The 123rd Minute: Salt Lake City, Come on Down


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Women’s Soccer writers RJ Allen and Charles Olney talk about Real Salt Lake getting an NWSL team, the coaching changes in the NWSL and more on this week’s 123rd Minute.

Intro: Those Better Days by Mimi Page

2009 to 2013: The Golden Age of USWNT Videos


There was once a golden age of USWNT videos. From around 2009 until 2013, videos of soccer tennis, holidays, birthdays and all sorts of things ruled the day.

And then the darkness came and these videos, which looked like someone filmed them on their iPhone, were replaced with glossy videos. So today in honor of the golden age, we visit some of my personal favorite videos. Just a note, I mostly stayed away from “Studio 90”, “Behind the Crest” and the “Back Home” Series. Go watch them all.  This is more a list of the one off and funny videos you might not know about.

So, on to the funny, the odd and the occasionally touching look at the golden age of USWNT videos.

Warning: This list is neither exhaustive nor is it in any particular order.


The New Kids Videos

Maybe a cheat because 1) There are 4 videos and I’m counting it as 1 and 2) They weren’t all from the golden age. And to that I say, New Kids don’t care about no rules.


WNT Smarter than a Fifth Grader?

There was a time when the USWNT had 4 Stanford alumnae on the team. I mean other than 2017 with Jane Campbell, Andi Sullivan, Christen Press and Kelley O’Hara. In 2013 it was Nicole Barnhart, Rachel Buehler, Christen Press and Kelley O’Hara. To see which of the younger two was smarter they played a game.


Classic Castle & WNT Wizards and The WNT Hits the Links

The USWNT took to Scotland before the 2012 Olympics and had two of the greatest videos that have ever been made. There isn’t much I can say about these videos that will do justice to them. From Kelley O’Hara falling after being “sniped” to Syd Leroux’s golf swing both are a delightful way to remember a time the USWNT wasn’t out of the Olympics before the final.


Rock Hard Abs on the WNT

Heather O’Reilly is a USWNT fan favorite, both for her play on the field and her personality off of it. This video is a pretty great showing off the second. O’Reilly and Lori Chalupny talk about a WPS game where Chalupny’s hand broke off of HAO’s rock hard abs.


Studio 90: Two Captains, Two Champions

I mostly have stayed away from Studio 90 but for this one I am willing to make an exception. There was a time when Julie (Johnston) Ertz was not a near permanent member of the USWNT. This video shows her close but not quite there yet as she and then captain Christie Pearce chat. One of the less funny but one of my personal favorites.


USWNT Does Celebrations: WNT Halloween in Mexico, WNT Holiday Party, WNT Birthday Party in Juarez, Mexico: Stephanie Cox

These three videos are great. Just great. They serve as a reminder just how much things like birthdays and holidays the team does together around camps and games. When you are together more days than you’re apart you have little choice but to become family. 

And how many videos show players getting thrown in a pool?


Sisters 4 Life

AKA Kristie and Sam Mewis answer weird questions about each other for our amusement. This video has some of the best (worst) graphics you could ask for. Along with odd questions and teenage Kristie and Sam. Some of the best entertainment there is out there. 


Cheese Tasting with Becky and Bue

Let’s face it. Becky Sauerbrunn is one of the wittiest people we wish we knew. And in video we get to see that wit in full force. She and the Buehldozer aka Rachel (Buehler) Van Hollebeke go on a cheese tasting adventure. Also Carli kicked Bue in the face beforehand so her nose is black and blue.

Real Salt Lake To Join NWSL in 2018

It was announced today that Real Salt Lake of Major League Soccer will launch a new club in the National Women’s Soccer League in the upcoming 2018 season. Home matches will be played in Rio Tinto Stadium in Sandy, Utah.

“We are very excited to welcome Dell Loy Hansen and Real Salt Lake into the NWSL family as the newest member of our league. During our discussions in this process, Real Salt Lake has demonstrated their unquestionable desire and commitment to bring the highest level of professional women’s soccer to all fans of the game in Salt Lake City and Utah. Real Salt Lake will immediately be able to hit the ground running on the business side as well as provide the players with a top-notch training ground and one of the best game venues in the country.” said NWSL Managing Director of Operations Amanda Duffy in the NWSL press release.

In the Real Salt Lake press conference, it was said that there will still be 10 teams in the NWSL. At this time, there is no mention of the fate of FC Kansas City, which has been on the market for new ownership. 

There is no information about official team name, potential roster, or potential staffing at this time.

We will be posting more articles as updates become available. 

The Key to Victory is in the Defense for Sky Blue FC

51.

That is the number of goals Sky Blue let in this year.

That’s more than Portland and Chicago let in this year. Combined. That is nine more than top-ranked North Carolina and Portland gave up, combined. It is three more than bottom-ranked Washington gave up.

It’s safe to say they had a bit of a break down on defense this year.

That is where 2018 has to start for Sky Blue. They have to start with fixing the defense and letting their strength help push the midfield and forwards to new heights. Sam Kerr can score as many goals in 2018 as she did in 2017 and it won’t matter if their defense can’t hold on to leads and can’t keep them from going down early and often.

So how does Sky Blue turn the boat around and find a way to go from 6th place to the Top 4 and a chance to go to whichever city is going to host the NWSL championship next year?

