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NWSL Soccer Thorns

Takeaways: Portland Thorns 3, Racing Louisville 3

It’s hard to write about a soccer game when there wasn’t much soccer being played.

When the Portland Thorns faced off against Racing Louisville on Sunday afternoon, nobody expected that the referee would make himself the main character and the game would set an NWSL record for the most number of fouls in a game (41, compared to the 25 the previous Thorns matches averaged). Thanks to two penalties and a brilliant headed goal by Reilyn Turner, the Thorns managed to eke out a win. Jessie Fleming said it best postgame when she said it was “embarrassing for Louisville, and embarrassing for the league,” to allow such blatant fouling and disjointedness.

Coming to the end of a three-game-week, head Rob Gale rotated his starting lineup, resting the Thorns’ only true outside back Reyna Reyes, and starting Hina Sugita in the No. 6 defensive midfield position while Sam Coffey was in Spain at a family wedding. Coffey had previously been the only Thorns player to see every minute. Gale described her as a metronome who “sets the tempo.”

As part of his squad management on the back of a congested three-game-week, Gale said, “It’s foolish at this stage of the season to be huge with minutes. We have a lot of young players, players who were squad players, who aren’t used to playing this many minutes. It would be irresponsible of me to push them too hard now, and it would cost us down the line. Squad rotation is very important, and I want to keep the players pushing each other, so that when they step up, they are able to perform.”

Hina’s heat map versus Racing

Hina, who does best as a free-roaming midfield player that can operate in both boxes, was asked to sit deeper. This rotation fundamentally affects the ways in which the Thorns’ attacking buildup is created, as they lose Hina’s creative ability going forward. Not including the penalty kicks, the Thorns created 0.54 expected goals—an abysmal outing. Hina’s heatmap shows that she very rarely got forward centrally, forcing the Thorns to try and build through their wide players. The only problem: the Thorns’ wide players are not actually wide players.

Photo by Kris Lattimore

The Thorns’ unbalanced roster construction has been a problem for the past several seasons, but is really coming to a head due to the current number of long-term injuries on the squad. With only two true wingers (Payton Linnehan and Alexa Spaanstra), Gale has resorted to playing central forwards Caiya Hanks and Turner out wide instead. By asking these players to be out of position, he is mitigating their strengths. We saw what could happen when Turner is able to find herself centrally: she scores a headed goal between the backs of two defenders. Unfortunately, Gale seems to be stuck in the mindset that Deyna Castellanos is the Thorns’ best option centrally, which time and time again has proven to be unsuccessful.

The game quickly spun out of control as Louisville scored their second and third goal in quick succession, both of which were egregious errors by the Thorns. Off a goal kick when trying to play out of the back, Mackenzie Arnold and Jayden Perry had a lapse in concentration and made a bad pass that was easily picked off by Racing and placed in the back of the net. Louisville is a high-pressing team, relying on the speed and stamina of forwards like Emma Sears to maintain the press. When up against such one-note opposition, sometimes it’s necessary to change up your style of play. If you know that you’re going to be under intense pressure on your backline, it’s up to the coach to recognize that and change up the style of play, using Macca’s long-ball distribution to switch the way the Thorns’ progressed the ball—especially without Hina operating in the midfield the way she usually does.

The third goal allowed by the Thorns started with a foul in the build up on Isa Obaze that left her on the ground and Racing outnumbering Portland in the box. Had the ref been competent, he would have called the ball back, but he didn’t. Ball don’t lie, however, and the Thorns were handed a lifeline when they earned a penalty in the fifth minute of first half stoppage time, with Jessie Fleming calmly slotting it home for her first ever (!!!!) goal in a Thorns jersey.

With twenty fouls recorded in the first half, the Thorns went into the locker room down 2-3. Gale said that during his halftime speech, there “wasn’t much tactically to change at half time due to the physicality of the other team and the nature of the game. We needed to stretch them better in a low triangle and deal with service in the wide area and stop giving away set pieces, because that is what they play for. Louisville goes long, dives, gambles on pressure and tries to slow down the game and they are effective at it. We rotated [Olivia Moultrie] into Jessie’s position, and at the end we just went for it with five at top and pushed for it.”

Momentum tracker via SofaScore

In a statistic that seems unbelievable, the Thorns are the only NWSL team that have not conceded in the second half, so clearly something that Gale is doing at halftime is working. With the frequent starting and stopping of play, it was hard for either team to create much rhythm. The inexperience of the Thorns’ roster showed through, with no Coffey on the field to step up and reset the tempo and place the Thorns back in control. This is one of the downsides of having your captain be a keeper, as it’s hard for them to reset the tone of the game from the penalty box. And unfortunately, no one in the outfield stepped up.

