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Tag: NWSL

  • Denver Summit FC signs Stanford star foward Jasmine Aikey

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    Stanford’s star striker is coming to Denver.

    Summit FC signed forward Jasmine Aikey, the club announced on Thursday. Aikey played for Stanford the last four seasons, tallying 43 goals and 29 assists in 89 games as one of the program’s driving forces behind continued national success.

    In 25 games for Stanford in 2025, Aikey paced the team with 53 points, including 21 goals and 11 assists. She had 11 game-winning goals as she was named a finalist for the MAC Hermann Trophy and earned TopDrawerSoccer Player of the Year for the ACC champion Cardinal.

    Aikey also helped Stanford win a Pac-12 championship as a freshman in 2022, and was a linchpin on NCAA Women’s College Cup teams over the last three seasons. She has high potential as a pro with her elite technical skills, vision on the pitch and ability to finish around the net.

    “Jasmine is an intelligent, creative player who has performed at a very high level in one of the best collegiate environments in the country,” Summit FC general manager Curt Johnson said in a statement. “She has a great feel for the game, the ability to unlock defenses, and the work rate to impact matches on both sides of the ball. We believe she has the tools to be an important part of our attack as we build this club for the long term.”

    Aikey signed a two-year contract with Summit FC that includes a mutual option for 2028. The 20-year-old Palo Alto, Calif., native is the third forward the club has acquired ahead of its inaugural 2026 season, joining Colorado Springs native Ally Watt (via trade with the Orlando Pride) and Spaniard Nahikari García (the club’s first international signing).

    More roster moves are coming over the next few weeks, especially at striker and midfield, as Summit FC continues to build out its offense. The team’s first home match is Saturday, March 28, at Empower Field.

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    Kyle Newman

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  • No. 8 Gotham wins historic NWSL Championship 1-0 vs. Washington Spirit

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    History has been made in the 2025 NWSL Championship.

    No. 8 NY/NJ Gotham took down No. 2 Washington Spirit Saturday at PayPal Park in San Jose, Calif., to win the NWSL title, becoming the lowest ever seed to do so.

    Gotham topped the previous record it set itself, as the Bats won the 2023 title over the Seattle Reign 2-1 as the No. 6 seed.

    Though history wasn’t on Gotham’s side entering the game, let alone the postseason, the team had more than enough star quality to get over the line. Striker Esther Gonzalez, midfielder Rose Lavelle, center-back Emily Sonnett and veteran goalie Ann-Katrin Berger provided Gotham with a key piece in each line.

    And, of course, it was Lavelle, the eventual Final MVP, that delivered the game-breaking moment when someone needed to step up.

    In the 80th minute gaining some momentum, substitute left-back Bruninha showed off some stepovers before putting it back into the box. The ball cleared several players, but made its way to Lavelle for a clean look at goal. And Lavelle turned in a beauty with her strong left foot.

    Washington threw what it could in hopes of equalizing at the death to send the game to extra time, but a key chance never arrived.

    In fact, Washington ended the game without a single shot on target despite seven attempts. Gotham had three shots on target from 12 total, while no side registered a big chance in what was a grind-it-out defensive battle.

    The Spirit ended the game with 0.49 expected goals generated, per FotMob, slightly upping Gotham’s 0.39. But moments win championships, and Lavelle delivered it.

    To win the championship unprecedently, Gotham upset No. 1 Kansas City Current, the NWSL Shield winners by a large margin, 2-1 in the first round. Gotham then beat No. 4 Orlando Pride 1-0 to reach the final.

    Washington got past Racing Louisville in a penalty shootout in the first round before beating the Portland Thorns 2-0 to make the final.

    Trinity Rodman, who has an uncertain future in the NWSL and has dealt with injuries most of this season, came on in the 57th minute to try to deliver the decisive moment. But it never went Rodman’s way, who seemed to suffer another knock in the closing seconds as she appeared emotional while briefly heading to the sidelines.

    It also marks the second straight heartbreak for Washington, who also lost the championship game 1-0 to Orlando last season. The Spirit’s lone title win came in 2021.

    For Gotham, it’s the franchise’s second title along with the aforementioned 2023 triumph. Onto 2026…

    Here are five things to know about USWNT and OL Reign midfielder Rose Lavelle.

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    Sanjesh Singh

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  • Citing ‘challenges’, Denver Summit FC looking at potential stadium sites outside Denver

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    DENVER – The Denver Summit FC ownership is “engaging with other jurisdictions” over a potential site of a future stadium for the new professional women’s soccer team, Denver7 has learned.

    Citing “challenges we have faced in the Denver City Council process” over plans for a 14,500-seat stadium at Santa Fe Yards, the team’s ownership said in a statement it was also continuing to “engage in an open and honest dialogue with the Mayor, City Council and Community in Denver” while pursuing a “parallel path regarding the stadium site,” according to a statement.

    On Friday, Denver7’s Veronica Acosta reported that four of five measures considered by the South Platte River Committee this week – in which city council members were a part – were postponed over funding questions.

    The four measures were related to $50 million for the future site including a potential pedestrian bridge.

    Denver7

    “I think as a council, we want to be fiscally responsible when it comes to the use of public funds,” said Councilwoman Flor Alvidrez, who represents District 7, where the stadium is expected to be built.

    There were questions raised on the cost of the bridge and from where those funds would come.

    “How does that work if we don’t have the funding right now? Like, when does that come into play?” Council president Amanda Sandoval asked regarding the potential pedestrian bridge. “I’m just concerned that, like, we’re taking the cart before the horse.”

    Denver

    Denver plans to spend $70 million on a new soccer stadium. Is it worth it?

    Denver7 asked Councilwoman Alvidrez if she was concerned about the postponement of the four measures pertaining to the stadium.

    “I just think we need to get things ironed out before we get there,” she said. “What was missing was things like, how are we going to fund this bridge that is part of the infrastructure master plan?”

    • Watch in the video player below: City officials raise concerns as Denver NWSL team on tight deadline for future stadium

    City officials raise concerns as Denver NWSL team on tight deadline for future stadium

    Earlier this year, Denver7 reported the city was moving forward with plans to build the new National Women’s Soccer League stadium by investing $70 million to get the project started with the ownership group expected to spend between $150 million to $200 million to finish the project.

    In the statement received Saturday, Denver Summit FC ownership added: “We are currently pursuing a parallel path regarding the stadium site.”

    In response, Denver7 received the following statement for Mayor Mike Johnston’s office:

    “Mayor Johnston has been steadfast in his belief that a professional women’s soccer team belongs in Denver and in this stadium’s ability to bring sustained, catalytic investment to South Broadway. Losing this team would be devastating for the thousands of people who have already fallen in love with this franchise and the small businesses who are counting on the boost it will bring.

    Having worked with the team from the beginning, we have seen ownership go above and beyond to answer questions, provide details, and work with the community. Mayor Johnston is working extensively with all parties, and we are confident that we will reach an agreement that benefits the city and keeps the Summit in Denver.”

    Councilwoman Flor Alvidrez, who represents District 7 – where the stadium is expected to be – told Denver7 she believes the timeline for the stadium is still on track but wants to get questions answered and details squared away.

    “I think as a council, we want to be fiscally responsible when it comes to the use of public funds,” said Alvidrez.

    Women’s Sports

    Denver Summit FC breaks another record with 15,000-season ticket deposits

    Below is the full statement from Denver FC Summit:

    “Denver Summit FC ownership is committed to fulfilling our obligations to the league, our fans, our athletes and the community. That means we need to deliver a purpose-built stadium for women’s professional soccer – on time, ready for play in March of 2028. We have been planning for a permanent stadium at Santa Fe Yards in Denver’s urban core. Given the challenges we have faced in the Denver City Council process, we are currently pursuing a parallel path regarding the stadium site and engaging with other jurisdictions outside Denver. We will continue to engage in an open and honest dialogue with the Mayor, City Council and Community in Denver. We are grateful for the steadfast support that we have received from fans, the community, the Mayor, the business community and small businesses throughout Denver.”

    Denver7’s Veronica Acosta contributed to this report.

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos


    Denver7 is committed to making a difference in our community by standing up for what’s right, listening, lending a helping hand and following through on promises. See that work in action, in the videos above.

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  • ‘We are here for everyone’: Washington Spirit looks to defend DC in NWSL semifinals – WTOP News

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    The Washington Spirit are set for their third NWSL semifinal in five years, facing the Portland Thorns at a sold-out Audi Field this Saturday.

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    Washington Spirit prepares to defend DC in NWSL semifinals

    After conquering the National Women’s Soccer League quarterfinals Nov. 8 in a penalty kick shootout, the Washington Spirit prepare to play their third semifinal match in five years on Saturday. However, the NWSL team is not alone.

    The No. 2 seeded Spirit will be at home in front of its “Rowdy Audi” supporters at D.C.’s Audi Field when they take on the Portland Thorns on Saturday. Players and coaches say it’s that support from those in the stadium and around the region that is providing the proper motivation heading into the semifinals.

    “I can’t sleep, unfortunately, because I’m so anxious for the game,” midfielder Croix Bethune said.

    Team officials announced the match is sold out, marking Washington’s sixth sell-out of the year. Fans looking to snag a last-minute ticket will need to use TicketMaster’s reseller site or another third-party vendor.

    The match will be broadcast on CBS, giving Washington a national spotlight in its third semifinal match in five years.

    The growth started in 2023, when the Spirit moved to Audi Field in Southwest D.C full time. Since then, the Spirit has attempted to charm itself within the D.C. area through community events while building a winning team.

    Head coach Adrián González said the Spirit’s roster represents the city’s makeup — filled with diversity. He added the players try to channel that support and give it back to the fans with their plays and spend time with supporters during the postgame.

    “I think it’s important to have that connection, and we can see the power that we have when we play at home,” González said. “The connection that we are having, I think, that’s an extra push, and obviously we are so thankful for that.”