1) Newly named head coach Denise Reddy needs to bring a clear vision of what she wants the team to be and use her considerable skills to make the team into her vision.

2) They need to part ways with some players and get experience in return.

3) The game plan can’t just be “Sam Kerr is magic”.


Reddy For a Change

Reddy comes into 2018 facing an uphill battle. The team needs a coach who can come in and provide some steadying forces on the team. There is no telling which of the current assistant coaches will stay. A total cleaning house may be the way to go.

Sky Blue finished their season with a triumvirate of assistant coaches taking over the helm after their head coach, Christy Holly, stepped away from the team. That left the team in an odd place even as it seemed to galvanize them.

Allowing Reddy to put her own unique stamp on the team, in terms of the assistants she feels comfortable with, would put her in the best position to build this team in her image. And that image is likely what got her the job in the first place.

If Reddy can find a way to elevate their defense from the bottom of the league to the middle while at the same time finding a way to bring this team together, it will go a lot way toward bridging the gap between Top 4 and middle of the pack in terms of their finish.


Fix the Roster

One of the biggest indicators of a team’s success is their roster. It sounds silly to type out but it’s the building block of the team’s DNA.

Yes, sometimes rosters do over or under perform what they say on paper. However, if their backline options are seasoned defenders mixed with some rookies they will likely have a better season than one or two solid defenders and a mix of pretty good to just OK defenders.

As of now, the current Sky Blue roster is young. Really young. Reddy is going to have the benefit of experience in the development system that might give her a leg up on training up some of the younger players.  

And with 18 players either having their contracts picked up or having been offered new ones, it might stay that way into 2018.

Take a look at the roster (as listed on their site) they are currently sporting:

Goalkeepers: Caroline Casey, Kailen Sheridan

Defenders: Cassidy Benintente, Mandy Freeman, Kayla Mills, Christie Pearce, Domi Richardson, Erin Simon, Erica Skroski

Midfielders: Daphne Corboz, Sarah Killion, Taylor Lytle, Raquel Rodriguez, Nikki Stanton, Madison Tiernan

Forwards: Leah Galton, Maya Hayes, Sam Kerr, McKenzie Meehan, Kelley O’Hara

This roster needs augmenting. Experience needs to be injected into it before they are going to be able to close the gap between goals scored and goals allowed.

Their goalkeepers are both under 24. Sheridan has a chance to be one of the best in the league – and might lead Canada one day as their number one – but it might benefit Sky Blue to find a more seasoned backup. Kailen Sheridan should stay but she needs a more experienced training partner.

Their defenders need experience with Pearce’s expected retirement. And O’Hara needs to give up the ghost and finally admit she will always be a defender, or at highest a midfielder, at this point. I would keep Mandy Freeman, Kayla Mills, Erin Simon, Erica Skroski and Kelley O’Hara on defense and try to find two defenders on the open market, most likely two center backs, to come in and try to help the defense out.

The midfield is more solid than it might look but suffers from Rodriguez often being played too far back to try to compensate for a weak defense. Stanton is a stand-out player for them who does a lot of the tough work that needs to be done but she needs more help out of her teammates. Daphne Corboz, Sarah Killion, Taylor Lytle, Raquel Rodriguez, Nikki Stanton, and Madison Tiernan can all stay. I think they could use an experienced midfield leader but if all 6 midfielders step their game up for 2018 this might be the most solid area for the team as of now.

Meehan was fine but not much else. O’Hara isn’t a forward. The trio of Leah Galton Maya Hayes, Sam Kerr make a nice group of forwards. If Hayes can keep playing provider and remain a threat to score, if Galton can get and stay healthy, and if Kerr can keep being Kerr they don’t need much more here.

They need to strip away a lot of the fat on the roster that likely is there because they can get away with not paying them much and they need players for practice. Money might be tight but a few key upgrades need to happen or they might give away more goals in 2018 than they did this year. 

I’d keep the following and hunt as hard as I could for some experienced players by either trading the rest or trading 2019 and 2020 draft picks. 

Also if I were them I’d draft Daphne Corboz’s younger sister Rachel if she is still there when they get to their first pick of the 2018 draft – they hold the 5th spot. She is the type of player who can be put in front of O’Hara or Skroski and make a big impact right away. 

The only way for them to compete is to have a roster full of players who can defend. That means looking at who on the team just doesn’t cut it anymore and let them go no matter how difficult it is. This team embraces the “us against the world” mentality but that will only get you so far with sub-par defensive talent. 


Sam Kerr is Magic but What Else Ya Got?

Having a more dynamic gameplay on offense helps the defense. They need to move past “just let Sam do it,” or they might stop giving up goals but they won’t score enough to counter the one or two they let in.

The 2017 season taught us two things: 1) Sam Kerr is, in fact, magic and, 2) She is only able to make so much magic when her team puts her in a hole.

Reddy is not the type of coach I worry about being uncreative with her game planning. I look forward to both her developing the team and seeing what she can do to Kerr’s already impressive talent.

It is as important for Kerr’s own development to have a defense worth a damn backing her up as it is for the team’s chances at winning.

Reddy also needs to take a look at in-game planning. Because next year? Teams are going to be on Kerr as tight as the head of a drum. That means Hayes, Galton, Corboz, Rodriguez and company are going to need to be better at their own finishing when they are left open by the double or triple teaming Kerr will get.