Jayden Perry celebrates scoring the game-tying PK. Photo by Kris Lattimore.

The biggest takeaway from the match, since there was hardly any quality soccer played by either side, is that Perry needs to be signed to a longer contract immediately. Her cool, calm, collected presence in the 100th minute to earn the team a point should be worth at least five years in a  Thorns kit, in my opinion. If the front office wanted to signal that they were serious about a long term rebuild, this should be one of their first moves.

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NWSL Soccer Thorns

Takeaways: Portland Thorns 4, NJ/NY Gotham 1

The air in Providence Park on a Tuesday night is different. After a frustrating one-nil loss to the Seattle Reign on Friday, and with the possibility of losing five games in a row to NJ/NY Gotham, the Portland Thorns took the field with something to prove to both themselves and the fans.

The Thorns’ first multi-goal game of 2025 arrived in spectacular fashion: a 4-1 thrashing of the juggernaut Gotham. It’s not that the Thorns have been unable to get near the goal—which is what their three goals across their first five games may have suggested. In fact, it’s quite the opposite. The Thorns lead the NWSL in shots (60) and are second in expected goals (10.2), only behind Kansas City. With a front line whose most experienced players are sophomores Reilyn Turner and Payton Linnehan, it has taken a few matches for the young team to find their footing. The Thorns seem to be heating up at just the right time, before a congested slate of games before the league breaks for the Euros in June.

With such a quick turnaround between games—only two training sessions—the Thorns had very little time to focus in after Seattle. Speaking postgame, both Caiya Hanks and Jayden Perry credited the Thorns leadership team, in particular Sam Coffey and Jessie Fleming, for helping create the right mentality headed into Tuesday night.

“Sam gave us a great speech at the beginning: to play with intensity, and smile, and have fun, and that showed today,” Hanks said.

Perry focused on the Thorns’ change in approach to their training sessions as modeled by Fleming and Coffey, saying, “The intensity and response in the quality and the energy, we knew we could have given more in that game and gotten a different result. We had to switch our mindset, and that showed in this game.”

Head coach Rob Gale said postgame that “19 players featured between the two games,” and spoke of his pregame speech, which referenced the late Pope. “We have to do it together,” Gale said. “We are not a team of superstars. We are servants to the team, and are humble, serving something bigger than ourselves.”

Right from the whistle, these slight shifts were evident. The Thorns were on the front foot, and playing with intentionality as they moved the ball across the lines and into the penalty box.

Mimi Alidou’s goal by Kris Lattimore

Mimi Alidou, the 29-year-old Canadian, started her first game for Portland nearly two weeks after she arrived in the city and quickly showed why the Thorns brought her over from Portugal midseason . In just the seventh minute, Alidou redirected a ball from Hanks into the back of the net with ease, a lá Christine Sinclair.

When speaking about Alidou, Hanks said that, even though the two don’t follow each other on Instagram yet, they “have this weird connection. I just knew that she was going to be there in the box,” she said. “It’s really cool when you meet someone and just know that you are going to have a really good connection on and off the field.”

Unfortunately, the celebrations did not last long. Thorns let Gotham respond immediately, and the game went into halftime tied at one. Credit to Gale, quite literally coaching for his job, for making tactical changes at half time. The first half had the Thorns playing on the back foot, defending Gotham (and allowing them just three shots). But after conceding, the Thorns never regained solid spells of possession and thus weren’t able to play the style of soccer that they needed to.

But Portland came out of the tunnel at half time flying. Finally, importantly, things were starting to click. The Thorns’ second half was one of their best in ages on both sides of the ball.

“We all knew we were due for a win,” Hanks said. “We had an issue with coming out slow in our last games, and we had to come out with the intensity and the fire. The games we come out fast are the games we win; we saw that in Utah. Once one or two go in, they just start flowing, and we were due for that.”

Photo by Kris Lattimore

Hanks was the star of the show against Gotham. She had three shots on target and completely dominated Gotham’s right back on every dribble and pass. After recording her first career assist in the first half, she added her first professional goal in the second. When asked about what it felt like, she said, “I released all my thoughts, all my hesitations, and just hit it.”

With that, the flood gates were open. It seemed as though every touch was turning to gold, and the Thorns were running circles around Gotham, dictating the tempo and exhausting the traveling team.