    As the Donald Trump administration’s law enforcement surge began in the District, Spirit fans chanted “Free D.C.” as a sign of protest. The club responded, becoming the only D.C.-area professional sports team to address the development, stating it stands by the city: “As your neighbors, we walk beside you.”

    For Bethune, the Spirit represents more than a team looking to win a soccer title.

    “With everything going on, we’re just trying to be the light for the city,” she said.

    Since being drafted to Washington last year, midfielder Hal Hershfelt said D.C. has become a second home. Hershfelt credits the fans and the Spirit for making her feel comfortable to grow as a player.

    “Even though I’m not from here and literally have no past connection, I’m like, ‘I love D.C.’ Just because I feel so proud to play in front of them every weekend, and it’s awesome,” Hershfelt said.

    If Washington wins, it would be the second professional D.C.-based sports team to compete in a championship game this year, next to the UFL’s DC Defenders. When asked what it would mean to accomplish the feat, González called it “a huge privilege.”

    “It means a lot, not just for us, but for D.C.,” Bethune said. “We’re the Washington Spirit for a reason, so we’re putting on for our city.”

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    Jose Umana

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  • NWSL Awards Expansion Franchise to Atlanta

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    Arthur M. Blank (above), owner of Atlanta United and the Atlanta Falcons, is now the owner of Atlanta’s NWSL club.
    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    Atlanta has been awarded the 17th National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL) franchise. The expansion was announced at an event on Tuesday evening featuring a night of entertainment, live performances, popcorn, hot cocoa, and empowering moments for female athletes of all ages who have led, competed, and inspired through sport. Presented by Arthur M. Blank Sports and Entertainment, the celebration was a testament that when you “empower her,” you “Inspire all.”

    Arthur M. Blank, owner of Atlanta United, the Atlanta Falcons, and now Atlanta’s NWSL club, said that he’s learned from the women in his life that true greatness comes from using your achievements to help others rise along the way. 

    “As we launch this new club, I’m deeply inspired by the opportunity to give young girls across Georgia, including my own granddaughters, the chance to see what’s possible by watching these world-class athletes right here in Atlanta, Georgia, our home,” Blank said. “It’s my hope that this club will ignite something powerful in everyone who watches, especially young people, and light a spark that says, ‘if they can do it, so can I.’ This is not just about seeing the athletes on the pitch. It’s about recognizing the dedication, the resilience, and the teamwork it takes to get there.”

    Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens (above) was one of the special guests on hand for the celebration of the newly announced club.
    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    Other featured speakers at the celebration included basketball analyst and ESPN reporter Andraya Carter, former Soccer in the Streets player Lauren Dubois, NWSL Commissioner Jessica Berman, Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens, and United States Soccer Federation President Cindy Parlow Cone.

    “I will now get to watch female athletes chase their dreams on the pitch right here in the ATL. So somewhere in Atlanta, right now, could be the world’s next great soccer star who will come of age knowing she can train here, play here, and win right here in Atlanta,” Dickens said. 

    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    The announcement comes at a time when all eyes are on the city as it prepares to host eight 2026 FIFA World Cup matches, including a semifinal match. The continued investment in soccer, from Atlanta United FC to the incoming high-performance Arthur M. Blank U.S. Soccer National Training Center, shows that the sport and what it means to people is deeply appreciated. And with the boom of women’s sports from media coverage to financial investment, the club is another step forward in the success of the game.

    Women’s sports are redefining what’s possible in the athletics business and culture,” ESPN reporter Andraya Carter (above) said.
    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice 

    “I’ve been so lucky to have the best seats in the house to some of the most exciting women’s sports events, and it has been absolutely electrifying across the country. Women’s sports are redefining what’s possible in the athletics business and culture,” Carter said. 

    When the new team takes the pitch in 2028, Blank said the club will represent the next generation of leaders, change makers, and athletes, and that the spirit of its supporters will build a club that stands for “excellence and greatness.”

    “Our NWSL players will be role models who embody excellence, determination, and the unshakable belief that anything is possible,” Blank said. 

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    Laura Nwogu

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  • NWSL Playoff Preview | Orlando Pride looks ahead to Seattle Reign

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    The Orlando Pride have grown familiar with dealing with pressure. After concluding a historic 2024 season, which saw the Pride claim both the NWSL Shield and NWSL Championship, the pressure of being the underdogs amid the record-breaking season was there. As Orlando prepares for a second consecutive playoff appearance on Friday against the Seattle Reign, the pressure to win the whole thing and repeat as champions is also there. “I think last year we were still the underdogs even though we were killing it,” Pride left back Carson Pickett told WESH 2 this week. “Every game that we won, it wasn’t a shock for us, but a shock for other people when we won the shield, and people thought we might not win the championship.” The Pride culminated the 2024 season with a historic double, winning the NWSL Shield, awarded to the team with the best regular season record, and NWSL Championship after defeating the Washington Spirit 1-0 in the league final. The NWSL Championship was the first major league title for the City of Orlando. But following a topsy-turvy 2025 season, which saw the Pride battle through player injuries and winless runs, Orlando (11-8-7, 40 points) made it back to the postseason after finishing fourth in the standings. “This year there’s huge pressure to repeat,” said Pickett. “Everyone wants to go back-to-back, everyone wants to double down on what they’ve done, and to become a winning club you have to do it multiple times.” To get back in the postseason picture, though, the Pride had to deal with a period of adversity this season. Star forward Barbra Banda was placed in August on the season-ending injury list after suffering a full-thickness avulsion of her right adductor longus.And that happened amid a winless run that went nine games, and saw Orlando fall in the standings to seventh place in the standings. The Pride signed Jacquie Ovalle for a record $1.5 million transfer fee from Tigres UANL during the summer. The 9-game winless skid snapped when Orlando came back to defeat the San Diego Wave 2-1 on the road on Sept. 26. That was followed by a draw and win before a come-from-behind 3-2 victory against the Washington Spirit on Oct. 18 at Audi Field. Orlando Pride head coach Seb Hines credits his players’ resiliency toward the latter part of the regular season for getting the team back into the playoff picture for a second consecutive year. “Last year was a really unique year, and it will be very difficult to emulate that season again,” Hines told WESH 2. “To replicate that was close to impossible, but our objective was always to get into the postseason and know once you’re in the playoffs, anything can happen.” Match DetailsOrlando Pride vs. Seattle Reign Location: Inter&Co Stadium Kickoff time: 8 p.m. ETBroadcast: Prime Mike Gramajo is an Assignment Editor and Sportswriter at WESH 2, who has covered the Orlando soccer scene since 2012. You can follow his coverage over on X and Instagram.

    The Orlando Pride have grown familiar with dealing with pressure.

    After concluding a historic 2024 season, which saw the Pride claim both the NWSL Shield and NWSL Championship, the pressure of being the underdogs amid the record-breaking season was there.

    As Orlando prepares for a second consecutive playoff appearance on Friday against the Seattle Reign, the pressure to win the whole thing and repeat as champions is also there.

    “I think last year we were still the underdogs even though we were killing it,” Pride left back Carson Pickett told WESH 2 this week. “Every game that we won, it wasn’t a shock for us, but a shock for other people when we won the shield, and people thought we might not win the championship.”

    The Pride culminated the 2024 season with a historic double, winning the NWSL Shield, awarded to the team with the best regular season record, and NWSL Championship after defeating the Washington Spirit 1-0 in the league final.

    The NWSL Championship was the first major league title for the City of Orlando.

    But following a topsy-turvy 2025 season, which saw the Pride battle through player injuries and winless runs, Orlando (11-8-7, 40 points) made it back to the postseason after finishing fourth in the standings.

    “This year there’s huge pressure to repeat,” said Pickett. “Everyone wants to go back-to-back, everyone wants to double down on what they’ve done, and to become a winning club you have to do it multiple times.”

    To get back in the postseason picture, though, the Pride had to deal with a period of adversity this season.

    Star forward Barbra Banda was placed in August on the season-ending injury list after suffering a full-thickness avulsion of her right adductor longus.

    And that happened amid a winless run that went nine games, and saw Orlando fall in the standings to seventh place in the standings.

    The Pride signed Jacquie Ovalle for a record $1.5 million transfer fee from Tigres UANL during the summer.

    The 9-game winless skid snapped when Orlando came back to defeat the San Diego Wave 2-1 on the road on Sept. 26. That was followed by a draw and win before a come-from-behind 3-2 victory against the Washington Spirit on Oct. 18 at Audi Field.

    Orlando Pride head coach Seb Hines credits his players’ resiliency toward the latter part of the regular season for getting the team back into the playoff picture for a second consecutive year.

    “Last year was a really unique year, and it will be very difficult to emulate that season again,” Hines told WESH 2. “To replicate that was close to impossible, but our objective was always to get into the postseason and know once you’re in the playoffs, anything can happen.”


    Match Details

    Orlando Pride vs. Seattle Reign

    Location: Inter&Co Stadium

    Kickoff time: 8 p.m. ET

    Broadcast: Prime


    Mike Gramajo is an Assignment Editor and Sportswriter at WESH 2, who has covered the Orlando soccer scene since 2012. You can follow his coverage over on X and Instagram.

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  • Olivia Moultrie Signs Extension With The NWSL’s Portland Thorns Through 2029 – KXL

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    PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — The Portland Thorns have signed midfielder Olivia Moultrie to a contract extension that will keep her with the National Women’s Soccer League team through 2029.

    The 20-year-old, who was U.S. Soccer’s Young Player of the Year in 2023, has also made 10 appearances with the national team, recently scoring a pair of goals in a 3-1 victory over Portugal.

    Moultrie signed with the Thorns in 2021 at 15 after filing a lawsuit against the NWSL that challenged a rule prohibiting players under 18. At the time, she was the youngest player in the league.

    Moultrie has appeared in 95 NWSL matches with the Thorns, including 65 starts, scoring 18 goals with 11 assists.

