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Club’s Handling of Riley Predominates as Timbers Win

It was, by many of the usual metrics, a lovely Sunday afternoon at Providence Park. The sun was shining, the air was crisp, and the Portland Timbers won their seventh game in eight attempts, continuing an improbable run up the Western Conference table that has them positioned to contend as the weather finally begins to turn and the MLS season enters its final stage.

But the result, a 1–0 Timbers victory on the strength of a late headed goal from the Polish marksman Jarosław Niezgoda, felt like little more than a sideshow.

This Timbers victory should have been the second game of the weekend played at Providence Park. The Portland Thorns were supposed to take the field first, on Saturday, for a derby match against their northern rival, OL Reign.

That match did not happen. In its place, after all games across the NWSL were suspended following the horrifying revelations reported by The Athletic last week regarding the conduct of former Thorns manager Paul Riley, Thorns supporters rallied outside the stadium in support of the players Riley abused and those who remain within an American soccer league that has at every turn disregarded their safety.

They also called for the firing of Timbers and Thorns general manager Gavin Wilkinson, who has emerged again as a lightning rod for anger.

Timbers fans last called en masse for Wilkinson’s firing in the autumn of 2012, when the club was suffering through a miserable season on the field. They were wrong then. The Timbers won the Western Conference the next season and an MLS Cup two years later, and Wilkinson’s prowess as a soccer executive has proven beyond any significant doubt many times since.

They’re not wrong now. This time, the frustration is not that Wilkinson can’t pick soccer players. It is that he, along with Timbers and Thorns owner Merritt Paulson and the club’s president of business Mike Golub, failed to ensure that Riley’s career ended after they were made aware of the allegations of his predatory, coercive, absolutely despicable behavior towards their players.

The club investigated Riley following the 2015 season and, with his contract expiring, let him walk. We don’t know exactly what that investigation turned up, and we don’t know exactly how seriously the club endeavored to communicate to the NWSL and Riley’s future employers that he was an active danger to their players too.

What it looks like, lacking that information, and knowing the connections between the Wilkinson and one of the men responsible for hiring Riley to his next job, is that the Thorns, like the Catholic Church, simply moved an ill-behaved coach on to his next parish, consequences be damned.

Sinead Farrelly. Mana Shim. How many others there are—both among those who spoke anonymously to The Athletic and those who weren’t reached or chose not to be interviewed—we don’t yet and will probably never know.

Timbers players Saturday released a statement expressing their support for NWSL players, while Giovani Savarese and other members of the Timbers coaching staff wore teal ribbons in a show of solidarity.

Savarese and his team entered Sunday in a difficult position. Around them in the stadium, and particularly in a vociferous North End, the supporters called—colorfully, loudly, and repeatedly—for their boss to be fired.

The Timbers Army, singing and chanting to the beat of a drum branded with the logo of the Rose City Riveters, made their position known from pregame to the final whistle. Banners hung or hoisted in the North End included “Believe, Support, and Protect NWSL Players,” “Protect the Players, Cut the Rot Out,” and, most memorably, a simple, “You Knew,” along with plenty of two-sticks aimed specifically at Wilkinson.


All the team on the field could do was focus on the task at hand, no matter how trivial it felt taking place in the middle of one of the biggest storms in franchise history.

Knowing a win would cement their status as in the West’s top four with Real Salt Lake’s loss on Saturday, the Timbers faced a Miami side in desperate need of points to keep their distant playoff hopes alive.

Starting without Sebastian Blanco, whose return to fitness was so critical in their revival this fall, and with Diego Valeri suspended for yellow card accumulation, the Timbers lacked a measure of attacking inventiveness in the first half. But Miami was rarely more than ponderous going forward themselves, with the Timbers comfortably defending deep and looking to break with pace.

When Blanco was introduced with a quarter of an hour to go in the second half and no score, the Timbers quickly began to rack up chances. It was thanks only to some excellent emergency defending from Miami’s three center backs, led by Leandro Gonzalez Pirez that the game remained level for as long as it did, and thanks to some very soft defending in the middle of that box that Niezgoda was allowed to freely position himself in the path of a Blanco corner seven minutes from time and nod in the opener.

Miami thought they had equalized just moments later when substitute Julian Carranza headed a cross past Clark, but the goal was ruled out for a push on Dario Zuparic. Miami manager Phil Neville said after the game that his team was “robbed,” and perhaps in a narrow sense, he was right. The whistle on Carranza was soft, one of a number of marginal calls that so often decide close, pedestrian late-season games.

