Lindsey Heaps is coming home.
The US women’s national team captain is joining the NWSL’s expansion Denver Summit this summer when her contract with French club OL Lyonnes is done.
Heaps is a native of Golden, Colorado, and made no secret of her interest in playing in her home state after the Summit was announced as the league’s 16th team in January 2025. The club embarks on its first season this year.
The 31-year-old has won league titles in the US and France, a Champions League title, a World Cup and an Olympic gold medal. She signed a contract with Denver through 2029.
“When I first heard about the team, I didn’t really feel like it was real. I couldn’t believe that we were getting a professional women’s soccer team and in Denver,” Heaps told the Associated Press. “I didn’t want to get too excited from the get-go because I didn’t know if it was a real possibility for me. And then, as conversations went on, the first thing I said, I wanted to make sure that it was the right opportunity for me.”
Not only does Heaps have family in Colorado, but her husband, Tyler Heaps, is general manager and sporting director of MLS’s San Diego FC, and the two have been juggling the demands of a transatlantic relationship.
Heaps also indicated that she was lured to the Summit by majority owner Rob Cohen and coach Nick Cushing, who previously coached the Manchester City women and MLS’s NYC FC.
“I think they align with all of my beliefs in how they see the team, how they see it becoming successful, and the investment that they’re putting in,” she said. “And then hearing Nick and how he sees football, I think that was a huge deciding factor for me as well as I wanted to be with a good coach. So that was exciting.”
Denver has been assembling a roster in anticipation of its first season, bringing in Ally Watt and Carson Pickett, both formerly of the Orlando Pride, and Kaleigh Kurtz from the North Carolina Courage, among others. More recently, the team signed defender Ayo Oke from the Mexican club Pachuca.
Heaps is known as an aggressive facilitator on the field, and her height – she’s 5-foot-9 – gives her an advantage in aerial duels.
She said she hopes to foster the “chemistry, values and standards that I want this club to have for years and years, and make it a successful place and a place that everyone wants to play, that’s entertaining to fans and plays good football as well.”
Following high school, Heaps turned down a scholarship to North Carolina and instead went overseas and played for Paris Saint-Germain for four seasons.
In 2016 and vying for a spot on the Olympic team, she returned to the United States to play for the Portland Thorns, where she won an NWSL title in 2017 and was named the league’s Most Valuable Player in 2018.
The Thorns loaned her to Lyon in 2022, and later allowed her permanent transfer to the team in France’s top division. In 95 appearances with Lyon, Heaps has scored 22 goals.
A fixture for the US since the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics, Heaps has made 170 appearances and has served as captain since 2023.
At the 2019 Women’s World Cup in France, she served Alex Morgan the go-ahead goal in the semi-final match against England. In addition to the World Cup trophy, Heaps also has a gold medal from the 2024 Paris Olympics.
Heaps’ return comes as some other US national team stars have departed for Europe in the past year. Naomi Girma and Alyssa Thompson made high-profile moves to Chelsea. Midfielder Sam Coffey is in advanced talks to join Manchester City, and star forward Trinity Rodman has interest from European clubs.
In response, the NWSL introduced a new “High Impact Player Rule” that allows teams to exceed the salary cap by up to $1m to attract and retain talent.
Heaps believes her time overseas made her a more complete player.
“The reason I left, at the time I left, was that I wanted to go experience something different. I wanted to challenge myself in a different way,” she said. “Not negating what Portland gave me or what the NWSL gave me, but I was just like, I’d been there for six years and I wanted another challenge and I’d be remiss if I didn’t go and try to challenge myself in a different way in France again.”