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Washington celebrates after its 3-2 overtime victory over N.C. State in the 2025 Men’s Soccer National Championship at WakeMed Soccer Park in Cary, N.C., Monday, Dec. 15, 2025.
ehyman@newsobserver.com
CARY
There was guaranteed to be a first-time national champion Monday at the NCAA men’s soccer championship game, regardless of the outcome.
N.C. State was hoping to lug the title trophy five miles back to campus. Instead, the trophy will catch a flight — 2,850 miles back to Seattle.
The No. 15 Wolfpack clawed its way back from a two-goal deficit to force overtime, but ultimately fell to the Washington Huskies, 3-2, at First Horizon Stadium in Cary after a chaotic final sequence that initially prompted an official review before the celebration could begin in earnest.
“My main job is to take care of these guys and help them grow as young men,” said second-year N.C. State coach Marc Hubbard. “I couldn’t be prouder of the group of individuals that we have in that locker room, what they’ve done this year and what they represent. The sun will come up tomorrow, and we’ve got to get back to work and move on.”
Washington center back Harrison Bertos found the back of the net, sliding the ball through a flurry of bodies in front of the Wolfpack goal, touching off a wild, two-part celebration during which N.C. State players laid or crouched on the ground, devastation clear on their faces and body language, as their historic season came to a stunning close.
Amid the initial melee, officials reviewed the play for a possible offside call. An NCAA official even took the trophy back from the Huskies during the review. After the goal was confirmed, Washington’s celebration resumed, sending N.C. State home heartbroken.
Hubbard and Wolfpack midfielder Taig Healy, who transferred to N.C. State following Hubbard’s hire, both said the team knew it was unlikely that Washington’s goal would be overturned. That moment instead gave the Pack a chance to take a deep breath and appreciate how far the program has come in just a couple of years. “[I was] just looking at the guys, like, ‘I’m so proud of every single one of us, the run we’ve been on, and what special team I’ve been a part of,’” Healy said. “Kind of a moment to soak it in.”
“It also just gave me a moment to say, ‘Listen as this is probably it, but let’s continue to handle ourselves with some humility and pride and hold your heads high and continue to represent our culture and what we’ve done,” Hubbard added. “You can see it out there all night long; kids and families and believers and chancellors. Just a great core memory for these guys.”
Bertos’ goal was his third game-winner of the season. The Huskies won four true road games en route to the title game. They played in front of 10,316 fans, most of which were dressed in red.
Washington head coach Jamie Clark said he believed N.C. State was the best team in the country and called the Wolfpack “brilliant” for its effort.
It seemed like all the momentum favored N.C. State (16-3-4) in the second half especially, as it rallied from a two-goal deficit.
“We had the momentum leading to the extra time, but soccer is a crazy sport. Anything can happen,” said forward Donavan Phillip. “It was their day to day, so congrats to them.”
Phillip scored his 19th goal of the season — the most in the nation — in the 66th minute of regulation. Phillip, a first-team All-American and ACC Offensive Player of the Year, squeezed the ball past a flurry of bodies to put N.C. State on the board.
Then, with three and a half minutes left in regulation, the Wolfpack tied the game at two. N.C. State used a three-player sequence on the scoring play. Defender Calem Tommy completed a clean pass to midfielder Justin McLean. McLean found Healy for a kick into the right corner, past leaping Washington goalkeeper Jadon Bowton. Bowton stood in the box, stunned.
“We have nothing to lose at this point, just go full out for it,” Phillip said of the team’s mindset after going down two. “After we got that [first] goal back, then we knew anything is possible. We just needed one more chance, one ball to fall at the back of the net.”
The goal came after a somewhat frustrating game in which the Wolfpack offense played aggressively, but struggled to capitalize on its opportunities.
Huskies find early advantage
Both teams played with urgency from kickoff, but the Huskies attacked first. Washington’s Zach Ramsey scored in the 44th minute after N.C. State goalkeeper Logan Erb left the box to deflect a ball. Erb, however, did not clear the ball out of play and allowed Ramsey to repossess the ball. Miscommunication between the goalkeeper and the Wolfpack’s back line left the net clear for a wide open goal right before halftime.
It was just the 11th goal conceded by Erb this season. He finished with 13 allowed. Erb entered the NCAA Tournament as the ACC Goalkeeper of the Year and is a second-team All-American.
Washington (16-6-2) moved to 13-0 when scoring first, while N.C. State ends the season 0-2 when trailing at halftime and 0-3-1 when conceding the first goal.
The Huskies started the second half with an equally-aggressive attack, threatening again in the 49th minute. The Wolfpack cleared the ball out of the box to narrowly avoid a multi-goal deficit.
UW added its second goal in the 62nd minute after Joe Dale slipped the ball past Carlos Santamaria and Nikola Markovic. Erb, stretching to his right, was unable to corral the loose ball.
The Wolfpack finished the title game with 17 total shots, and seven shots on goal. Bowton finished with five saves. The Huskies ended the game with 13 shots and nine on goal. Erb picked up six saves.
This was N.C. State’s second College Cup appearance in program history, with the Wolfpack previously reaching this stage in 1990. Its 16 wins this fall more than double the win totals from 2022 and 2023 combined, the two seasons prior to Hubbard’s arrival.
“This all comes back to what this program has built this year. What it came to is unreal,” Markovic said. “When Hubs came, this program was in a totally different place. I think this just showcases how big is what Hubs built in this team. Playing out there is unreal. You have 10,000 people and maybe 9,000 of them are your fans. I think we proved it in the game. Down 2-0, we came back 2-2. I think we fell short a little bit, but I think what we built up is unreal, and it’s only going to go up from here.”
This story was originally published December 15, 2025 at 10:00 PM.
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Jadyn Watson-Fisher
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