We remember the moments, not the trophies. What will resonate next year, or at the next Women’s World Cup, or even come the next decade, will not be the United States Women’s National Team hoisting a third Women’s World Cup trophy after Sunday’s 5-2 defeat of Japan. What will linger is Abby Wambach’s post-match kiss with her wife, an emphatic exclamation point to a summer in which the Supreme Court issued a win for inclusivity. What will be remembered is Carli Lloyd’s magnificent midfield strike that put the U.S. women’s national team up 4-0 in the first half. “I just went for it,” Lloyd told NBC’s Matt Lauer on Monday morning, describing the goal that was in effect a drone strike. Lloyd, a New Jersey native who will turn 33 on July 16, intercepted a pass in the U.S. end of the field, eluded one defender and then, with the ball situated exactly on the midfield stripe, launched a shot into history. The contest was only 16 minutes old at the moment that Lloyd planted her left foot. The Americans already led 3-0 and Lloyd had already scored two goals. The first came in the third minute following a bit…