Tiernan has the chance to turn in to a hard-playing winger who can come in and open up games but using her properly, and keeping her from hitting 5 cards before week 7, is something that will need to be kept in mind. Rodriguez and her stint at Perth Glory with Kerr and Stanton will hopefully bring back the attacking side that can be so deadly when she uses it.

If the defense is stronger in 2018 a lot of the midfield problems go away. And when the players who had to tighten up to prevent the weak defense from seeing more shots can relax then they will be more able to be more creative as a group.


The core of the roster isn’t rotted. But they need to work on not always expecting magic or they are going to end up with spells blowing up in their faces.

If they can bring in two or three defenders who have experience on top of one or two attacking players who can concentrate their attacking talents, they have a shot at going from a team that finished in the middle of the pack to a team that has a solid playoff shot. 

Reddy was a smart hire by a team that needed to have a solid win in the search for a new head coach. She brings experience and a fresh perspective I think will go a long way to bringing Sky Blue back in the playoff picture.

So, are you Reddy for 2018 yet?

Who Should the USWNT Pool Include?

A few days ago I wrote a piece about which 23 players I’d put on a roster for a mythical tournament in December.

One of the results of doing so was spending a lot of time thinking about the size of the USWNT pool of players. Who was in? Who should be? Is it better to bring in more players even if the talent isn’t as high to find a possible diamond in the rough or should it remain, as it has often been, hard to get one call up to get and even harder to get a second?

The answer is somewhere between the extremes. The US needs a big enough pool of players for the coach to keep the talent pool fresh, but a wholesale turnover can produce too much instability. There has to be a middle ground between “one at a time” and “everyone at once” in terms of new talent on the team.

At a minimum, bringing in a handful, even a few handfuls, of new players for a January camp or in the “off” years where the USWNT isn’t fighting for a World Cup or an Olympic gold seems necessary. But there’s also value in making sure the core is strong and not too paranoid about imminent replacement. Getting the balance right is key to creating an environment that is stable enough for growth but dynamic enough to allow that growth to happen.

Constructing the player pool

But that doesn’t answer the question of who actually constitutes the extended pool of players.

There are really three ways to think about this. You can speak to the players who have been called up in the last year, but who aren’t part of the consistent core; you can talk about the players right on the edge, who might reasonably expect to make a camp soon; or you can go very broad, and talk about all possible players who are even plausibly available.

The last one is the least useful. It ranges all the way from players like Ella Maser (who calling a ‘long shot’ would be kind) to all the squads from the U23 through U15 teams. At the far edges, you’d have to include every American semi pro and pro player. It’s not so much a pool as a long beach. You can be on the sand that waves haven’t touched since the last flood, the high tide area, in the shallows or out deep. There’s not much value in drawing that broadly.

However, the first approach is too narrow. Identifying who have earned recent call ups is helpful to orient a player in the cosmos of the USWNT, but it hardly tells the whole story. A player who is fith or sixth on the depth chart for centerback, behind a load core, might not get any call ups, but that doesn’t mean they shouldn’t be in the conversation.

So I mostly default to the second approach. Players who are reasonably likely to get called in, whethe or not they’ve actually made an appearance yet. 

To try and draw this group, in order to write “Who Should Make a 23 Person USWNT Roster?” I started with this group of 84 players, which I then whittled down. It’s not quite the ‘every plausible player’ approach, but it’s a pretty generous list, so it’s a useful starting point for developing a reasonable assessment of the player pool. 


I decided to work toward a pool with a set number. That’s not because I think there is a necessary cap at any number, but simply to impose some restraint on the project. This group of 80 players is really just a list of good players, who you could squint and maybe make a case for calling them up. It’s not a good picture of what the pool does (or should) look like.  

30 felt too low, 60 too high. I decided to cut the difference and go with 45. Why 45? Because it feels like a manageable group size but it’s not small enough to drowned in a bathtub.

Dividing the pool: locks, in the mix, and depth players

So, if I were to list 45 players for a USWNT player pool, who would I list?

To be clear, the point of this exercise is not to define the pool as Ellis sees it. Only she and the peacocks know who she sees in the pool. My goal is to think more broadly, about who should be in the pool. To answer that question, I first created three sub-groups.

First, my “locks” – those players it’s impossible to leave off and be serious.

Second, the “depth” players who might not be locks but almost always end up on rosters or lists like this. It’s possible to leave them off but they are usually there.

And finally the “borderline” players. Those players you’d love to have on the roster, but who are never requirements. They’re good players, solid. Sometimes they’re young and hungry–not there yet, but could use a chance to grow. Sometimes they’re old vets, no longer at their peak but useful for stability. Sometimes it’s something else. The US is strong enough that this group is full of great players; they just aren’t quite good enough to regularly break through. 


The Locks

The locks were the easiest group to pick out for this roster. These are the work horses. The ones that show up regularly in everyone’s preferred starting XIs. The ones who you measure all new players by.

Alyssa Naeher is the best option the USWNT has in goal right now. She is the most capped goalkeeper in the program right now, which helps to see where they are building. USSF has never been much for spreading the wealth around in goal. They like running their goalkeepers out for 150 or so caps at a time before searching for the next 150+ capped goalkeeper. So while there are goalkeepers I’d like to see get some more time, to put Naeher under pressure if nothing else, right now if I had to pick a lock at goalkeeper, it’s Naeher.