    “From day one, this organization has believed in me and supported my development in ways I’ll always be grateful for,” Moultrie said in a statement. “I grew up in this league wearing Thorns colors and that’s shaped me and my expectations.”

    Moultrie leads the Thorns with eight goals this season and has appeared in 26 games with 24 starts. Portland finished third in the league standings and made the playoffs for the ninth straight season.

    The Thorns, who won league championships in 2013, 2017 and 2022, will host the San Diego Wave in a quarterfinal match on Sunday.

    “We are thrilled to extend Olivia as a Thorn for the foreseeable future. We have seen her playing arc see tremendous growth over the course of her development in Portland. Her on-field capabilities, her sheer competitiveness, and the maturity off the pitch has established her as one of our nation’s brightest young stars,” said Jeff Agoos, Portland’s president and general manager.

    Moultrie was also awarded the 2025 Supporters Player of the Year by the Rose City Riveters, Portland’s supporters group.

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    Jordan Vawter

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  • Gotham clinches NWSL playoff spot after 2-2 tie with Racing Louisville

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    Rose Lavelle scored the tying goal in the 85th minute and Gotham FC had a 2-2 draw with Racing Louisville in the National Women’s Soccer League on Sunday.

    With the draw Gotham (9-7-9) clinched a spot in the NWSL playoffs with one match of the regular season still to play. It is the third consecutive year Gotham has made it to the postseason.

    In the only other NWSL match on Sunday, the Portland Thorns also clinched a playoff spot with a 1-0 win over Angel City.

    In New Jersey, Gotham opened the scoring when Jaelin Howell scored her fourth goal of the season with a long-range strike in the 15th minute.

    Janine Sonis made it 1-1 in against the run of play with a deflected shot from inside the box in the 29th.

    After halftime, Racing took a 2-1 lead when rookie Sarah Weber slashed in a bouncing ball from six yards out in the 65th.

    But Lavelle had the last word when she curled a stunning direct free-kick just inside the post to make it 2-2 from 20 yards out.

    Racing (9-9-7) ended the weekend eighth in the standings, which is the final playoff spot, and has a two-point cushion over the ninth-place North Carolina Courage with one match remaining.

    Since joining the league in 2021, Louisville has yet to reach the NWSL playoffs.

    NWSL commissioner Jessica Berman tells CNBC’s Alex Sherman how she will leverage the domestic 2026 FIFA World Cup to grow the league.

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    Theo Lloyd-hughes | The Associated Press

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  • Orlando Pride winless run extends to 6 games after Gotham FC loss

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    The Orlando Pride’s scoring issues continued on Friday night. Without leading goal scorer Barbra Banda who was added to the season-ending injury list last weekend, Orlando extended its scoring drought to three games. Esther Gonzalez netted early and Jaelin Howell scored in the second haf as Gotham FC defeated the Orlando Pride 2-0 at Inter&Co Stadium. The loss extended the Pride’s winless streak to six games heading into the final eight games of the regular season.Angelina left the game in the 26th minute after suffering an undisclosed injury. Barbra was officially ruled out of the rest of the season on Sunday after suffering a full thickness avulsion of her right adductor longus tendon during an Aug. 16 game at Kansas City Current. The Pride head into Concacaf Women’s Champions Cup action on Tuesday when they host Costa Rican club Alajuelense at Inter&Co Stadium. Mike Gramajo is an Assignment Editor and Sportswriter at WESH 2 News, who has covered Orlando City SC since 2012. You can follow his coverage over on X and Instagram.

    The Orlando Pride’s scoring issues continued on Friday night.

    Without leading goal scorer Barbra Banda who was added to the season-ending injury list last weekend, Orlando extended its scoring drought to three games.

    Esther Gonzalez netted early and Jaelin Howell scored in the second haf as Gotham FC defeated the Orlando Pride 2-0 at Inter&Co Stadium.

    The loss extended the Pride’s winless streak to six games heading into the final eight games of the regular season.

    Angelina left the game in the 26th minute after suffering an undisclosed injury.

    Barbra was officially ruled out of the rest of the season on Sunday after suffering a full thickness avulsion of her right adductor longus tendon during an Aug. 16 game at Kansas City Current.

    The Pride head into Concacaf Women’s Champions Cup action on Tuesday when they host Costa Rican club Alajuelense at Inter&Co Stadium.


    Mike Gramajo is an Assignment Editor and Sportswriter at WESH 2 News, who has covered Orlando City SC since 2012. You can follow his coverage over on X and Instagram.

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  • Barbra Banda placed on season-ending injury list for Orlando Pride

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    Orlando Pride forward Barbra Banda was placed on the season-ending injury list, the team announced on Saturday. This comes after the Zambian attacker suffered a full thickness avulsion of her right adductor longus tendon during last weekend’s game at KC Current. “Barbra has been instrumental to our success, and losing a player of her caliber is heartbreaking for the entire organization,” said Haley Carter, the Pride’s VP of soccer operations and sporting director. “We are committed to providing her with the highest level of care and support throughout her recovery. Her contributions to this team both on and off the field have been immeasurable, and we know she will approach her rehabilitation with the same determination and professionalism she brings to everything she does.”The injury is a major blow to the Pride’s offense this season. Orlando is winless in its last five games — two losses and three draws — and have scored only twice and conceded 5 goals during that stretch. Banda, 25, currently leads the Pride in scoring with 8 goals this season. She was the team’s top scorer with 17 goals in 2024, which also saw the Pride win a historic double with the NWSL Shield and NWSL Championship. Since her arrival in Orlando last year, Banda has scored 25 times and has produced seven assists in 41 matches played in all competitions. Her 2024 NWSL Championship MVP performance earned her a nomination to the 2025 Women’s Ballon d’Or earlier this month. Related: Orlando Pride, Barbra Banda, Marta earn Ballon d’Or nominations The Pride (8W-5L-4D, 28 points) currently sits in fourth place in the standings with nine games left in the 2025 NWSL regular season. Orlando hosts Gotham FC on Friday at 8 p.m. at Inter&Co Stadium. Mike Gramajo is an Assignment Editor and Sportswriter at WESH 2 News, who has covered Orlando City SC since 2012. You can follow his coverage over on X and Instagram.

    Orlando Pride forward Barbra Banda was placed on the season-ending injury list, the team announced on Saturday.

    This comes after the Zambian attacker suffered a full thickness avulsion of her right adductor longus tendon during last weekend’s game at KC Current.

    “Barbra has been instrumental to our success, and losing a player of her caliber is heartbreaking for the entire organization,” said Haley Carter, the Pride’s VP of soccer operations and sporting director. “We are committed to providing her with the highest level of care and support throughout her recovery. Her contributions to this team both on and off the field have been immeasurable, and we know she will approach her rehabilitation with the same determination and professionalism she brings to everything she does.”

    The injury is a major blow to the Pride’s offense this season. Orlando is winless in its last five games — two losses and three draws — and have scored only twice and conceded 5 goals during that stretch.

    Banda, 25, currently leads the Pride in scoring with 8 goals this season. She was the team’s top scorer with 17 goals in 2024, which also saw the Pride win a historic double with the NWSL Shield and NWSL Championship.

    Since her arrival in Orlando last year, Banda has scored 25 times and has produced seven assists in 41 matches played in all competitions.

    Her 2024 NWSL Championship MVP performance earned her a nomination to the 2025 Women’s Ballon d’Or earlier this month.

    Related: Orlando Pride, Barbra Banda, Marta earn Ballon d’Or nominations

    The Pride (8W-5L-4D, 28 points) currently sits in fourth place in the standings with nine games left in the 2025 NWSL regular season.

    Orlando hosts Gotham FC on Friday at 8 p.m. at Inter&Co Stadium.


    Mike Gramajo is an Assignment Editor and Sportswriter at WESH 2 News, who has covered Orlando City SC since 2012. You can follow his coverage over on X and Instagram.

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  • Emma Hayes struck balance between USWNT celebration and evaluation, winning the October window

    Emma Hayes struck balance between USWNT celebration and evaluation, winning the October window

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    Center back Naomi Girma stole the show in Louisville as the U.S. women’s national team wrapped up the international window with its third win. But the real story of that October camp is the sheer amount of evaluation head coach Emma Hayes managed in addition to the celebratory nature of the team’s Olympics gold medal victory tour.

    “I got out of it what I wanted to get out of it,” Hayes said Wednesday. “A ton of debutants, managed minutes for everyone that’s still in NWSL play, (and) a chance to develop some things that, for us, we set as targets for ourselves on the training pitch.”

    Hayes has backed up everything she has said since taking over the job in May, going back to her first media appearances in New York City this spring — specifically: club form matters. While her hands were tied slightly in this window as Olympics celebrations meant she had to call up every healthy member of the squad that went to the Games in France in the summer, she used her remaining roster spots to the fullest. She also maximized rotation, not just in the starting line-ups and her substitute choices, but the 23-player game-day rosters.

    All seven uncapped players on the roster, including a mid-camp addition, earned their first USWNT minutes.

    Orlando Pride defender Emily Sams and Washington Spirit midfielder Hal Hershfelt were in France as alternates but did not see the field. Racing Louisville forward Emma Sears immediately impressed in her debut as only the fourth player in program history to record a goal and assist in her first cap. Bay FC defender Alyssa Malonson nabbed her first assist in her debut Wednesday against Argentina, playing provider to Girma. Paris Saint-Germain’s Eva Gaetino, Utah Royals’ Mandy Haught and Gotham FC’s Yazmeen Ryan rounded out the new kids.

    There were important returns too. Alyssa Thompson finally scored her first international goal in her return to the national team after missing out on the Olympic roster, and Ashley Sanchez and Hailie Mace picked up minutes against Argentina.

    It’s hard to disagree with Hayes’ approach to club form after a successful window because she achieved all of her objectives and captured three multi-goal wins. As a bonus, she also finally saw the team down a goal, forced into mounting a comeback against Iceland in Nashville on Sunday. It was the first time the USWNT had fallen behind in a game managed by Hayes.