But in a broader sense, his team did not take advantage of the opportunity presented to them in Blanco’s reduced fitness and Valeri’s suspension. They lost the expected goals battle by nearly two and only forced Steve Clark into a pair of notable saves, one on an uninspired Gonzalo Higuain, the other on Brek Shea.

Miami had one more great chance after Carranza’s equalizer was ruled out, deep into stoppage time, but Gonzalez Pirez, outstanding on the other end of the field, sent his open look well wide. That was it. The Timbers are now seven points clear of fifth, on a glide path to hosting a playoff game.

Afterwards, Savarese and Clark were asked about the NWSL. For many of the supporters, the afternoon ended with that subject—and the club’s response to it—foremost in mind. The Timbers Army and the Rose City Riveters are extraordinary in the American sporting landscape for the outspokenness and seriousness with which they take their sociopolitical commitments.

They also, in recent history, have been extraordinary for their effectiveness. The supporters, with the help of others across the MLS, namely in Seattle, stared down the league and won its fight to fly the Iron Front in 2019. The coming fight to hold the organization accountable for its role in perpetuating Riley’s career will, in many ways, be a much bigger challenge.

Paulson’s most enduring trait in a decade-plus as a major league owner, right alongside his passion and inability to stay off Twitter, has been his loyalty to and faith in Wilkinson—a loyalty that has been richly rewarded in on-the-field success.

This scandal is not not going away any time soon. U.S. Soccer and FIFA have opened investigations. The NWSL remains in turmoil, with the Thorns scheduled to play the Houston Dash at home on Wednesday night. Their current manager, Mark Parsons, who is vacating the role in a matter of weeks, has not faced the media since the story broke.

The level of protest at this, a Timbers game, not a Thorns game, made that plain It is as yet unclear what is coming next for Riley and everyone who passed the buck and did the bare minimum instead of stopping him cold. But it is obvious, if there was ever a doubt, that Portland fans are going to keep close score.

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Soccer Timbers

Takeaways from Portland and San Jose’s 1-1 Draw at Providence Park

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Build the Statue

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Back Four, Back Five, Defensive Midfield: Center Back Bill Tuiloma is the Timbers’ Do-it-all Defender

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Yet Another Slow Start Dooms Portland in 4-1 Loss to Austin FC

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Timbers Experimentation Yields Mixed Result in Draw Against Houston

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Timbers Find Their Stride as International Break Approaches

It took a while for the Timbers to break through against the LA Galaxy Saturday afternoon, but once they did it became a field day at Providence Park.

After a frustrating, scoreless first half, Portland found the opening goal they so desperately craved in the 47th minute. Forward Felipe Mora, who subbed on after Andy Polo left the game in first-half stoppage time due to a hard, unnecessary tackle, read the space and got on the end of a well-placed cross from outside back Josecarlos Van Rankin. From there, the Timbers scored two more times and cruised to a 3–0 victory against Los Angeles. 

“The commitment to perform what we work on during the week is what coaches always want,” coach Giovanni Savarese said. “It shows what this team is all about. A united group that will fight. It doesn’t matter who goes out on the field, everybody’s going to try and perform for each other and today was another very good performance.”

Los Angeles provided a tough test for a Timbers team looking to build on their 2–0 win at San Jose a week ago. Coach Greg Vanney’s team entered the match on a two-game winning streak and took 12 of their first 18 possible points. Talented players such as Chicharito, Jonathan Dos Santos, Efrain Alvarez, and Julian Araujo dotted the visitors’ starting 11. Despite the talent on paper, however, they struggled to find any sort of rhythm against the hosts.

While it took Portland a while to grow into the match, the team looked solid defensively and did enough to prevent the Galaxy from finding too many dangerous opportunities. Still, for as solid as the Timbers looked, they struggled to find a decisive goal or opportunity of their own throughout the first half. 

A lot of those squandered chances stemmed from trying for the jugular. Multiple times throughout the first half, Portland pushed the ball into the attacking third in transition before settling for a half chance. A ball into the box turned into an attempted bicycle kick by forward Dairon Asprilla. In another transition moment, outside back Claudio Bravo found himself with time and space and tried to laser the shot in from deep. Those opportunities came dangerously close both times, but were both still low-percentage chances. 

Photo by Kris Lattimore

Near the end of the first half, the Timbers went a man up after Los Angeles forward Derrick Williams received a straight red for his brutal aerial challenge on Polo. The Peruvian watched the second half on crutches and Savarese’s immediate update did not sound good. 

