NJ/NY Gotham FC and Washington Spirit are locked in for the NWSL Championship after a pair of pulsating semifinals.
Jeff Kassouf breaks down all the action from the NWSL’s penultimate weekend.
Marta’s brilliance not enough for Orlando
ORLANDO, Fla. — As Sunday’s NWSL semifinal at Inter&Co Stadium crept deeper into stoppage time, Orlando Pride forward Marta was already planning for extra time — and for a return to the championship and the Bay Area, where she called home 15 years ago.
In a semifinal filled with stars but devoid of much attacking action, the Brazil icon shone the brightest again — until the seventh minute of stoppage-time, when NJ/NY Gotham FC’s Jaedyn Shaw curled a free kick into the goal and sent her team to next week’s NWSL Championship with a 1-0 victory over the defending champions.
Marta played as Orlando’s No. 9 on Sunday, an unspoken acknowledgement of the absence of injured forward Barbra Banda, whose near-MVP form last year helped carry the Pride to a championship after a 23-game unbeaten streak to start the season. This year’s Orlando team was far more inconsistent, including an eight-game winless streak in the summer that, at one point, left them on the brink of the playoff line.
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They pulled it together in the fall and appeared to find their groove in a semifinal victory over the Seattle Reign last week. On Sunday, Orlando was certainly the better team — Gotham generated a measly 0.17 expected goals, and their only shot on goal was the winner in the 100th minute — but the Pride’s faults caught up with them. Chiefly, a struggle to finish chances in front of net.
“I think we were so resilient this season,” Marta said. “I don’t know if, besides us, people believed we would go so far, especially after we lost Barbra [Banda]. The team needed to find a way to work a little bit more and better together and run for each other and open spaces for each other and expect that everyone can score goals because we didn’t have Barbra there.”
Marta, with her captain’s armband next to her on the table, stopped talking several times during her 15-minute press conference to calm her emotions and hold back tears. She pointed to the star on her jersey above Orlando’s crest, representing the championship the team won last year.
“We have one,” she said, moving her jersey so the cameras could see. “This star, it’s made by everybody — everybody. Which means I prefer to have one star with so many people around who work for one objective, one goal [than] so many others who believe they’re a star.
“At the end of the day, this doesn’t work. We had a team here [circa 2017] with so many stars in it. What did we win? Nothing.”
The 39-year-old Brazilian, a six-time world player of the year, would not commit to what her future looks like. She signed a two-year contract extension in January to stay with the Pride through 2026, and while the brutal reality is that one of these games will actually, finally be her last — a day the world of soccer should collectively mourn — she continues to defy time and age.
She did it last year as she pushed the Pride to their first trophies while scoring nine goals. She did again — nearly, anyway — on Sunday from the opening whistle, fighting for 50-50 balls with Gotham defender Jess Carter, yelling at the ref as she so frequently and passionately does, and creating the Pride’s few clear opportunities.
None looked more promising than in the 33rd minute, when Marta rolled over the ball with her left foot at the top of Gotham’s penalty area and played the ball wide to Julie Doyle, who squeezed a low cross through three Gotham defenders toward the back post. Gotham defender Emily Sonnett’s slight redirect with her toe changed the trajectory of the ball, and it evaded Pride winger Jacquie Ovalle at the back post of an empty net.
That moment was the most clear-cut opportunity for either team in the game, one that came through buildup play rather than in transition. Marta’s left foot nearly saved Orlando’s season in the final play of the match, when she delivered a free kick to the head of Oihane Hernández, but Gotham goalkeeper Ann-Katrin Berger made a diving save to prevent the equalizer.
Orlando head coach Seb Hines said after Sunday’s loss that he was proud of how the team has evolved from being “one-dimensional” in transition last year to a squad that can keep the ball.
“If we can combine the two ways of playing then we can be a really threatening team going into next year,” Hines said. “I don’t think we need to add a whole lot; we just need to be more consistent.”
Banda’s return will bring back more of those dangerous transition moments. She sustained a season-ending adductor injury in August. And as the Pride’s playoff run showed, they still have the foundation of a title-contending team.
Center back Emily Sams put on another masterclass in one-on-one defending, Ovalle has finally found her rhythm after a then-record $1.5 million transfer in August, and role players from Hernández — who brought a spark to the Pride’s right side in the second half on Sunday — to Doyle provide depth for Orlando. The offseason will absolutely bring changes, as is a custom in the NWSL — especially with two expansion teams joining.
And like last year, plenty of questions will center around Marta. Will she keep playing? She didn’t exactly answer that on Sunday, instead saying she will to Brazil to see her family and take a vacation. And if she does play, can she keep defying logic with such incredible performances? She will turn 40 before the start of the next NWSL season.
Those questions still loom, as they did last year after the team’s emotional championship — her first in the NWSL. Marta said she was hungry before Sunday’s game but she couldn’t eat in anticipation of the big game. She’d have been forgiven for not seeing it as such, having played in World Cup and Olympic finals.
But as she expounded raw, emotional analysis of the Pride’s season just moments after it had ended, she made it clear that the fire inside of her was alive and well.
“I’m not here to waste my time,” Marta said. “I never was. I am still hungry. I am not playing because of what I did in the past. I still feel like I can do something for this team, for my teammates, for my staff. I care so much. I care.