    The challenge now is figuring out how much these matches actually matter in the long run. While the friendlies were fun to watch — no one will complain about a Girma brace either — with so much focus on rotation and evaluation, it feels more like one of the first pieces to the larger puzzle. One that won’t be completed for a few more years.

    The back half of 2024 has generally felt like a period for recovery and big-picture thinking at the senior team level.

    While the next and final window of the year in late November and early December involves two high-profile European opponents on the road, the friendlies against England and the Netherlands will likely be an outlier from this period. Higher-profile opponents mean higher stakes, but it’s fair to expect Hayes to again use the full depth of her roster with an eye on evaluation and development.

    Hayes has already shown she’s not afraid of big moments and prioritized using the depth of her roster to bring Jaedyn Shaw, Croix Bethune and others to their first major tournament this summer. While the starting XI against England on November 30 is sure to be the strongest possible, Hayes has another chance to ensure that players who will be crucial to the team’s success two or three years down the line experience an environment like Wembley Stadium as well.

    The true sign of things to come will be January’s Futures Camp, which Hayes promised to run concurrently with the full senior team camp in Los Angeles. The USWNT hasn’t run a talent and identification camp since 2019, shortly after Vlatko Andonovski took over the team, but it was the only one to occur during his four-year tenure.

    Hayes has promised to cast a wide net, especially following semifinal appearances from the under-20 and under-17 teams in their respective World Cups this year. But for all the angst over the past few years about generational change, the runway has finally been fully cleared.

    The Olympics were the most obvious symbolic gesture of the end of one USWNT era, with Alex Morgan not named to the roster. It was a surprise sunsetting of a generational player but was also a testament to the team she helped build.

    GO DEEPER

    Alex Morgan has designed her own USWNT exit by setting the next generation up for success

    There are more options than ever before in every position. Making the U.S. roster seems harder than it’s been in the past, but doing so is also more clearly tied to form and thus more transparent than ever. Hayes has finally truly buried that “emergency surgery” line she came in with and led the team to Olympic gold, and as promised, the larger work is now underway.

    These three games provided a good start, but were just a start nonetheless.

    The first 270 minutes of the cycle leading to the 2027 World Cup in Brazil and home-turf Los Angeles-hosted Olympics a year later are in the bag. There’s still so much more to come.

    (Top photo: Scott Wachter / Imagn Images)

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    The New York Times

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  • Kerolin scores after returning from ACL tear, NC Courage take down Chicago Red Stars 3-1

    Kerolin scores after returning from ACL tear, NC Courage take down Chicago Red Stars 3-1

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    Kerolin scored her first goal since returning from an ACL injury, helping the North Carolina Courage beat the Chicago Red Stars 3-1 on Sunday night.

    It was just the second game back for Kerolin, who was named MVP of the 2023 National Women’s Soccer League season.

    In the 15th minute at SeatGeek Stadium in Bridgeview, Illinois, the Courage (11-9-2) jumped into the lead when Ashley Sanchez crossed to Brianna Pinto, who forced an own goal while battling for the ball. Pinto was injured on the play and had to sub out a few minutes later.

    Just before halftime, Tyler Lussi passed back to Denise O’Sullivan at the top of the 18-yard box, and O’Sullivan fired a shot into the upper right corner with her first touch to double North Carolina’s lead.

    Kerolin got on Olivia Wingate’s cutback pass to make it 3-0 in the 65th.

    Ludmilla responded for Chicago (9-11-2) a few minutes later, scoring from a tight angle.

    The Courage finish the weekend in fifth place while the Red Stars hold onto sixth.

    U.S. women’s national team coach Emma Hayes attended the match.

    BAY 1, REIGN 0

    Asisat Oshoala scored a penalty kick, and Bay FC held on for a 1-0 road win against the Seattle Reign at Lumen Field.

    In the 27th minute, Oshoala sent her penalty into the lower left corner after the Reign were whistled for a foul in the box.

    The win moved Bay (9-12-1) into eighth place, the final playoff position, with four games remaining. The expansion team is tied with Portland for seventh place with 28 points.

    After going unbeaten in seven straight games, the Reign (5-12-5) have now lost three straight.

    ___

    AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

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  • Bay FC suffers heartbreaking loss to undefeated Orlando Pride on late goal by Barbra Banda

    Bay FC suffers heartbreaking loss to undefeated Orlando Pride on late goal by Barbra Banda

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    SAN JOSE — Two screaming passes went across the penalty area in the late moments of Friday night’s clash between Bay FC and the undefeated Orlando Pride, but Bay FC couldn’t finish either chance.

    A minute later, the hometown club surrendered a heartbreaking goal to Orlando’s Barbra Banda to complete a devastating 1-0 loss at PayPal Park.

    “This one hurts,” said head coach Albertin Montoya. “The team played well and we deserved better.”

    Bay FC was every bit as good as the first place Pride most of the night, out-shooting them 13-12, and had several chances to win it in the final few minutes.

    In the 79th minute, rookie left back Maddie Moreau dribbled by two defenders on the left side of the box and slotted a pass to Dorian Bailey, but Bailey’s low shot was stopped by the foot of goalie Anna Moorhouse.

    Then in the 83rd minute, Racheal Kundananji dribbled down the left side and put the ball through the legs of Orlando defender Emily Sams, then crossed her up a second time and fired a perfect pass into the penalty area, but Rachel Hill’s first-time shot went a few feet wide of the goal.

    “The best teams finish those chances,” Montoya said. “But we’re creating chances and creating a lot of really good chances. It’s frustrating but it’s also encouraging because we’ve come a long way. We’re getting better.”

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  • North Carolina Courage defeats San Diego Wave 4-1 in Alex Morgan’s final professional soccer match

    North Carolina Courage defeats San Diego Wave 4-1 in Alex Morgan’s final professional soccer match

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    Defender Malia Berkely had three assists as the North Carolina Courage earned a 4-1 road win against the San Diego Wave on Sunday evening in the National Women’s Soccer League.

    The Courage (10-8-1) came away with their second road win this season and played spoliers on a special evening, as 26,516 fans filled the stands at Snapdragon Stadium to witness Alex Morgan’s last professional soccer game.

    Morgan announced earlier this week that Sunday’s game would be her last, as she is retiring and pregnant with her second child. The longtime U.S. women’s national team forward retires with two World Cup titles, one Olympic gold medal and a bronze medal. She also won the NWSL Shield with San Diego in 2023 and helped fight for equal pay and to bring light to abuse in the NWSL.

    All three opening goals came off corner kicks.

    In the 4th minute, North Carolina’s Haley Hopkins headed in Berkely’s corner kick.

    Morgan had one final chance to add to her goal tally with a penalty kick, but Courage goalkeeper Casey Murphy saved the attempt. Shortly after, Wave teammate Kennedy Wesley got her head on a corner kick to tie the score.

    In the 13th minute, in honor of her jersey number, Morgan subbed out of the match for a final time to a thunderous applause.

    Felicitas Rauch rose up to head in another corner from Berkley in the 21st minute, while Bianca St-Georges scored off Berkley’s pass just before halftime.

    Wave goalkeeper Kailen Sheridan received a red card in the 61st minute for denying a goal-scoring opportunity.

    Meredith Speck finished Olivia Wingate’s cross to give the Courage an insurance goal in the 94th minute.

    The Wave (3-9-7) are winless in 12 straight games.

    GOTHAM 2, DASH 1

    Esther González scored in the 93rd minute to give Gotham a 2-1 home win over the Houston Dash.

    The forward got the ball with her back to the goal, turned and fired into the left corner to seal the win at Red Bull Arena.

    Lynn Williams, in her first match back from the Paris Olympics, assisted the goal.

    Yazmeen Ryan opened the scoring for Gotham (11-4-4) in the 10th minute, dribbling into the box and shooting into the left corner.

    Diana Ordóñez headed in Avery Patterson’s cross to bring the match level in the 17th minute.

    Houston (3-11-5) have lost five straight games and finished the weekend in last place.

    PRIDE 1, RED STARS 0

    Marta’s first-half goal gave the Orlando Pride a 1-0 win on the road against the Chicago Red Stars.

    Orlando (14-0-5) is now undefeated in a league record 20 straight games, dating back to last year.

    In the 37th minute, Marta whipped a left-footed shot into the far post to put Orlando ahead.

    Chicago (7-10-2) was held to just three shots and has lost three straight games.

    ___

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  • Why Alex Morgan missed the USWNT Olympic roster

    Why Alex Morgan missed the USWNT Olympic roster

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    For the first time in 16 years, forward Alex Morgan will not feature on a major tournament roster for the U.S. women’s national soccer team.

    On Wednesday, coach Emma Hayes left Morgan off the 18-player roster for the Olympics this summer in Paris. In her absence, the U.S. will be without a previous gold medal winner, with the team’s last win from the London Games in 2012.

    “It was a tough decision, of course, especially considering Alex’s history and record with this team,” Hayes said, “but I felt that I wanted to go in another direction and selected other players.”

    Morgan’s absence can be considered in several ways. It is the end of an era for the USWNT. Some will see it as an overdue move to balance younger players alongside veterans. Others will argue that Hayes made a simple soccer decision. Above all, Wednesday’s move reminded us that no spot on any U.S. roster is guaranteed.

    “Today, I’m disappointed about not having the opportunity to represent our country on the Olympic stage,” Morgan posted on social media following the announcement. “This will always be a tournament that is close to my heart and I take immense pride any time I put on the crest.”

    Hayes declined to get into her reasons for leaving Morgan off the roster and a list of four alternates, which included Gotham FC forward Lynn Williams. Instead, she highlighted “what an amazing player and human that Alex Morgan has been” through her brief window of working with her at this month’s camp for two friendlies against South Korea.

    “I saw firsthand not just her qualities, but her professionalism. Her record speaks for itself,” Hayes said. At the same time, she acknowledged the constraints of the 18-player roster, with spots for only 16 field players.