“When there’s a tackle like that, you don’t want to see that on the field,” Savarese said. “Especially having players that then have to come out because of that situation. Right now, the most important part is hopefully Polo can come back.”

The reckless challenge quelled the crowd at Providence Park for a few minutes, but Portland eventually made the most they could of the man advantage. Mora said that the game changed once the red card was issued. Spaces between the Galaxy’s center backs opened up, which the team relentlessly exploited in the second half.

“It was very hard to find spaces, but after the red card we spoke at halftime,” Mora said through a translator. “We knew that we needed to be calm, patient, and wait for the right opportunities. Thankfully after the first goal, the game opened up more for all of us and we were able to get two more goals.”

Mora took advantage of the newly found space with his header to open the second half, then 13 minutes later, netted a brace. Once again, the Chilean forward showcased his movement in the box, but this time by reading a second ball. In a moment of chaos, Van Rankin’s floated shot hit the top post, Mora reacted first, and he powered another opportunistic header past goalkeeper Jonathan Bond.

To cap off the high-scoring second half, the Timbers received an opportunity from the penalty spot after Los Angeles defender Daniel Steres brought Van Rankin down in the box. Midfielder Diego Valeri, who missed a pair of penalties in Portland’s 2–1 loss against Seattle, once again stepped to the spot. This time, he left little doubt as he confidently blasted the ball past Bond for the 3–0 lead.

“I needed to score that goal,” Valeri said. “After missing those two PKs against Seattle, it was important for me to score that third goal and keep lifting the team. Anyone can miss a PK, but for me it was important to put the ball in the net and keep looking forward.”

Photo by Kris Lattimore

Just as sweet as the win, the Timbers put together their second-consecutive clean sheet against a team that entered Saturday with 10 goals. The center back tandem of Dario Zuparic and Bill Tuiloma came up big, while loanee goalkeeper Logan Keterrer put together another impressive performance.

“I think that has come because of the discipline of the group in the way that the guys have performed, in the way that the guys have executed the plan that we put together,” Savarese said. “We have players that are sacrificing for others in order to make sure that we cover every space, and that’s what we’ve seen in the last two games.”

With the three points, Portland wrapped up their home schedule before the three-week international break on a strong note. The Timbers now travel to Philadelphia high on confidence for one final match before the break, playing with house money and a roster getting healthier by the day.

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Injury woes continue in Portland’s 2-1 Cascadia Cup loss against Seattle 

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Observations from Sandy: Timbers Drop All Three Points to Vancouver in their MLS Opener

The Portland Timbers started off their CONCACAF Champions League campaign with a bang, but began their MLS schedule with a whimper. The Timbers put five goals past overmatched CD Marathón on Tuesday; just five days later, in their season opener, they conceded a set-piece goal to the Vancouver Whitecaps, failed to find the back of the net themselves, and dropped all three points.

Portland showed plenty of promise and ideas in the first half, only to resort to a more direct style of play after Vancouver striker Lucas Cavallini headed in the game’s only goal at the back post. For large stretches, it looked like a game between two teams playing a competitive league game for the first time in months. Both sides had ideas, but couldn’t execute many of them.

For the first time since March 2020, I watched the Timbers play with my own eyes, in Sandy, Utah. I also noticed some things that I haven’t picked up while watching games over television. So to recap the game, here are a few of those observations.

Van Rankin and Bravo will play important roles on a Portland team that wants to play out from the back even more.

The Timbers’ most dominant spells of play often came when they successfully built possession from the back line and linked with the midfield. In those situations, right back Josecarlos Van Rankin frequently appeared to be at midfield while the rest of the back line shifted to become more of a back three.

When Portland advanced the ball higher up the field, Van Rankin constantly made himself available to play quick one-twos down the right. Building out of the back with three defenders allowed the Timbers to get an additional player into attack even earlier, while the quick-passing progressionespecially in the first half—yielded the visitors some of their best chances of the night.

Once the ball reached midfield, left back Claudio Bravo also advanced to add width further up the left side of the field, leaving the pair of center backs to possess the ball and start more direct attacking movements from the attacking half of the field. With both outside backs capable of carrying the ball forward or combining with midfielders to advance possession into the attacking third, they’ll both surely play an important role in coach Giovanni Savarese’s team this season.

“I thought they did very well, they have adapted very quickly, and we can see that they’re quality players,” Savarese said. “They understand the way we want to play and what we want to achieve on the field. I thought they did well, very similar to what they did in the past to CCL games. I’m very content with their performance.”