When it comes to locks as defenders, things get a little murkier. In the end it was Becky Sauerbrunn, Casey Short and Kelley O’Hara. Sauerbrunn and O’Hara are the two most capped and experienced defenders in the bunch. I don’t see either of them being left out of a starting XI against a top 10 team in the next 2 or 3 years. Not unless a coach is trying to experiment to find the next Sauerbrunn or O’Hara. 

What Sauerbrunn provides is a rare combination of security and dynamic play that can start off a scoring run. She’s the default option when it comes to passing the ball back under pressure, and her skill as a pure defender is well known. She doesn’t run forward much, but when she does she has the vision to put the ball on the head or foot of any attacker she chooses.

O’Hara meanwhile is the sort of player you need if you want to play the high attacking style the US has employed of late. She is fast, unrelenting in her defensive duties and willing to be whatever the coach needs her to be. Right back, left back, winger, forward. Outside of goalkeeper (which she might eventually cover if the keeper is ever sent off after all the subs had been used), O’Hara can play pretty much everywhere with the same sense of purpose she plays outside back. Without her the backline might have attacking presences but it lacks a tenacity of spirit that is hard to go without in key moments. 

Of these three, Short is probably the least “locked in,” but she’s made a strong case for herself. And right now finding anyone apart from O’Hara getting starts on the left is a hard sell.

The midfield locks look different today than they would have 6 months ago. But if healthy, these four are vital to helping the US be a version of their best self.

My midfield locks are Julie Ertz, Megan Rapinoe, Sam Mewis, Tobin Heath.

The key here, as always, is when healthy. When healthy Rapinoe and Heath are two of the best wings in the world. When they aren’t they can be ineffective, sloppy and require the outside backs to do much of their work for them. But beautiful soccer happens when they’re at their peaks. Rapinoe is the most vulnerable of the four due to mainly age. Heath has been battling a back issue all year and after making a few appearances at the end of the NWSL season, once again was forced to sit out the Canada friendlies. But when healthy these two are both locks any day of the week.

Julie Ertz and Sam Mewis are the future of the American midfield. Big, strong, smart, and willing to do just about anything to put themselves and their team in a position to win. Ertz has played both midfield and defending roles on the USWNT and can play anywhere from the 10, to 8 or 6 for the team. Sam Mewis is a candidate for captain of the 2023 USWNT World Cup team and has seen incredible growth over the past two seasons. When both are on the field the US plays with a vision and a skill level that is hard to match.

The forwards should shock approximately no one. Alex Morgan, Christen Press and Mallory Pugh are among the best. Pugh is still growing, but the talent is already there, so I could find no reason to keep her from the locks at this point. She still isn’t the finished product yet, but she has that intangible quality that some  players fight their whole careers to find, without ever managing it. And if you don’t know Press and Morgan then I worry about you. Most teams in the world would count themselves lucky to have one striker even close to this level.  We have two.


The Depth Players

What is the difference between the “locks” and the “depth” players?

Well, if I leave Sauerbrunn off a roster, and instead bring in Dahlkemper and Menges, you’d raise an eyebrow (or maybe look at me like I have lost my mind). But a roster without Dahlkemper, with Sauerbrunn and Menges as the central defenders wouldn’t provoke the same response. Sure, you might have questions, but it’s not a total miscarriage of justice. 

So, these are the players with very strong cases, but who aren’t (yet) locks. 

Goalkeeping wise I think I am going to have the hardest time selling my picks. Adrianna Franch and Katelyn Rowland should be called up to the USWNT nearly every time there is a camp to call them up. Both helped their teams make it to the NWSL championship. Both are fantastic shot stoppers who have learned how to organize a defense filled with world class players. And both have often been overlooked because they don’t have the flash of some other goalkeepers.

I hope in 2018 we see both of them get consistent call ups. They have shown they have the tools to make the USWNT goalkeeping pool a little bit deeper.

And while we’re talking about pools that need to be deeper for the USWNT, let’s talk about defending.

Across the NWSL there are three defenders that stick out in the “really hard to ignore how good they are” camp: Abby Dahlkemper, Emily Menges, and Emily Sonnett.

Dahlkemper has become a regular in 2017, and is close to entering the “lock” stage, but there are still some questions to be answered there. While she has proven to be a worthy free and corner kick taker, maybe the best on the team since Lauren Holiday left, there’s still some gaps in her defensive playbook. Some of that is surely youth and can be fixed the more time she sees. Soon enough, she might be a lock. Sonnett has seen time with the USWNT while Menges has so far been shut out of the selection process. All three had strong NWSL season, Sonnett and Menges pairing up for the Thorns as a pair of formidable centerbacks that helped keep North Carolina from the championship crown. 

Each of these should be in the pool to try to supplement a defensive core that has grown weaker over the last half of a cycle. Sauerbrunn, Short and O’Hara can’t do it on their own and won’t be around forever. Growing the next generation of locks now will save us pain later.

Even though center midfield in the current USWNT call ups has been a little thin, the US is blessed with a crop of 20 something center midfield geniuses.

The 5 pack of center midfielders of the future: Andi Sullivan, Danielle Colaprico, Lindsey Horan, Rose Lavelle and Vanessa DiBernardo.