    Morgan has leadership, having captained the Americans on the biggest stage at the World Cup. Her experience outranks every other player on the roster in terms of appearances and goals. So what kept her off the Olympic team?

    It had been clear since the South Korea friendlies that the best forward starting line involved Trinity Rodman, Sophia Smith and Mallory Swanson, yet Morgan was still in contention for a roster spot. But her club performance may have hurt her campaign for a role.

    “I’ve come from a club level and what I have learned is the best development is done at club level,” Hayes said at her first media availability last month in New York City, essentially directly addressing players through the media. “So go back to your clubs, play, compete, get healthy, and put yourself in the best possible place.”

    Hayes has been consistent since taking over the job that performance and form matter in her assessment, particularly on the club side.

    “There are players on the roster that are performing well, and the decision to take those players was one that we certainly deliberated over, but I think it’s a balanced roster,” Hayes said. “I’ve considered all the factors that we’re going to need throughout the Olympics, and (this roster is) one that I’m really happy with.”

    After a few years with limited club involvement — she only played 10 league games across the Orlando Pride and Tottenham from 2019-2021, including a break while she was pregnant with daughter Charlie — Morgan had a resurgent 2022 season for the newly launched San Diego Wave. She won the Golden Boot by leading the NWSL with 15 goals, including 11 from the run of play. It was Morgan at her best — consistently setting up shots on her left foot while finding plenty of space inside the six-yard box to convert dangerous chances.

    Morgan, who turns 35 on Tuesday, has also missed time due to a lingering ankle injury.

    Her form wasn’t quite as robust at the start of 2023, but her place on Vlatko Andonovski’s World Cup roster was assured. She was a fixture in his lineups throughout the run-up to the tournament, and the hope was that she could do some thankless line-leading work even if her scoring touch wasn’t quite in vintage form.

    Since the USWNT’s elimination in the World Cup round of 16, however, Morgan has struggled to score for club and country alike. San Diego has not hit form this season and dismissed head coach Casey Stoney this week. Still, a player of Morgan’s pedigree is expected to score even when the going gets rough. Instead, she has yet to find the back of the net in 2024, midway through the season.

    Given the Wave’s struggles to advance possession this year, Morgan has had to drop deeper than usual to get on the ball. That’s illustrated by how much more frequently she’s having to direct her passes upfield — 16.2% of her distribution advances at least 5 yards toward goal, a rate more commonly seen from a midfielder than a striker and well above her 12.1% in 2022. She has looked less inclined to take an opponent on with her dribble, making just three take-ons in 542 minutes this season after logging 35 in 1,630 minutes last year.

    Even more concerning is the 0 in her goals scored column this season despite logging nearly 600 minutes.

    Morgan’s lack of versatility could have also factored into Hayes’ decision. Morgan has long been an expert striker, scoring 123 goals as the USWNT’s fifth-all-time leading goalscorer. But with that specialization comes a lack of experience at other positions, like some of the players called up for the tournament.

    Hindered in part by her club team’s stagnating approach in possession, Morgan hasn’t been able to enjoy a similarly bountiful amount of service in the box. She has yet to take a single shot inside the six-yard box in the 2024 season, leading to a steep regression in her expected goals per shot, and only six of her 20 shot attempts this season have been taken on her stronger left foot.

    Wave teammate Jaedyn Shaw was able to do just enough despite the team’s floundering form to remain in Hayes’ plans for the Olympics. Unfortunately, Morgan didn’t have the same bulk of strong USWNT performances that helped anchor Shaw’s case for inclusion, with Hayes calling her national team goal involvements “significant” on Wednesday.


    Morgan’s greatest case for making another Olympic appearance had more to do with the intangibles, whether that was her presence as a veteran leader alongside captain Lindsey Horan, or the kind of presence she could offer at the late stages of a knockout match considering her major tournament track record. With an 18-player roster, it’s clear Hayes could not justify those intangibles over more basic roster needs.

    “There’s no denying the history of this program has been hugely successful, but the reality is that it’s going to take a lot of work for us to get to that top level again,” Hayes said.

    Youth is part of that process. Hayes has named the youngest Olympic roster for the USWNT since 2008, when the team won gold in Beijing. The current roster has an average age of 26.8, four years younger than the team that went to Tokyo in 2021 and settled for a bronze medal. But even more stark is the difference in the number of appearances from the last Olympics. The average caps per player in 2021 was 111; for this team the average is only 58.

    “Looking through the cap accumulation of the team, there’s been a lack of development, of putting some of the less experienced players in positions where they can develop that experience,” Hayes said. “I think it’s important that we have to do that to take the next step. So I’m not looking backwards.”


    Morgan’s 224 appearances for the U.S. far surpasses any player on the Olympic squad. (Photo by Brad Smith, Getty Images for USSF)

    Hayes pointed to Shaw’s inclusion on the roster to support this idea, focusing on younger players and their development at major tournaments to gain experience that would benefit the USWNT immediately and in the longer term. Hayes avoided questions about where the team might finish or what its goals would be for the Olympics, stressing that her mission was getting the team as close as possible to its best level and best version.

    Morgan, for all the history and legacy she will leave in her absence, might have provided a short-term boost. She also might not have. It’s impossible to predict what an individual player might contribute in the run of a major tournament. Ultimately, Hayes is focusing on something larger, building on the changes that have already been made following the early exit from last summer’s World Cup.

    “For us, this is an opportunity to show those learnings will take us much further than it did last time,” she said. “But there is no guarantee in anything in life.”

    (Top photo: Getty Images; Design: Dan Goldfarb)

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  • How USWNT’s interim coach period affects Olympic ambitions

    How USWNT’s interim coach period affects Olympic ambitions

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    In November, U.S. Soccer gambled that it was worth sacrificing a year of continuous preparation under a permanent manager to hire Emma Hayes. For eight months following the 2023 World Cup, interim management has overseen the U.S. women’s national team. To her credit, Twila Kilgore’s tenure as placeholder helped turn over the player pool and saw her team win a pair of tune-up competitions this spring.

    Still, it’s been a lost year for the program at a time when it was in sore need of a clear new vision. Hayes’ first games as USWNT manager in June are still two months away, bringing the post-World Cup interlude to 10 months — and a full seven months from her appointment in November.

    With the CONCACAF W Gold Cup and SheBelieves Cup in the rearview, it’s time to take stock. Is the program any better prepared to contend at the Paris Olympics than it was when Sweden knocked it out of the World Cup?


    The 2023 World Cup cycle (and, by association, the Vlatko Andonovski era) stands out as the low point for the USWNT on the field.

    The belated 2020 Olympics was a warning sign, as an aging core entered with varying levels of fitness amidst the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic. The team played every game in empty stadia, a far cry from the raucous support it so often enjoys in major tournaments, and the team was ultimately eliminated by Canada in the semifinal.

    Rather than heeding lessons from that tournament, Andonovski largely ran it back for the 2023 World Cup in Australia and New Zealand. The team’s style of play often looked languid as it failed to breach the final third. Multiple players failed to see the field for a single minute as the U.S. advanced from its group thanks in part to a friendly goalpost against Portugal. The relief was short-lived as the U.S. fell to another longtime rival, Sweden, in a round of 16 penalty shootout.

    Advanced metrics show that the U.S. did do some good things in its four games at the tournament. No team allowed fewer shots per 90 than the squad’s 4.6, and its average xG per 90 advantage of 2.14-0.32 certainly screams “contender” in isolation. However, the issues with build-up and chance creation were clear.

    The team progressed up the field quickly enough, ranking 11th in the tournament field with a direct speed of 1.71 meters advanced upfield per second of possession.

    Speed isn’t everything. Tournaments are notorious for eliciting small sample size judgments, and the trendline is far from definitive. Nevertheless, none of the 10 teams that ranked higher in direct speed advanced any further in the tournament than the round of 16.

    Progressing the ball upfield with pace is a helpful tool in transition, but the USWNT seemed devoid of ideas once it met the opposing defense in the final third. All four teams that had a more rapid direct speed also bowed out in the round of 16. Unsurprisingly, all five teams that averaged fewer goals per 90 than the U.S. also failed to reach the quarterfinal or further.

    Playing direct and sharp final third decision-making shouldn’t be treated as a mutually exclusive proposition, mind you. Given the talent at the USWNT’s disposal, there’s the potential to create a near unstoppable balance in attack. With the benefit of hindsight, the federation wanted to ensure the team was better equipped to make smart decisions to score with dependability.

    ​​“There was definitely a sense that we need to be better with the ball and have more solutions,” U.S. Soccer sporting director Matt Crocker said in September. The federation polled players during the coaching search and much of the focus from the tactical feedback involved building the attack, playing through the midfield and having “creative solutions in tight spaces, having the players and the tactics to beat the low block.”

    After spending an entire cycle moving the ball despite its midfield — the Prayer Circle Formation, as Kim McCauley so brilliantly branded it — they wanted to make use of their engine room.

    Enter Hayes, a tactical chameleon who’s well-versed in the art of breaking down low blocks at the helm of her Chelsea juggernaut. She plans for the opponent rather than coaching from dogmatic principles. Each game’s instructions are curated with one aim in mind: winning, above all else.

    You can see the appeal at surface level, hiring a coach who habitually works to overcome the type of cynical tactics that sunk the team last summer. The catch: the team would have to wait while Hayes admitted her “full focus and attention is on what I do for Chelsea” until that season’s end.


    If there’s a highlight performance over the last 10 months, it came in the Gold Cup quarterfinal against Colombia. In the preceding group stage, the USWNT was frustrated by opponents like Argentina and Mexico sitting in a low block as Kilgore maintained a possession-oriented structure perhaps too closely akin to Andonovski’s. Patterns of ball circulation slowed the team’s build-up, giving all too much time for defensive-minded opponents to get into their ideal placements.

