
Lindsay Tarpley. Five other members of that same team would join Tarpley as teammates on the senior international team:
Rachel Buehler,
Lori Chalupny,
Heather O'Reilly,
Leslie Osborne and
Angie Woznuk. Other notable 2002 team members were
Kelly Wilson, the all-time leading goal scorer in the history of the U-20 team, as well as two-time
Hermann Trophy winner
Kerri Hanks, who would go on to become one of the most decorated players in women's collegiate soccer. In 2004, the U-19 team placed third at the
2004 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship in Thailand, after having been defeated by
Germany in the semifinals. The tournament marked the world championship debut of future
senior national team members
Yael Averbuch,
Stephanie Lopez,
Amy Rodriguez and
Megan Rapinoe. 2004 also saw the first loss to a similar-aged team in the history of the program when the squad lost to
Japan. The U-19 team became dormant in 2005 when U.S. Soccer raised the age of the squad from U-19 to U-20. The move was, again, in response to FIFA's altering of the competition age from U-19 to U-20. The team subsequently had only periodic competitions until 2019, when the Federation (under general manager
Kate Markgraf) reinstated all youth-level teams in their own right. ==Competitive record==