Each brings a level of vision, talent, and skill that the US has never really had in such high doses before. Imagine a future where the USWNT has an in-form and healthy Lavelle, Colaprico, Horan, Sullivan and DiBernardo, plus Ertz and Mewis, to pick from when composing a starting XI. That will be a bright day for those who believe that a strong midfield paired with a strong defense is key to winning companionships. Colaprico, DiBernardo and Ertz have shown in Chicago just how well they work together. Add in Mewis, Horan, Lavelle and Sullivan and that is a midfield core that few other countries could beat.

One difficulty here: all of these players are center midfielders. Only Lavelle has seen time for the US on the wing and that was more a matter of finding her a spot than a reflection of her natural position. The same with Colaprico, who played on the left for Chicago this year, but is really a central holding player. This is a consistent problem in the US pool, with lots of central players and almost no true wingers. 

However, it may just be a matter of perspective, because the forward group certainly contains some width. Lynn Williams, in particular, has seen time for the USWNT as a wide forward in a 4-3-3. And while that’s not her ‘natural’ position, she’s been pretty successful in the role. Williams has all the tools to start the 2019 Women’s World Cup in France as the right wing if she can keep progressing the way she is.


The Borderline Players

‘Borderline’ isn’t an insult here. Having someone able to come in to fill in for another player is an underrated quality in a player and on a roster. These players are stuck behind some stars, but that doesn’t mean they’re not great themselves. The point of this group is to identify those players who might sit on the bench, or see 15 minutes at the end of a match, or who could play a full 90 in some cases. And you need a stable of good depth players, because reality is often less forgiving than hypotheticals. When your first and second choices are hurt, having a talented player ready to step in can be the difference between winning a tournament and going home early.

In terms of goalkeeping, the list is long. Ashlyn Harris, Michelle Betos, Abby Smith, Aubrey Bledsoe and Jane Campbell all have the skills to be a second or third choice goalkeeper. And at least historically, there’s been very little difference between second and fifth. Mary Harvey then Briana Scurry and then Hope Solo, with their supporting cast rarely seeing more than a game here and there. Each time a strong number one has risen the others in the pool have all taken, not the backseat, but the seat in the back of the car behind them.

Of this group, Harris and Campbell have received the most call ups, but neither have seen much playing time. Bledsoe showed herself to be a capable backup when Harris was hurt this season. Betos was one of the best in the league before heading to Europe. There’s plenty of other options here, but it would be nice to bring her in for a camp to see her progress. And Smith is similar to Campbell: a young and up and comer, worth keeping an eye on.

The defensive core has grown a little lightweight, and needs to be bolstered sooner rather than later.  Looking at the NWSL gives us some clue as to who might be in the depth pool for the US. In my eyes, this group is composed of: Ali Krieger, Amber Brooks, Erica Skroski, Jaelene Hinkle, Katherine Reynolds, Katie Naughton and Taylor Smith. 

Krieger may not have a spot in Ellis’s eye, but still has plenty of talent and could be a calming force for the team. But while she made a name for herself at outside back, it’s at center back where she’d be most useful now. She played nearly all of the season there for Orlando, and showed that it was a good fit for her now. She isn’t the speedster she once was at outside back but she is still fast for a centerback and has the soccer smarts to be able to help lock down a game late on the national team.

Brooks, Skroski, Hinkle, Reynolds, and Naughton all have shown their chops in the NWSL over the last season. Brooks moved into the role partway through the season for a weak Houston team, but took to the role very well. Skroski’s sophomore season wasn’t as dynamic as her rookie year, but a lot of that can be chalked up to minor injuries that nagged her all season. If she’s back to full health, she remains a useful option at outside back. Hinkle had a solid season in North Carolina with an attacking presence on the left to help spark the North Carolina offense. Reynolds and Naughton both deserve looks after solid seasons on playoff level teams. Naughton in particular really showed growth between last year and this year. 

For depth in the midfield I went with Allie Long, Christina Gibbons, McCall Zerboni, Morgan Brian and Sofia Huerta.

Allie Long was given a shot to shine on the national team and never quite was able to show there what she had in Portland. With the strength of the other central midfield options I think we are likely to see less of Long both on the bench and on the field for the national team.

McCall Zerboni had a wonderful 2017 and she deserved the call up she got, warm body call or not. But the problem going forward for her is there are players nearly a decade younger with the same range of talents and ability. I wish things were different, but her peak likely has come a bit too late. If she has any role with the team, it’s likely to be a late sub in a game where the US needs to stay tough and hold a lead.

Who would have thought in 2015 anyone would be talking about Morgan Brian as a depth player? If it were just about talent, she’d still be up there as a lock, but at this point her injury history is a serious red flag. While I think she has a chance to recover with some extended time to recuperate, as of right now, it’s hard to see her in the XI or even on the 23. Every game she isn’t playing is another chance for a center midfielder to write their name above her’s on the list.

Sofia Huerta has seen some calls up as an outside back, but in the long term I don’t see that as a long term solution for either player or team. Christina Gibbons is also a possible defensive option, but her transition into the central midfield at FCKC has shown that the midfield is her best position. Still, when you’re talking about depth, having players like these with a lot of positional flexibility is never a bad idea.

The forward pool is one of the most interesting we have to talk about. I’ve gone with Ashley Hatch, Carli Lloyd, Crystal Dunn, Margaret Purce, Merritt Mathias and Shea Groom.