    Colombia was a World Cup quarterfinalist last summer, blessed with one of the world’s great young attackers, Linda Caicedo, and a team that suited her skillset on the break. Kilgore strove to exploit those tendencies by letting her team play direct. It achieved two things: greater attacking intensity going forward, and fewer turnovers in the defensive half that would cater to Colombia’s strengths. A 3-0 win was a statement that the USWNT was back with a point to prove.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Direct again: How USWNT’s new old approach lends flexibility going forward

    Taking a similar scoring initiative was impossible in a rain-soaked semifinal slog against Canada, and the team opted for a more controlled style of play in the final against Brazil, winning 1-0. It got results, ensuring the team won the inaugural Gold Cup.

    Still, the team wasn’t showcasing the type of consistent goalscoring necessary to be better prepared for the Olympics than it was in the World Cup. Fortunately, SheBelieves was right around the corner, providing another pair of games against high-level opponents to showcase Crocker’s desired “creative solutions in tight spaces.”

    Japan had other ideas. Kiko Seike became the first player to score against the USWNT in a game’s opening minute since 2003, putting the hosts at an early 1-0 deficit. With some savvy high-pressing the U.S. equalized 20 minutes later before a 77th-minute penalty kick sealed a 2-1 win for the U.S. It was a professional result, but not a showcase of the principles U.S. Soccer strove to install.

    Up next came Canada, which saw Kilgore drop one of her usual four attacking players for a second pivot at the base of midfield. Intentional or otherwise, this saw the team revert to their Prayer Circle tendencies.

    “Our attack is not built around one individual player and that is by design,” Kilgore said ahead of the final. “It’s important that we have the ability to score goals from a variety of different ways. And even though we have these predictable moments for us that we’re looking for, it’s important that different people are filling different roles and able to recognize when they’re the one that needs to maybe make an early run or get out ahead of the opponent for a cross.”

    Just over five minutes into the final against Canada, the USWNT seemed to look through its variety of chance-creation methods after a Lindsey Horan tackle sprung Sophia Smith on the counter.

    Huh, that’s a let-off for Canada. Time to set up for another wave of attack.

    Oh no, not the Prayer Circle.

    No, no, no , no, no, no —

    Over half an hour later, Canada opened the scoring after a miscommunication between goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher and her defense. Once again, the United States was forced to react to the game after allowing the opponent to establish its terms.

    Ultimately, a fresh batch of Naeher shootout heroics saw the USWNT become SheBelieves champions again. The two conceded goals could be chalked up to individual errors.

    Then again, the same could be said for the USWNT’s showing last summer: a team largely in control of games, but not showing enough bite to convert ball retention into goals — all while being prone to gaffes.

    Is this team really better equipped to contend at these Olympics than it was last year?


    If we’re looking for evidence of progress since August, we’ll need to start by looking at individual players. Alex Morgan struggled in the World Cup, but her gritty line-leading work was vital to the proactive success against Colombia. Mallory Swanson and Catarina Macario returned from injuries that limited their 2023 involvement and largely kept pace with the game around them.

    The aftermath of the World Cup was always bound to see some program mainstays give way to the next generation. Julie Ertz and Megan Rapinoe both had send-off games, while captain Becky Sauerbrunn has faded from involvement. Horan has stepped up as a team leader, while Naomi Girma is already similarly impactful despite being just 23.

    Young players benefited from Kilgore’s call-ups. Jenna Nighswonger has been a breath of fresh air at left back, providing sorely needed width in the build-up in a role that was previously instructed to tuck into midfield under Andonovski. Jaedyn Shaw is the latest attacking revelation, showing precocious decision-making in transition while being a capable first-time finisher. Sam Coffey seems poised to be the team’s defensive midfielder of the future, and Korbin Albert’s all-around game makes her seem like a possible successor to Horan in midfield (pending the off-field issues that could impact her locker room standing).

    Having promising young players step up is essential to overcoming a bad four-year spell. But how many players like Nighswonger, Shaw and Coffey will need to reassert their readiness once Hayes comes in? It’s remained an open question just how closely Hayes is watching and assessing her upcoming pool of players. If that answer is less than “with a keen eye,” they’ll need to ace their second first impression to stay ahead of more veteran alternatives.

    Ultimately, no matter who makes the 18-player Olympic roster, we don’t know how they’ll look to play in Paris. The questions that hung over the program still don’t have definitive answers.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    USWNT Olympic roster prediction after the SheBelieves Cup

    In appointing a coach who couldn’t start her job for over half a year, the USSF gambled that her quality is so much more irresistible than any alternatives that it was worth spending half a year in purgatory.

    The summer’s trio of friendlies come against South Korea and Mexico, both of which won’t partake in the Olympics, but will no doubt want to claim a win over one of the world’s most celebrated teams of any sport. They’ll provide tests at a time when Hayes will still be studying for answers.

    Tuesday also saw the final member of the USWNT’s Olympic group qualify. Zambia joined the U.S., Germany and Australia in Group B. Australia was a semifinalist last summer. Germany has its point to prove after failing to advance from its group, while Zambia is riding high on the back of its first World Cup appearance. It won’t be a given that the U.S. will advance to the knockouts, to say nothing of its medal-winning ambitions.

    It will be easy to spin a poor showing in Paris as a short-term sacrifice with a focus on the 2027 World Cup, which could potentially be played on home soil. That said, this isn’t a program that has ever treated any major tournament as a developmental tool. When the United States competes in a women’s soccer tournament, it’s there to win. That’s the benchmark that has been established for generations of players and one that the fans hold to account.

    This summer, the players’ every performance will be scrutinized, and their future selections will hang in the balance more than Hayes’ job will (or should). If the program’s decision to spend so many months under interim leadership backfires, the blame will fall on them — and unfairly so.

    (Photo: Brad Smith/Getty Images for USSF)

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    The New York Times

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  • Why did the USWNT-Canada match continue? Explaining the rules around postponing games

    Why did the USWNT-Canada match continue? Explaining the rules around postponing games

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    American soccer has dealt with two high-profile instances of extreme weather disrupting professional games in the last week. In both cases, despite conditions making it impossible to play at anything close to normal, the games went on.

    The most recent of the two happened on Wednesday, when steady and heavy rains flooded the field at Snapdragon Stadium in San Diego, Caif. before the U.S. women’s national team’s Gold Cup semifinal match against Canada. Conditions meant the ball could not travel on the ground farther than a couple of feet in most parts of the field, which played a direct role in the United States’ opening goal.

    “It was honestly insane,” Shaw said. “We had such a good warmup … the ball was moving really fast, and we were excited to just play and have a really intense game, and then we came back out and we were like, ‘What’s happening?’”

    Asked if the game should have been played, USWNT interim head coach Twila Kilgore said, “Probably not.”

    The previous Saturday, an MLS match between Real Salt Lake and Los Angeles FC was similarly affected, but by a different form of precipitation. That game, which was held at America First Field in Sandy, Utah, was delayed first by high winds and then again shortly after kickoff by lightning. Once the game began in earnest, snow had started to fall, resulting in accumulation of up to four inches and whiteout conditions by the end of Salt Lake’s 3-0 win.

    “It was one of the worst professional sporting events I’ve ever seen in my life,” LAFC head coach Steve Cherundolo said after the match, comments for which he was fined $10,000 by the league this week for violating the league’s public criticism policy. “I feel terrible for the players that we put them through this. The game could have and should have been called (off). In my opinion, it was an absolute disgrace we had to play today.”

    Why were these games allowed to play on?

    In North America, soccer games are usually only called off or delayed when there is lightning within a certain radius of the field or any sort of weather that would impact the structural integrity of the stadium. While baseball and tennis (which saw a recent competition postponed due to rain) are at the more delicate end of the cancellation, soccer is generally about as likely to play through bad weather as American football.

    There are numerous examples of professional and international soccer games played through bad conditions, with perhaps the most prominent example being the U.S. men’s national team’s World Cup qualifier against Costa Rica in Commerce City, Colo., just outside of Denver (dubbed by many U.S. fans as the “SnowClásico”). In the 2022 World Cup qualifying cycle, the U.S. hosted Honduras in St. Paul in February, with the temperature at kickoff hovering around 2 degrees Fahrenheit (-16 Celsius). That game, too, was played as planned.


    Herculez Gomez takes a corner in 2013’s ‘SnowClásico’ (Dustin Bradford/Getty Images)

    The fact that Saturday’s game continued to be played came as a surprise to new RSL signing Matty Crooks, who has spent his whole professional career in the United Kingdom.

    “Back in England, I’d probably say after about 10 minutes it would’ve been called off,” Crooks said. “But to be fair, no one in the changing room even mentioned it being called off, so it was like, ‘Alright, we’re going to play through it.’”

    USWNT forward Alex Morgan pointed out how the conditions on Wednesday turned a game that is largely played on the ground into something else entirely.

    “It’s just hard to even call it a game of soccer tonight, especially the first half,” she told the media afterward. “Your instincts are to dribble, and then you can’t dribble, you’ll lose the ball. Your instincts are not to hit it long when you have shorter options but we saw from the goal that Jae scored … that it’s anyone’s game and just to put instincts aside and just really grind this win out.”


    Alex Morgan tackled by a Canadian defender (Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images)

    What are the rules for W Gold Cup matches? Is that different from NWSL?

    Many professional games throughout the world are generally overseen by a person whose job it is to make sure that all the logistical things required to play are in place. This includes but is not limited to ensuring on-time arrival of both teams and the officiating crew, inspecting the field of play, ensuring security arrangements are met, and acting as the organizers’ representative on the ground. In CONCACAF, that person is called the match commissioner and is usually stationed on the sideline between the benches.

    CONCACAF rules for the W Gold Cup state that the decision on whether or not to play a game in case of inclement weather is up to the match referee (except in cases of lightning), but in practice it is the match commissioner who has the final say.