The best sequence of the night was absolutely in the 70th minute when the Thorns won a penalty kick (without even needing a VAR review—how I love quick footballing decisions). Coffey stood over the ball, then, from the back line, came rookie Jayden Perry. She stepped up in front of a rowdy North End, and calmly sent Ann Katrin Berger, 2024 NWSL keeper of the year, the wrong way, becoming the first rookie to score a penalty this year.

Perry gets her rose by Kris Lattimore

Perry said postgame that she advocated for herself early into the preseason. As the designated penalty kick taker during her time at UCLA, she had never missed. “I told Rob that I am confident in PKs, and that if he let me take them, I would do that job,” she said. “My teammates and my coaches put their trust in me, and I knew that they had my back.”

In addition to slotting home her first professional goal, Perry had a solid performance at center back, winning all but one of her ground duels and all of her aerial ones and making four clearances. She is only signed through this season, and with the Bhathal family in attendance on Tuesday, they should swiftly lock Perry down to a longer contract.

Perry added: “Little Jayden would be crying right now. It’s such a dream to play at this level, and scoring my first goal brings so much joy to me and my mom and my sister, who were here today. Today, we were playing with that passion that we had as little kids.”

The fourth and final goal of the night came from Deyna Castellanos, who broke a 23-game scoring drought by capitalizing off a rebounded shot. Soccer is a funny sport, because despite having a 50% passing completion rate, losing the ball 20 times (per SofaScore), and having zero clearances, blocks, interceptions, accurate crosses, or duels won, Castellanos still plays ninety minutes and scores a goal. My only hope is that the goal unlocks something within her, and she is able to be much more productive going forward.

Air Turner by Kris Lattimore

There is still so much season ahead of the Thorns, but the win against Gotham was a statement to the rest of the league: Don’t underestimate the Thorns. We might be without Sophia Wilson and Morgan Weaver, but we have the best young talent in the league.

Maybe we should play more games on balmy Tuesday evenings in Portland.

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NWSL Soccer Thorns

Takeaways: Portland Thorns 0, Seattle Reign 1

The first Cascadia rivalry of the year was played in Lumen Field, and the hosts got the win.

Coming off their first victory of the year, spirits were high as the Portland Thorns hit the road to play Laura Harvey’s team. Even though the Seattle Reign had a rough start to the year with an aged roster, the seasoned coach has found a way to give to reinvent the Reign.

Seattle’s goal

Not even five minutes into the game, Lynn Biyendolo found an opening between Portland’s lines. The forward sent a horizontal pass to Maddie Dahlien on the left, where she faced Thorns defender Kaitlyn Torpey. The rookie beat the Matilda, but the tally wouldn’t have been possible if not for the complicity of Nérilia Mondésir.

Credit: NWSL
Credit: NWSL

As you can see in the image below, Mondésir occupies the space between Torpey and Sam Hiatt at centerback. She then steps back to leave the space open for her teammate.

It was an excellent off-the-ball job by the Haitian, but Portland’s backline was also to blame. Look at the acres of space between the center-backs and the Reign players available to make a run if Dahlien had chosen to pass instead of shooting.

Credit: NWSL
Credit: NWSL
Seattle’s plan in the first half: Long balls

It was clear that one of coach Harvey’s plans had to do with long balls to either Dahlien or Biyendolo. The rookie was Torpey’s nightmare, and she and Hiatt had to double-mark to stop the winger.

It was key, then, not only for the back four to be very attentive to any long balls and runs, but also for Bella Bixby to do the same and to intervene when necessary. And that’s exactly what she did several times during the match.

No doubt, Bixby’s interventions were pivotal and stopped Seattle from extending the lead. We can see that clearly in Biyendolo’s shot, where Bixby comes out of her line to shrink the striker’s angle.

Portland’s plan

Reilyn Turner had found the back of the net for Portland in two consecutive games, but she couldn’t do so for a third time. But she was still the player who stepped the most on Seattle’s box (five touches) and hit the crossbar in the second half.

As you could see in the video above, Hina Sugita was once again the most unpredictable player. She was successful the times she went through the wings and tried to make a pass or send a pass into the box.

If we talk about things the Thorns need to improve on, one of them is the players’ positioning inside the box. As you can see in the video above, the ball played by Sugita was good enough but Turner’s body angle wasn’t the best, knowing that she wasn’t going to have enough time to receive, accommodate her body, and shoot.

But there were still other areas of success, like Payton Linnehan with crosses. Even though she didn’t have much weight on the field, she was the player with the most crosses completed.