Dunn has sadly taken a step back after going to England in 2017. Maybe that’s a matter of different usage, maybe it’s simply a regression in form. For now, she’s a depth option, though we all know what she’s capable of. If the form returns, maybe the placement changes.

Carli Lloyd is simply not the player she once was. Nor is she the player that the USWNT needs now. When she comes on the field the formation has the bend to her to keep her from becoming a liability, and she just isn’t good enough anymore to justify those contortions. At this point the trend is moving in only one direction, as she slowly fades from starter to bench player.

Ashley Hatch Margaret Purce, Merritt Mathias and Shea Groom are a tale of two groups.

Hatch and Purce are both up and comers. They have bright futures if they can grow as players. Hatch could very well be a nice pairing in a 4-4-2. She worked well with Williams this year in North Carolina and might fill the type of roll Amy Rodriguez did for much of her national team career. Purce could be a nice wide player to bring out when the US needs a bit of a spark late in a game. She has a nice cross in and showed a resilience during her season with Boston.

Mathias and Groom are not rookies. But they do bring something that a lot of the players don’t on the current team. They have the type of hard-nosed play that befuddles opposing teams. That can be risky–they both have disciplinary records to match their styles–but it can be very effective when a team needs to go full out. Mathias and Groom also could, in theory, play wingback if needed.


The Final 45

It was much harder to find players to find players for some positions than it was for others. It shows where the US could do with some investment as they move toward 2019 and 2020.

So this invites the question. If you were coming up with your own 45, who would you add to my list and who would you take off?

Denise Reddy Named Head Coach Of Sky Blue FC

Sky Blue FC has announced that Denise Reddy has been hired as the new head coach of the team.

Reddy, who most recently served as assistant coach with the Washington Spirit, has head coaching experience from time spent in Sweden, Denmark, and the United States.

“Words cannot describe how excited and honored I am to be the Head Coach of Sky Blue FC. This is where my coaching career started, and it feels great to be back in Jersey and part of such a professional organization. I am looking forward to starting this journey with such top-class players and cannot wait to get on the pitch.” said Reddy.

“We are thrilled that Denise has agreed to join our organization. Her diverse experience, passion and approach to the game are a wonderful fit. We strongly believe Denise is the right person to provide our players with the development, preparation and leadership they deserve, and we look forward to the upcoming season.” said Steven Temares, Sky Blue FC co-owner.

Reddy replaces former Sky Blue FC head coach Christy Holly, who stepped down from his position in August. 

Chelsea Ladies: The Real Chelsea

About two months ago, I moved to London to pursue my Masters in Human Rights at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). Being a massive fan of soccer (or football as it is called over here), and women’s soccer in particular, I was eager to check out some of the London area teams in the FA WSL. My first choice was Chelsea, and shortly after moving to the city, I went to their season opener against Bristol City.

I knew that women’s soccer in the United Kingdom was still in its early stages. It didn’t exactly shock me that it took 90 minutes to get from my apartment in Central London to the stadium—about 45 minutes on the Underground and 45 minutes on a bus—but I could see where conversations about accessibility come into play. The match had little advertising outside of the women’s soccer circles on social media, and the team’s new stadium—officially known as the Cherry Red Records Stadium—left much to be desired. But there were over 1,000 people at the season opener, and Chelsea looked impressive in their 6-0 victory. I knew I was seeing some of the best players in the world—Ramona Bachmann, Crystal Dunn, Fran Kirby, and Hedvig Lindhal, amongst others. Even better, a ticket to the match was only £6.

I had every intention of going back to another Chelsea Ladies match. At the same time, I was starting my program at LSE. A few of the people on my program were soccer fans, although admittedly most of those soccer fans were men. I was talking to one of my classmates about it as we walked to an event. I told him that I was a women’s soccer fan and I told him he should check out some of the women’s teams in the area. I told him that I was getting ready to see Bayern Munich vs. Chelsea in Champions League and that it was only £6.

A random stranger stopped us as we were walking through the building. “I’m sorry,” this man said. “Did you say you saw Chelsea for £6?”

“Yeah,” I said. “Their women’s team.”

The stranger looked at the guy I had been talking to and laughed, as if they were sharing some personal joke.

“Oh,” he said. “I thought you meant the real Chelsea.”

He laughed again and kept walking. 

I didn’t say anything to my friend about it. In fact, I had drawn this reaction to women’s soccer with such frequency that it didn’t even stand out to me until later, when I was getting ready to go to the match. I was so excited to go to my first Champions League game. I didn’t understand why some people sought to undermine it. The Chelsea Ladies had looked great in their first match—so, why were they any less worthy of this man’s respect?

When I got to the match, I was surprised. I expected a Wednesday night match to struggle for attendance, especially since Chelsea Ladies draw a lot of families. But to my surprise, there were over 2,000 fans in attendance and Bayern Munich had their own traveling supporters section.

I sat down towards the front. They had been handing out free Chelsea flags outside of the stadium and I didn’t want those waving in my face, so I sat behind one of the academy teams. These girls were probably between 8-10, but I quickly realized how well they knew their stuff. Two of the girls sat down next to me, with the rest spread out in the front row.

“There seems to be a lot of stoppage in this game,” one of the girls said during the first half.

“Yeah,” the other said. “Munich fouls a lot.”

Shortly after that, Chelsea came close to a breakaway, before a Bayern Munich player tackled her to the ground.