The Timbers’ fluidity in attack should yield positive results in the future.

On paper, Yimmi Chará started the game as a right winger, Felipe Mora occupied a central striker role, and Dairon Asprilla played down the left. And while those three players generally occupied those places on the field, it wasn’t uncommon to look up and see Yimmi central, Mora closer to midfield and Asprilla pushing from wide.

Portland looked at their best when they played with fluidity all over attack and players constantly interchanged with one another. Yimmi scored a goal that was called offside in the first half, but it came when the winger had an opportunity to come inside and play more centrally for a few seconds.

When Mora plays, Portland lacks a “true” number nine when it comes to a goal-scoring presence in the box. While that can provide issues when the team needs to rely on a singular player to score goals out of nothing, his ability to drop into midfield helps when it comes to the Timbers’ fluidity. On Sunday night, Mora helped open up some of that space that Yimmi or even Asprilla used to come inside by dropping toward midfield.

And speaking of Asprilla, the winger played on both sides of the field, where he looked to constantly run at Vancouver’s outside backs. In the first half, Asprilla put a rocket on frame that forced an athletic save out of keeper Maxime Crépeau. In the second half, he attacked in numerous one-on-one situations down the right before firing crosses into the box.

There were hints of that fluidity in midfield, too, as the Timbers tried (at least in the first half) to progress the ball all the way from back to front. At times, midfielder Eryk Williamson played all the way forward in the right half-space, almost like a winger, where he combined with Van Rankin. The Chará brothers also combined quite a few times when the ball came into the team’s attacking half.

The quick passing and fluidity, especially in the first half, moved the Whitecaps defense around and gave the Timbers more space to work with. It stretched a Vancouver team happy to get plenty of numbers behind the ball when it could. While it didn’t result in any goals on Sunday night, it provided an early example as to how Portland might look to break down opponents with possession in the coming weeks.

The Timbers tried some different things offensively, and then completely went away from them in the second half.

While they didn’t find a goal in the first half, the Timbers looked like a team with plenty of ideas. They played with possession and created some dangerous moments in attack with well-worked passing sequences and off-ball movements. 

It’s crazy to think that not even two seasons ago, this was a team that either took chances on the counter or played down the flanks only to play hopeful crosses into the box. Don’t get me wrongPortland still wanted to attack directly against Vancouver—but it seemed more methodical. Players weren’t afraid to recycle possession along the back line, switch the point of attack, and pick out a better pass. 

Then the second half started, and everything that I mentioned above just slowed down. Once Cavallini scored in the 49th minute, the Timbers became even more desperate as they began to chase the game. In the first half Portland appeared calculated in their direct play. In the second 45 minutes, there were too many moments where the visitors tried to play long ball after long ball over the top. As players grew more tired—thanks especially to Utah’s high altitude—those long balls turned into one wasted opportunity after another. 

Portland also began to bypass their midfield, making it easier for Vancouver’s already compact defense to deal with any dangerous opportunities. Instead of playing quick-passing soccer, the Timbers continuously attempted to play diagonal balls from deep in midfield to the right wing. Sure, it allowed Asprilla, and eventually Marvin Loría, to attack defenders in one-on-one situations, but that strategy never looked effective.

“We did a lot of good things; we were in a lot of good areas inside their box,” Savarese said. “We did have a lot of chances, we did have a lot of moments where we could have capitalized, but we just have to make sure we are better in those moments to get those points.”

As cliché as it is, the 1–0 loss to Vancouver proved to be a tale of two halves. The Timbers showcased elements of a promising attacking in the first half, only to revert back to more desperate direct play in the second. Together with the altitude and conceding the first goal to a Vancouver side content to sit back, that was never going to be a formula for success.

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Soccer Timbers

Portland Tests its Possession Game in CONCACAF Champions League Opener Against CD Marathón

Portland coach Giovanni Savarese understood the task at hand before the Timbers even touched down in San Pedro Sula, Honduras, for the first leg of their CONCACAF Champions League series against CD Marathón.

He knew that Marathón, a team that’s won just two of its first ten league games in the clausura season, wanted to make the most of a fresh start in a new competition. That they would be comfortable sitting back before springing into attack.

Earlier in the week, Savarese talked about the directness and individual talent Marathón possessed, and acknowledged that the opening game would be a good time for his team to test their mettle, especially with the ball.