Payton Linnehan's distribution. Credit: NWSL
Payton Linnehan’s distribution. Credit: NWSL

On the other hand, Portland also need to improve on their passing. Let’s take this play, where Olivia Moultrie carries the ball, as an example:

Turner does an excellent job at receiving the ball with her chest and passing it with that sole movement, wasting no time making the pass in that way to Moultrie. Caiya Hanks sees the space in front of her and signals where she wants the ball, but instead of a vertical pass, Moultrie decides to continue with the carry. That gives Seattle time to close the space, and Moultrie can’t find an open teammate to pass to after that. As a result, she goes for a horizontal pass, and the opportunity gets lost.

So, we can see the Thorns didn’t play badly against the Reign, but there are important details they need to improve to maximize their chances and be able to take them.

Also, it would be good not to have to depend on only one player to score. Before Sophia Wilson, one of the Thorns’ main characteristics was the fact that pretty much anyone could score. And since they don’t have a clear striker nowadays, it’d be great if they could go back to being that kind of team.

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NWSL Soccer Thorns

Takeaways: Portland Thorns 0, North Carolina Courage 0

Three games into the 2025 NWSL season, the Portland Thorns are still searching for their first win. The club has managed to net only two goals across one away loss and two home draws. Last season, former head coach Mike Norris was given four games (3L, 1D) before being promoted to Technical Director, so head coach Rob Gale is on a very short leash before a potential reassignment. A failure to win all three points at home against a North Carolina team who are perennially terrible on the road should have been the final straw, but alas, it was not. Instead fans are left dissatisfied headed into the international break.

Game over game, there has been tremendous growth in the Thorns team—and that trend continued against the Courage. Gale fielded a starting XI with an average age of 24, the second-youngest in Thorns history, and Mackenzie Arnold had far and away her best game in Portland colors. The centerback pairing of Isa Obaze and Sam Hiatt is already strengthening, and the duo of Reilyn Turner and Caiya Hanks up front is one of the most exciting forward lines in the league in terms of raw potential.

It’s hard to look at a 0-0 draw and say that it was a good game or deserved, but for the defensive unit in particular, it was. Arnold played out of her mind, making five saves (including a penalty). She was commanding of her box, putting her body on the line several times. Her effort seemed to set the tempo for the rest of the team. Reyna Reyes won the most duels in the match (10) and Kaitlyn Torpey was the most accurate passer (94%), as both were tasked with starting the attack from the wide channels as well as defending. To complete the line, both Obaze and Hiatt had nine defensive actions apiece—and stifled the Courage’s forwards.

Leo wrote a very good article about the pressure that a new general manager is under to build a roster for a perennial powerhouse in under two months, and the roadblocks he has faced. I would like to expand on one signing in particular, Deyna Castellanos. By the time Jeff Agoos was named GM, there were very few free agent signings available, and most Big Name Players had already resigned with their clubs or chosen a new one by January. Castellanos was not a free agent, and had to be bought out of her million-dollar contract after a lackluster season in the Bay Area in order to be picked up by the Thorns. Castellanos has a lot of starpower in the NWSL, is the face of a new Nike campaign alongside Sophia Wilson, and was absolutely the Thorns’ biggest signing in their short offseason.

So, why would the coach bench her? Against the Courage, Gale tried a new formation, a 4-4-2, with a diamond midfield that relied heavily on progressing the ball through the center of the field. Castellanos played the point of that diamond, and in theory, this should have been a very successful lineup given the available players on the Thorns, with a lack of traditional wide forwards and outside backs healthy. Without Wilson to tailor the formation to, Gale seems to be setting up the team around Castellanos.

Unfortunately, during the 60 minutes she was on the field, it felt as though the Thorns were playing down a person. Her zero chances created, zero touches in the Courage’s box, zero accurate long balls or crosses, zero tackles, and one defensive action all point to a player that might as well have not been on the field—not someone who is supposed to be a creative centerpoint of a team’s attack. By not putting in much effort, Castellanos effectively stranded the two target forwards, Turner and Hanks, who then had to drop back further to receive the ball and had more work to do and players to beat once getting it.

One possible formation change could be sliding Olivia Moultire into the point of the diamond, allowing her more freedom centrally. I am also eagerly awaiting Pietra Tordin’s first start, as she has looked particularly bright in her fifteen minute cameos so far. The flare and vision that she has shown in limited minutes could also be positive for the No. 10 position, despite her playing more as a No. 9 in college.

Post game, Gale mentioned that there was “no way to keep the upward momentum going when you have 11 players gone for international break,” but perhaps that is not necessarily a bad thing. The Thorns have played better each game, but are still experiencing the same poor results. The break in play will allow for a reset before these next stretch of games against the Utah Royals (one point), Seattle Reign (four points) and NJ/NY Gotham (two points), all of which are winnable games.