    “Technically and practically by law it is always in the ultimate decision of the referee to make that decision,” professional referee and CBS rule analyst Christina Unkel said during the halftime broadcast. “That being said, practically speaking, there is a match commissioner at each of these CONCACAF matches. As we saw within the first minutes of this game, the referee went and demonstrated that the ball was not in fact rolling when she went over to near the fourth official station, which is where the match commissioner stands. It was very clear from her demonstrative showing that she does not necessarily think this is a safe condition, but is being told to continue this match by that match commissioner.”

    CONCACAF did not respond to questions from The Athletic about the decision-making process that led to Wednesday’s game playing on.

    In the NWSL, weather delay decisions are made by a weather delay committee, according to the league’s 2023 rules and regulations. The committee is comprised of the referee, representatives from each team (usually the head coaches), and stadium staff.


    The 2012 Eastern Conference semifinal at Red Bull Arena was postponed due to Superstorm Sandy, and was eventually played in a Nor’easter (Jeff Zelevansky/Getty Images)

    What are the rules for MLS matches?

    According to MLS policy, “Matches may be delayed or postponed when circumstances exist such that the start or continuation of play would pose a threat to the safety and well-being of participants or spectators.”

    “The determination of whether a match is considered ‘delayed’ or ‘postponed’ shall be made by the League Office in its sole and absolute discretion,” the policy reads. The league generally makes that determination with input from meteorologists, staff at the venue and both competing teams.

    MLS says it considers safety for players, officials, staff and fans first, followed by competition-related factors like the playability of the field. The league also takes logistical factors into consideration, like availability of the venue and match officials if the game is played the following day. Broadcast implications and other commercial aspects are considered after the aforementioned factors.

    When rain flooded the Los Angeles area last February around the start of the MLS season, the league rescheduled its highly touted El Trafico between LA Galaxy and LAFC due to “safety considerations resulting from inclement weather” – factors that included flooded parking lots around the stadium. The game was rescheduled to take place months later, on July 4. LA had recorded its fourth-highest average rain total (6 inches). This February, LA saw 12.6 inches of rainfall — an inch less than the 1988 record.

    What’s the reaction been like?

    After the Real Salt Lake vs. LAFC game, LAFC defender Ryan Hollingshead said that the MLS Players’ Association would be notified of the players’ complaints.

    “My lower back is killing me,” he said.. “It’s just like trying to run on an ice rink. You’re sliding and slipping the whole time. The whole goal is just to not fall over and hurt yourself. It will absolutely be taken to the players association. I know our rep will be having that conversation immediately.”

    Reached on Thursday, an MLSPA spokesperson told The Athletic: “We’re continuing to discuss things that need to be done better with the players and the league. At this time, we have no further statement.”

    Reaction on social media to the playing conditions was universally negative. Former USWNT player Julie Foudy posted, “This is so insane. STOP THE MATCH.” San Diego Wave head coach Casey Stoney, whose NWSL team plays at Snapdragon Stadium, was concerned for the players on the field — including multiple representatives from the Wave — writing, “So dangerous!! Make the right call for player safety!”

    “Why are the players being put in this situation? No chance these are safe playing conditions,” former USWNT player Sam Mewis posted.

    (Top photos: Getty Images)

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  • Bay FC sign Kundananji from Madrid CFF for world-record fee

    Bay FC sign Kundananji from Madrid CFF for world-record fee

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    National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL) side Bay FC have signed Zambia forward Racheal Kundananji from Madrid CFF for a world-record fee. 

    A source with knowledge of negotiations, who is granted anonymity to protect relationships, confirmed to The Athletic that the fee for the 23-year-old is €735,000 ($785,000).

    She has signed a contract until 2027 with the option of a further year. 

    Bay FC general manager, Lucy Rushton, said: “We are delighted to add Racheal to our group. She is a tremendous talent with dynamic attacking qualities and an incredible physical profile who has produced for both club and country.

    “Racheal has a composure in-front of goal and a natural ability to score with different types of finishes and from various locations. We believe she will continue to grow and develop at our club, showcasing her skillset and adding to the array of exciting attacking talent we have here.”

    Bay FC is a newly established team in the NWSL, set to embark on their inaugural season in 2024.

    Kundananji, meanwhile, has scored 33 goals in 43 Liga F games for Madrid.

    At international level, Kundananji showcased her talent by both playing and scoring in the 2023 Women’s World Cup. She also boasts an impressive record of 10 goals in 18 appearances for Zambia.

    She becomes the first African player to break a world transfer record.

    Chelsea broke the women’s transfer record last month after signing Colombia international striker Mayra Ramirez from Levante. The Spanish side said that the deal amounts to €450,000 ($482,000, £382,800) fixed, plus a further €50,000 in variable amounts based on goals that the club expects to be met, one of which requires Ramirez to play 30 per cent of the matches.

    England midfielder Keira Walsh previously broke the women’s transfer record in 2022 following her move from Manchester City to Barcelona. 

    Kundananji joined Madrid from Eibar in August 2022, having previously had stints at Kazakhstan club BIIK Shymkent and Zambian side Indeni Roses. 

    The women’s game saw a record spend for a January window of $2.1m. This marked the second record-breaking transfer window in a row following the $3m spent last summer.

    In February, Bay FC also completed the signings of Arsenal defender Jen Beattie and Asisat Oshoala from Barcelona.

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    (Buda Mendes/Getty Images)

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  • Mallory Swanson returns to USWNT as training player ahead of W Gold Cup

    Mallory Swanson returns to USWNT as training player ahead of W Gold Cup

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    U.S. women’s national team coach Twila Kilgore has named her 23-player roster for the upcoming CONCACAF W Gold Cup, with three additional training players that will participate in the pre-tournament camp, including forward Mallory Swanson. This will be Swanson’s official return to the national team environment following her recovery from a torn patellar tendon last April.

    “Mal will come in and be Mal. We’re thrilled to have her back in the camp environment,” Kilgore said. “We know that in anything that Mal’s doing, she brings a really high level of professionalism, a high level of execution. We believe she’s absolutely ready for the step, and she’s just a really important leader in this team.”

    The roster is largely unchanged from the team’s final friendlies of 2023 against China in December, with the notable returns of goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher (who could earn her 100th cap during the Gold Cup) and defender Crystal Dunn. Veterans Becky Sauerbrunn and Alex Morgan, who were not on the December roster, are notable absences this camp.

    “We have quite a few players that are not in camp that we’re still looking at and evaluating in terms of leading up to the Olympics. Nobody is out of the mix. That goes for some of our bigger names. That goes for lesser names that we’ve been tracking. We want to get it right,” Kilgore said. “In terms of Alex — I guess this goes for really everybody that’s not here — everything that happens in the Gold Cup will matter in terms of the future and everything that is happening outside of the Gold Cup will matter in the future.”

    In a new twist following a busy NWSL offseason, NJ/NY Gotham FC now leads the way in NWSL representation with seven players: defenders Dunn, Tierna Davidson, and Jenna Nighswonger; midfielders Rose Lavelle and Emily Sonnett; and forwards Midge Purce and Lynn Williams. Since the last USWNT roster, six players have signed with new clubs.

    Midfielder Savannah DeMelo and defender Gisele Thompson are the two other non-rostered players who will train with the USWNT. Gisele Thompson, younger sister to forward Alyssa Thompson, recently signed with Angel City FC and has earned her first senior team call-up. While it’s limited to the training environment, the nod is another positive sign for Gisele Thompson building on her youth national team experience.

    “This is just a good opportunity for Gisele to get a firsthand look at what the environment is actually like,” Kilgore said. “Obviously, she’s starting her career in the NWSL, so she’s got a lot of firsts but I think this is an important piece for her to understand what she’s working towards.”

    Goalkeepers (3): Jane Campbell (Houston Dash), Casey Murphy (North Carolina Courage), Alyssa Naeher (Chicago Red Stars)

    Defenders (8): Alana Cook (Seattle Reign FC), Abby Dahlkemper (San Diego Wave FC), Crystal Dunn ((NY/NJ Gotham FC) Tierna Davidson (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Emily Fox (Arsenal), Naomi Girma (San Diego Wave FC), Casey Krueger (Washington Spirit), Jenna Nighswonger (NY/NJ Gotham FC)

    Midfielders (6): Korbin Albert (PSG), Sam Coffey (Portland Thorns FC), Lindsey Horan (Olympique Lyon), Rose Lavelle (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Olivia Moultrie (Portland Thorns FC), Emily Sonnett (NJ/NY Gotham FC)

    Forwards (6): Mia Fishel (Chelsea FC), Midge Purce (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Trinity Rodman (Washington Spirit), Jaedyn Shaw (San Diego Wave FC), Sophia Smith (Portland Thorns FC), Lynn Williams (NJ/NY Gotham FC)

    How to watch the Gold Cup

    The inaugural W Gold Cup features 12 teams, eight from CONCACAF and four guest nations: Argentina, Brazil, Colombia and Paraguay. In the U.S., CBS holds the rights to the tournament, with every match available on Paramount+.

    The USWNT will play all three group stage matches at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, Calif. All games kick off at 7:15 p.m. PT/10:15 p.m. ET:

    • vs. Guyana/Dominican Republic (winner of prelim. match), Tuesday, Feb. 20
    • vs. Argentina, Friday, Feb. 23
    • vs. Mexico, Monday, Feb. 26

    The 12 teams are split into three groups of four. The top two finishers of each group, plus the two best third-place teams (that’s eight teams total) advance to the quarterfinals at BMO Stadium in LA. The quarterfinals will be seeded based on results, with 1 vs. 8, 2 vs. 7, etc.

    The four winners will head to San Diego and Snapdragon Stadium for the semifinals and final, with the tournament wrapping up on March 10.

    “Not only is there a trophy on the line, but this is a great opportunity to capitalize on meaningful match opportunities and experience the short turnarounds between games, which is a rhythm that closely mirrors the Olympic format,” Kilgore said in the press release.