“I don’t know how long I’m gonna keep like that, but I still care so much, and I hope that we come back next year with the same mentality, a strong mentality, same belief, same attitude, because this team deserves much more.”
Spirit’s perseverance pays off
Time appeared to slow down for Washington Spirit forward Rosemonde Kouassi as she chased down the ball on the sideline 27 minutes into her team’s 2-0 NWSL semifinal victory over the Portland Thorns on Saturday at Audi Field. Kouassi practically flew to the sideline as she kept the ball in bounds and left Thorns defender Kaitlyn Torpey in her dust. It took exactly 16 seconds for the ball to go from Thorns midfielder Olivia Moultrie’s foot for a Thorns corner kick to the back of the opposite net, some 120 yards away, where Gift Monday tapped in a pass from Kouassi. The goal punctuated a suffocating first half of pressure from the Spirit and clinched Washington a second consecutive trip to the NWSL Championship. The goal also perfectly encapsulated the Spirit’s recent success: two unsung heroes carrying the load for a team hellbent on outworking their opponents. Kouassi and Monday have quietly carried a Spirit team that has labored through injuries this season and operated — very much against their will and to the chagrin of head coach Adrián González during news conferences — in the shadow of forward Trinity Rodman’s stardom. The onlooking world had already been watching Rodman’s every move to see if the U.S. women’s national team star would play again in these playoffs after spraining her MCL last month. Then came Saturday morning, when it appeared more than ever that Rodman might be suiting up for the Spirit at home for the final time due to more lucrative offers abroad for the impending free agent. A few hours later, Rodman made a cameo in the 90th minute and came within inches of scoring in stoppage time in front of a raucous, sold-out stadium of more than 19,000 fans. A goal would have been fitting — Rodman scored a stoppage-time winner in August at Audi Field against the Thorns after another long injury layoff — but it wasn’t necessary. This isn’t a Spirit team built solely around Rodman, but one whose depth has been tested and proven through a mountain of injuries this season. Kouassi pulled the strings from the opening whistle, as she had a week earlier in the quarterfinal and on countless other occasions this season. “Queen,” Spirit defender Esme Morgan said to describe Kouassi, before Spirit midfielder Croix Bethune jumped in with her own singular description: “baller.” Monday had a goal called back after four minutes, when she appeared to be narrowly offside. The warning shot was fired, and Washington kept its collective foot on the gas to make Portland, the franchise with more playoff appearances than any other in league history, look like a rattled newcomer too wide-eyed for the occasion. Monday and Kouassi eventually linked up for a goal that counted, just as they had a week earlier, when Monday was just days removed from returning from her father’s funeral in Nigeria and overcome with emotion. In Saturday’s semifinal, Bethune scored the insurance goal in the 83rd minute when she picked off an ill-advised back pass from Thorns defender Sam Hiatt, tapped the ball around goalkeeper Mackenzie Arnold, and nearly walked the ball into the back of the net. For all the Spirit’s dominance throughout the run of play, it would be easy to argue that the difference in Saturday’s semifinal was a pair of mistakes from the Thorns. And while Portland should be commended for its own resilience to even reach a semifinal amid its own injury problems, the Spirit’s semifinal victory cannot be diluted into luck or fine margins. This is a team that has earned its way back to a second straight championship match in what many consider to be the most competitive league in the world. González spoke at length last week about the team’s mental and psychological preparations. Those preparations, he argued at one point after his team’s quarterfinal victory over Racing Louisville, are even more important than tactics. The Spirit, who have made a habit of going to extra time in the postseason, had just won a penalty shootout at home in the playoffs for the second straight year. Their perseverance was no coincidence. Extra time was not necessary on Saturday. González said on Saturday that the hard work from earlier this year is now paying off through “muscle memory.” The Spirit’s mature mentality and experience shone through from the opening whistle. Kouassi ran rampant on the right flank. Kate Wiesner, filling in for injured full back Gabby Carle, wreaked havoc on the left side. Center back Tara McKeown started after leaving the quarterfinal injured, and she, Morgan and Rebeca Bernal set a high defensive line to regain the ball high and pin the Thorns into their own defensive half. “I didn’t want them to think too much, because sometimes when you are overthinking, you cannot express your talent,” González said. “So, we’ve been believing that in the past, so now it is not time to think; it’s time to play with that flow, with that creativity that we have.” This is a team whose depth and quality has been tested and proven through multiple injuries to Rodman, three starting-quality players absent on maternity leave and, for the second straight year, a dramatic midseason coaching change. All the while, Washington steadily picked up points and momentum in the shadow of the Kansas City Current’s record-breaking season. Washington, however, is the team still alive in these playoffs. The Spirit are riding the streak of less heralded stars. Their experience as a group having gone through last year’s heartache and hard lessons is paying off this postseason. It feels like eons ago that the Spirit won the NWSL Challenge Cup in a championship rematch against the Orlando Pride. Washington celebrated that penalty shootout victory in Orlando with a distinct taste of revenge, however minor, for last year’s final. Now, the Spirit will get a shot at true vengeance on Nov. 22 in San Jose, Calif. at the NWSL Championship.
