Russo explained that moving to North Carolina for college football was a pivotal point in her career. She admitted she was homesick but described those three years as the best of her life, both for football and personal growth. It was during this period that she learned resilience, independence, and that ‘football isn’t everything’.
In an interview with the BBC, Russo said: “I think when I went to America and played three years out in college. I was very much a home bird. I used to hate going to my friends for sleepovers because I just wanted to be at home with my family. That was a big decision for me to go out there and live in North Carolina – the other side of the world – and play football in a surrounding I have never known. It was a really tough decision, but when I look back on my life, it was the best three years ever.
“I learned so much about myself. When you move out anywhere, you have to grow up quickly and I was on the other side of the world. The only person I knew there was Lotte [Wubben-Moy], who is with me now [at Arsenal], so it’s nice to reminisce with her. Those three years changed me as a person. I understood a bit more about myself and my body and I went through my first injury out there. I also learned that football isn’t everything, although it does feel like it. I found joy in other things and made friends for life.
“I’ve known Lotte since I was about 12 or 13 through England youth camps. She was at Arsenal and I was at Chelsea and Charlton in the academies. She is like the big sister to everyone – she knows what to do in stressful situations and handles things so smoothly.”
“The one result I would change in my career? The 2023 World Cup final against Spain. It hurt a lot after winning the Euros, and knowing how that felt, to get so close to the World Cup but then so far away at the same time. It left a hole in us as a team, but the way we bounced back in the Euros, maybe wouldn’t have happened if we had won. I feel like everything happens for a reason.”
When questioned about which game she would like to relive without the result changing, Russo added: “I’m going to say the Euro 2022 final. That whole year and that tournament, and the impact that changed after that win was something we could never have imagined. The whole process of winning that tournament in England and then seeing the change, seeing the growth in the game, seeing everyone become a fan of women’s football after… that was something I will always live with. The impact we had in that tournament… every player in that squad will tell you it was more than we ever imagined and we were just in our little bubble. Me and Tooney talk about it a lot. Going from nobody really knowing us, to pretty much overnight you are this England footballer that suddenly has won the Euros and the paparazzi are after you and you are getting these amazing opportunities that you would never have imagined pre-tournament. For both of us, that whole tournament completely changed our lives.”
Russo admitted she already imagines life after her playing career, even if it feels far away right now.
“I do. It’s hard in the moment because it is so intense. When you are in football, all you want to do is win every trophy you can. But one day after football, I’d like to have another career. We can’t play forever. I’d love to have children and live on a beach somewhere. I’d love to have my own vineyard and live in Italy with my family and have loads of kids and switch off and just be away from football and watch it for fun and enjoy a whole other life. But I don’t think that will ever happen.”
“I look forward to after football and achieving everything I want to achieve in terms of trophies. I do look forward to having another career. I suppose it’s a new phase of life after you play football.”