In many ways, that’s exactly what played out on Tuesday in Portland’s 2–2 draw at the Estadio Olimpico Metropolitano. The Timbers finished the game with 58% of the possession, outshot Marathón 16–12, and completed 107 more passes.

In their first competitive game since the first round of the 2020 MLS Cup Playoffs, Portland was given both the ball and the onus to do something with it against a compact opponent. While known more as a counter-attacking team in the Savarese era, the Timbers will face games where they need to break teams down with the ball. A season ago, the team showed progress in that facet of their game––hey, fewer hopeful crosses is always a good thing––and received an early opportunity to test themselves in possessional play this season.

“I thought it was very competitive, and I thought that we did a lot of very good things, especially in the first half,” Savarese said. “We created chances. Unfortunately, we couldn’t capitalize a little bit more on the chances we created.”

The Timbers started the match on the front foot and found themselves with multiple scoring opportunities early. Yimmi Chará continuously attacked Marathón left back Luis Vega down the right wing, which created danger right away. Winger Dairon Asprilla later bodied off a defender to get a shot off in the box that he dragged wide by a good margin. In the 27th minute, midfielder Eryk Williamson nearly pulled off a moment of magic with a side-footed shot that keeper Denovan Torres did well to save.

Then, in the 35th minute, Portland found its breakthrough when striker Felipe Mora brought down the ball in the box and squeezed the ensuing shot under Torres’ outstretched right hand.

The goal, while not flashy, perfectly exemplified the Timbers’ effective possession play. With the team in their attacking third, right back Josecarlos Van Rankin slowly made his way from the right side of the field to the left half-space where he received the ball from left back Claudio Bravo, beat two defenders, and chipped a ball with his left foot to Mora, who found the back of the net.

Van Rankin’s addition into the attack provided the Timbers with an offensive wrinkle in possession, which helped them break down coach Hector Vargas’ compact side. The right back’s presence in that left half-space drew Marathón center back Mathías Techera away from Mora for a split-second, which allowed the striker to control the ball and get a shot off. While there are potential drawbacks to that type of cross-field run––say the ball turns over quickly and that entire space is vacated––the addition of Van Rankin into the attack proved crucial in Portland’s first goal of 2021.

Savarese also asked Mora to drop into midfield from time to time to help the Timbers create numerical advantages in central areas while in possession. With wingers Yimmi Chará and Asprilla tasked with stretching Marathón’s defense, Mora had plenty of room to work with when he dropped back and combined with midfielders Diego Valeri or Eryk Williamson. While Mora seemed to tire near the end of 90 minutes, his ability to drop into   midfield and also finish opportunities in attack will certainly prove useful for Portland this season.

Savarese said the team went into the game with the aforementioned goal of stretching Marathón out, especially between midfield and defense, to create more space in possession. He felt like the team did that, especially early.

“I think that the balance that we have with Diego Chará and Eryk [Williamson] in the middle was very, very good,” Savarese said. “The defense handled the long balls really well, and going forward we were patient enough to find the right moment to keep the ball or to get behind to create opportunities.”

Valeri thrived in the additional space created in midfield. The Timbers star scored the (own) goal of the game from a free-kick taken from yards behind the box and constantly popped up in vacant midfield spaces. The Argentinian played a large role in both finding and creating the “right attacking moments” that Savarese mentioned.

“He was phenomenal today,” Savarese said. “He was very active and found a lot of good spaces to give us the chance to be able to be vertical.”

While Portland looked effective in possession through large stretches of play, it wasn’t all perfect. The Timbers failed to capitalize on multiple golden opportunities. In the 57th minute, Yimmi Chará had a great opportunity on a corner kick that fell into his path in the box with nobody around him, but he didn’t put enough power on the ball and shot it straight at Torres.

Marathón’s deeper formation also enticed Portland to creep further up the field, which opened up new spaces for the very direct Central American side to attack through. That’s what happened in the 68th minute when midfielder Kervin Arriaga found plenty of room between the Timbers’ lines to drive into before delivering a well-weighted pass to forward Marlon Ramírez who leveled the score 2–2.

“Arriaga found moments to dribble and become a little more dangerous,” Savarese said. “Then they found some corners and more dangerous crosses.”

On Tuesday, Timbers fans got their first look at what Savarese wants his team to look like when forced to play with the ball. In just under a week, some will see it first hand when the team returns to Portland with a 2–2 result to defend and everything to play for.

“We’re not satisfied with this result,” Savarese said, “but scoring two goals away is very important.”