Adam Baum Cincinnati Enquirer Published 3:22 PM EDT May 28, 2019 Janet Lavelle picked up 9-year-old daughter Rose from school early so she could make it home in time to watch something on television. It was the U.S. Women’s National Team in a 2003 World Cup semifinal match against Germany. “I thought, ‘I know this is lame,’ no one thinks this is important taking a girl out of school to watch a women’s sporting event,” said Janet. “(But) she wasn’t gonna get to see it otherwise.” Rose watched the Americans lose 3-0, then retreated to the solitude of her bedroom. “I remember the rest of the night I sat on my bunk bed and cried,” said Rose, now 24 and set to make her FIFA Women’s World Cup debut next month in France for the USWNT. Her mom remembers that “Rose said, ‘I need some time to be alone and about a half hour later I checked on her and she was in her bed on the top bunk, but she was under the covers sitting straight up, crying.” Almost a year to the day after those tears, in October of 2004, nearly 19,000 fans filed into Paul Brown Stadium to watch the U.S….