“Come on!” The girls moaned.

It kept going like that for most of the game. The girls argued about the calls they didn’t like, and pointed out which players they were most like.

“I’m like Fran Kirby,” the girl next to me said.

“Yeah,” another one laughed. “Cause you’re short!”

“And fast,” the girl said, swinging her legs under her seat.

It was a thrilling 1-0 win for Chelsea Ladies, with a goal scored by Drew Spence, who I met after the match. For me, the best moment of the game was when the women walked out of the tunnel. All the people around me—a lot of them families—had their flags waving in the air. They were singing the Chelsea song. And the two little boys behind me—no older than five or six—were freaking out. “CHELSEA!” They kept screaming. They went on like that for most of the game. “GO CHELSEA!”

That’s right. Chelsea. Because to those kids—those young boys who hadn’t been taught to think less of the women than the men, those young girls who thought that maybe someday they could be on that pitch—these players were the “real” Chelsea. There was no difference for them. And that was enough to give me hope.

NWSL: We’ll Cross That Bridge When We Get There

The fifth National Women’s Soccer League is well in the rearview mirror.  National team players are in camp, while overseas leagues like the Australian W-League and England’s FA WSL are underway.

Looking back on the NWSL, the excitement and action of the season was clearly memorable. We had  Sam Kerr scoring goals on her way to the Golden Boot and MVP awards, Marta elevating the play of the Pride and guiding them to the first playoff appearance for an expansion team, and Christine Sinclair leading the Portland Thorns to their second league title.

However, not all the action stayed on the pitch.

Those that followed the league closely will remember the nebulous NWSL disciplinary committee suspending Seattle Reign defender Merritt Mathias and Thorns forward Tyler Lussi. However, even those paying close attention would probably have a challenging time actually explaining the league policy and inner workings of the DisCo, and that’s a problem. As the league becomes more stable and mature, there should be a higher expectation for defined league policies and transparency on how those policies function.

To illustrate the point, it’s worth taking a moment to consider things on the men’s side. At Orlando this year, for example, a couple players had off-the-field issues involving the law. After their arrests, these players were placed into Major League Soccer’s Substance Abuse and Behavioral Health (SABH) policy. This program covers a range of issues, including the codification of player suspensions, potential behavioral health assessments, and treatment for the player if required. The idea is to directly address the direct issue of player arrests, while taking a “whole person” approach that focuses on player wellness as well as simple punishment.

Thankfully, as far as we know, this type of program hasn’t been needed in the NWSL. But there have been some close cases, with one recent prominent example being the Alex Morgan alcohol-related incident at Walt Disney World’s Epcot theme park. The end result of that incident was Morgan and members of her group being escorted out after a day of drinking around the world. Nobody in the group was arrested.

Now, this incident is worth discussing not because of what actually happened. As far as we know, this was an isolated incident, with no reason to expect any recurring problem. The only reason the story received global attention is because of who Alex Morgan is. However, while there is no reason to think anything serious happened here, and no need to rehash the minor details, it did call attention to the question of underlying policy. Because, when asked whether they had a something similar to the MLS SABH policy, the NWSL responded that they did not have any set policy, and would handle any instance on a case-by-case basis.

The SABH policy also governs drug testing. Federated players compete in Olympic and international competitions, in which drug testing is normal, but we have no information about whether the league’s other players might fit into a league drug testing policy. It wouldn’t be shocking if the NWSL drug tested the players somehow–other women’s sporting organizations like the WNBA and LPGA have systems in place–but we have no information about whether it actually happens. And given the general bare bones standards set by the league, it certainly wouldn’t be surprising if the non-federation players are not drug tested. The league is focusing on raising standards from bare-bones to merely acceptable. It’s possible that drug testing simply hasn’t made the cut.  Maybe, just like with the substance abuse policy, they’re operating on a case-by-case basis.

The question: is that the best approach for a growing league?

Back in May, Amanda Duffy was questioned on the NFL policy known as the Rooney Rule, which requires a team to interview a minority candidate for open positions like head coach. The thought here is to promote diversity within the coaching ranks, a point made now that Laura Harvey has stepped down as Seattle Reign head coach. Her response was not all that surprising.

Generally, as a society we prefer to establish policies that are clearly stated, in which actions are treated equally. Anything else risks creating awkward situations and double standards. Had the situation with Alex Morgan escalated into something worse would the league have taken any action or would U.S. Soccer have stepped in? What if the Morgan incident had also included non-federated players? What sort of actions would those players face, and would all the players be treated equally? Could an amateur player looking to make a team turn to performing enhancing drugs, knowing there is no system to prevent it and catch a potential culprit? If so, doesn’t that create an awful incentive for other players struggling to make the roster to engage in similar experiments?

It’s time the NWSL front office establish a formal policy, so that players, front offices, and coaches can understand the rules and play the game fairly. As a growing league, it’s understandable they’ve prioritized other things, but the time for creating policy on the fly is over.

The WNBA uses the NBA as a model for its policy. Is there a good reason why the NWSL couldn’t do the same, and adopt a variation of the MLS SABH policy? Surely, given how involved U.S. Soccer is in the league, it would be no difficult thing.

This would also be a perfect opportunity for the league to act in good faith, and engage with the newly formed NWSL Players Association. That could improve relations with the players, and help set the tone for productive arrangements when a union is eventually formed. 

