In January, Alice Mercer began a new job at The Field School in Washington, D.C., as a social and emotion learning coordinator and school counselor. It’s been her professional passion to help young people grow.
Mercer, a defender on the U.S. women’s national team, teaches students from grades 6-12 at the small private school about self-awareness, social awareness, relationship skills, responsible decision making and self-management. Those pillars are the keys to understanding and identifying emotions.
Those skills directly translate to the locker room, where Mercer is one of the respected leaders of Team USA.
“Off the field, this line of work that I am in, it really impacts how I’m able to support and care for the people around me,” Mercer said, taking pauses to allow a muffled announcement over the school loudspeaker to finish. “It helps me understand when someone needs a kick in the butt or when someone needs a hug.”
Versatile leadership like that is hard to find. On a team full of leaders, Mercer provides something unique to the mix. Reading the room and understanding situations is quite literally her life.
On the field, Mercer’s vocal. She directs traffic on defense and communicates adjustments on the fly. Off the field, Mercer is compassionate and understanding. Megan Douty, who played with Mercer at Maryland and has since played alongside her in the U.S. system, learns from Mercer whenever they’re together.
“What she does for a living is very unique and special,” Douty said. “We roomed together at the last training weekend, and she just had great perspective about the tryout process and being part of a national team.”