    The games are meaningful, but they’re also the first of the year. The team will likely treat this as an extended preseason and that should be the biggest takeaway; if they go through to the final, that’s a lot of time together on training fields and earning game minutes. They probably won’t be the prettiest games, but it’s still going to be a lot of data for everyone — including incoming head coach Emma Hayes. The tricky balance that Kilgore and the squad are going to have to hit is acknowledging the pressure of that looming Olympics roster while trying out new tactics and combinations.

    Forward momentum


    Fishel and Shaw scored their first USWNT senior team goals last year. (Photo by Brad Smith, Getty Images for USSF)

    Everyone (including me) was rightfully excited about the rosters for the December friendlies. Seeing the continuity between the two camps isn’t that surprising, but what’s most exciting is the chance to see players like Jaedyn Shaw and Mia Fishel become expected names on a USWNT roster — and candidates to get some starts too.

    If there’s one thing that’s going to unite everyone in excitement, it’s seeing Swanson inch closer to a full national team return. Before her injury last April, Swanson was in electric form. Despite her extended absence, Swanson led the team in goals (7) last year. There’s no need to push her back ahead of the Olympics since anyone involved with the USWNT already knows exactly what she brings to the mix, so allowing her to get back into form via the NWSL is the right thing to do.

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    I wrote after the December friendlies that the team had acquired the wins not “in perfect fashion, but in a way that told us something about the direction and immediate future of the project ahead of the Olympics.” Those games were also relatively quiet, with smaller attendance numbers and limited press coverage.

    We’re in an Olympic year now, though. It’s not quite the same as a World Cup year, and the players still have a few months yet to build out of the spotlight. When Emma Hayes gets here, all bets are off. For now, the Gold Cup could be important in getting the small stuff in order.

    (Photo: Sam Hodde/Getty Images)



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  • Lindsey Horan just wants to talk soccer

    Lindsey Horan just wants to talk soccer

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    It’s USWNT captain Lindsey Horan’s final morning in the States before a flight back to France to rejoin Lyon, her club team. She’s spending it in a hotel lobby, tucked away at a table, talking to The Athletic for an hour about her time leading a team in the spotlight, how she sees her role during this time of transition, and one thing above all:

    “Can we think about the football?”

    Horan was speaking almost exactly five months since being named by then-USWNT head coach Vlatko Andonovski as captain of the national team alongside Alex Morgan (Horan has been getting the armband when both are on the field at the same time). The role is the fulfillment of a life goal, but also seems like a natural outcome, given how often, and how intensely, she thinks about the game.

    Her first five months in that leadership role were full of notable exits: her team’s from the World Cup, Andonovski’s, and the retirements of Megan Rapinoe and Julie Ertz. It was capped with a big addition: U.S. Soccer’s announced hiring of Emma Hayes as head coach.

    Horan, now 29 years old and with 139 senior national team caps under her belt, is part of an in-between camp: too experienced to be a newcomer, and too new to be on the way out. It’s her generation – which also includes Rose Lavelle, Emily Sonnett and others – that must keep the team’s signature fire, that USWNT DNA, burning even as the team undergoes a serious re-think after its worst ever World Cup finish.

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    “We have to continue that,” she says of herself and fellow in-betweeners. “You have to be amongst this team for a while to know what the f— that takes… it’s one of the most competitive national teams to be a part of.”

    No one on the team is talking about starting from scratch. It’s just that they need more ways to win. More than mentality or fitness levels, more than a never-say-die approach. That’s what Horan said her early conversations with Hayes have been about. And that’s why she wants to talk about football, and how the USWNT can bounce back — not just by playing better, but by thinking more.

    “We’ve been so successful for so long in a certain way that we play, that attack and transition,” Horan says. “We’ve had individual brilliance. We’ve had soccer players on the field and real players that want to play and it all kind of meshed together or it would always work out, or our DNA would take us to this place where we come out on top because our mentality was so f—ing good.”

    The game is changing, and Horan recognizes this. She praises Portugal’s level of play at the World Cup, the investment into the game in Spain and other European countries, and the high level of up-and-coming U.S. talent (specifically citing 19-year-old San Diego Wave forward Jaedyn Shaw). If there was a theme for Horan and the rest of the USWNT in that final camp of the year, it was a repetitive one: no one actually knows the ceiling of this team.


    Horan cited Shaw as an exciting young player for the U.S. (Brad Smith/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

    “Even in these past few games, you see little glimpses of that, but it’s the final product, continuing to do that throughout the game, getting everyone on the same page, not just four or five players,” she says. “If you can develop that more, and it’s inherent in every single player on the team, you’re looking to play the combinations, all of these things? No idea what this team can do.

    “Then you have the mentality aspect on top of it, where if the football is not going well, we know that we can freakin’ go. We have players on the field that are faster, stronger, capable in behind, and we’re gonna gut it out, right? The world is going to be very fearful.”

    Those words could cause a stir. In 2019, Ali Krieger suggested the USWNT substitutes could take on and beat multiple other teams at the World Cup, and it was a massive point of contention for a team that got plenty more criticism from across American culture even as it was celebrated for its third consecutive title.

    “We have to be one of the most talked about teams,” Horan says. “We’re always in the magnifying glass on every single thing we do or anything we say.”

    Individual players can bear the brunt of that magnifying glass just as much as the team can. There’s a clear, though understandable, vein of frustration from Horan over how her own performances are understood, even from the USWNT’s own fanbase. To illustrate her point, Horan brings up that many viewers will take a television commentator’s analysis at face value.

    “American soccer fans, most of them aren’t smart,” she says. “They don’t know the game. They don’t understand. (But) it’s getting better and better.”

    She takes a brief pause, sensing that those words, too, will cause a stir.

    “I’m gonna piss off some people,” she continues, “but the game is growing in the U.S. People are more and more knowledgeable, but so much of the time people take what the commentators say, right? My mom does it!” She breaks into laughter. “My mom says, ‘Julie Foudy said you had such a good game!’ And I’m here, just going, ‘I was f—ing s— today.’”

    When playing with Lyon in France, Horan says, things are different.

    “From what I’ve heard, people understand my game a little bit more, a sense of my football and the way I play,” she says. “It is the French culture. Everyone watches football. People know football.”

    None of that, though, compares to Horan’s experience at the 2023 World Cup. The outside commentary, including from her own former teammate Carli Lloyd, the entrances into stadiums in their custom suits; the tone used in interviews; the body language. Everything was scrutinized. This time, though, the talk was accompanied by bad performances, and bad results.

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    Horan says she wasn’t bothered by the outside criticism, but noted no one else but the players could understand what it was like to be on that team. Ultimately, she says it felt “perfectly fine” that people would find something to talk about.

    “If you’re not backing it up on the field, people are gonna come and talk s— about what you’re doing, where your priorities are,” she says. “Like, ‘Are you getting ready for the game? Are you caring more about this s—?’”


    Horan has leaned on Lavelle (left) to help lead a team in transition (Jose Breton/Pics Action/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

    Horan, again, comes back to a small, seemingly innocuous detail: The traditional pre-match starting XI photo. In the NWSL, more and more teams have started using the occasion for various hijinks; something that Horan’s European teammates bring up as an example of Americans not taking their business seriously. It’s clear that it gets under her skin, too.

    “I want professionalism,” she admits. “Those little things, they really irked me. I don’t think I could do it, and maybe I’m wrong in saying that, I don’t know. It just bothers me. We put so much into this game, and it’s just like a joke sometimes.”

    She’s quick to point out she’s not going to be the one who shuts it down if it works for others. That’s not what she’s trying to say. It’s just that, ultimately, for her, it’s about the football.

    “We need to get back to the football. The football is the most important thing” Horan says. “So maybe we should knock some of the s— out for now. We need to focus on the game, we need to focus on being the absolute best we can be.”

    As captain, Horan can help enact that. It’s a role she’s clearly grown into, even as she has struggled to understand it in the months between Andonovski’s exit and Hayes’ hiring.

    Hayes hasn’t officially started yet, and won’t coach in games until after her job as Chelsea’s head coach ends along with the European season in May. But Hayes’ December visit with Horan and the rest of the team helped clarify the process, Horan says. It also gave Horan a chance to open up the lines of communication, to admit that sometimes she didn’t feel like she had full control, that she hadn’t been handed the reins.

    “I always felt like I was someone that could really touch on every single player and get the best out of them and try to make them the best that they could be,” Horan says. “I’m not going to be like the rah-rah speeches, all that nonsense. Becky (Sauerbrunn) and me are probably a little similar in that. I’m probably a little more crazy on the field. I want to make sure I’m the leader that I want to be, and no one’s trying to make me something else.”

    Before Andonovski gave her the armband — a move made in part because longtime captain Sauerbrunn missed the World Cup due to a lingering foot injury — Horan told him that getting the armband wouldn’t change her, or how players could talk to her. What it would change, she told him, is the tone it would set. She wanted to be a role model.

    “I’m not going to be a coach’s captain, I’m going to be a players’ captain,” she told Andonovski. So if that wasn’t what he wanted, then he shouldn’t make her a captain.

    Horan has lived up to her word since interim head coach Twila Kilgore stepped in, leaning on Morgan, Lavelle and Sonnett to make them part of the transitional process. She has empowered the team’s relative newcomers, too. The normally-reticent 23-year-old center back Naomi Girma said Horan “encouraged me just to find my voice.”

    “A lot of these new young players are going to have big freaking roles, even in this Olympics,” Horan says. “How the hell do we get the best out of them to go put us on the podium? It’s been a crazy place, but this is a really exciting role for me because I’ve felt like this is what I’m meant to do.”

    The team has four months until Hayes takes over, and six until the Olympics. The sprint is very much on for this massive group project to re-establish the team at the top, before looking ahead to 2027 and a World Cup that could be hosted at home. Every voice matters to Horan, from Horan to Lavelle to Morgan to Girma to Shaw and beyond.

    “We need to be doing everything we possibly can to be improving, to make each other better, holding the standards,” Horan says. “We need to change every bit of culture that we had prior to the last World Cup and going into this Olympics because we need to win. And that starts now.”

    (Photo: James Gilbert/Getty Images)



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