The old patchwork system, where federated players operate under one set of rules set by the national team, and everyone else operates in a series of grey areas, is no longer acceptable. Players shouldn’t have to speculate about consequences. Fans and media shouldn’t have to speculate either. 

Just create a policy, NWSL. You’ve got a perfectly good guide available in the MLS policy. Don’t wait until a crisis happens. The league has spent a lot of time being reactive. It’s time to start being proactive.

Who Should Make a 23 Person USWNT Roster?


Sometimes thought experiments are a good way to go through players pools and figuring out what you like and don’t like about players. As someone who writes about women’s soccer, I do a lot of thought experiments that never see the light of day. But the last one I did was something I thought I’d share.

It started with a simple question: Who could reasonably be included in the USWNT pool? It then turned quickly into who would make the best 23? Not who ARE the best 23 players in the country but which 23 would make the most solid team? I’m sure if you looked at the list of the last few rosters of players called up to the USWNT you could put together a 23 woman list that would be the envy of most countries on earth.

But is that the best the US could do?

I think if there was an event, a fictional mid December tournament, let’s say in France with Germany, the US and Australia all invited. Each team gets 23 players on the roster and the USWNT no longer has players they have to call up due to contracts, who makes the cut?

If I were in charge, and every player were healthy, this is what would my 23 for this tournament look like.

Before you crack your knuckles and start commenting and why this or that player should have made the cut, let me explain how I got down to the pool I did. I listed out all of the players in the NWSL, sorry college players but I don’t know you well enough to judge you yet, who could be called up to the USWNT. 

Goalkeeper Defenders Midfielders Forwards
Abby Smith Abby Dahlkemper Allie Long Alex Morgan
Adrianna Franch Ali Krieger Andi Sullivan Ashley Hatch
Alyssa Naeher Amber Brooks Christina Gibbons Beverly Yanez
Ashlyn Harris Arin Gilliland Christine Nairn Carli Lloyd
Aubrey Bledsoe Becky Sauerbrunn Dani Weatherholt Cheyna Williams
Haley Kopmeyer Caprice Dydasco Danielle Colaprico Chioma Ubogagu
Jane Campbell Cari Roccaro Daphne Corboz Christen Press
Katelyn Rowland Carson Pickett Julie Ertz Crystal Dunn
Michelle Betos Casey Short Kealia Ohai Jasmyne Spencer
  Christen Westphal Kristen Edmonds Jessica McDonald
  Emily Menges Kristie Mewis Lynn Williams
  Emily Sonnett Lindsey Horan Mallory Pugh
  Erica Skroski Lo’eau LaBonta Margaret Purce
  Estelle Johnson McCall Zerboni Merritt Matthias
  Gina Lewandowski Megan Rapinoe Rachel Hill
  Jaelene Hinkle Meggie Dougherty Howard Savannah Jordan
  Katherine Reynolds Morgan Andrews Shea Groom
  Kelley O’Hara Morgan Brian Stephanie McCaffrey
  Kristen McNabb Nikki Stanton Sydney Leroux
  Lauren Barnes Rose Lavelle  
  Mandy Freeman Samantha Mewis  
  Megan Oyster Sarah Killion  
  Meghan Klingenberg Sofia Huerta  
  Sam Witteman Tobin Heath  
  Taylor Smith Tori Huster  
    Vanessa DiBernardo  

To start pairing down the list I removed the players who I gave a “soft pass” to. These are players who either have never been in the USWNT system, have been passed by it, or I don’t think have that special something needed to be on the full national team. 

The players given a “soft pass” are marked in red.

Goalkeeper Defenders Midfielders Forwards
Abby Smith Abby Dahlkemper Allie Long Alex Morgan
Adrianna Franch Amber Brooks Andi Sullivan Ashley Hatch
Alyssa Naeher Becky Sauerbrunn Christina Gibbons Carli Lloyd
Ashlyn Harris Caprice Dydasco Dani Weatherholt Cheyna Williams
Aubrey Bledsoe Cari Roccaro Danielle Colaprico Chioma Ubogagu
Jane Campbell Carson Pickett Daphne Corboz Christen Press
Katelyn Rowland Casey Short Julie Ertz Crystal Dunn
Michelle Betos Christen Westphal Kristen Edmonds Jasmyne Spencer
Haley Kopmeyer Emily Menges Lindsey Horan Lynn Williams
  Emily Sonnett Megan Rapinoe Mallory Pugh
  Erica Skroski Meggie Dougherty Howard Margaret Purce
  Jaelene Hinkle Morgan Andrews Rachel Hill
  Katherine Reynolds Morgan Brian Savannah Jordan
  Kelley O’Hara Rose Lavelle Shea Groom
  Kristen McNabb Samantha Mewis Beverly Yanez
  Mandy Freeman Sarah Killion Jessica McDonald
  Taylor Smith Sofia Huerta Merritt Matthias
  Ali Krieger Tobin Heath Stephanie McCaffrey
  Arin Gilliland Vanessa DiBernardo Sydney Leroux
  Estelle Johnson Christine Nairn  
  Gina Lewandowski Kealia Ohai  
  Lauren Barnes Kristie Mewis  
  Megan Oyster Lo’eau LaBonta  
  Meghan Klingenberg McCall Zerboni  
  Sam Witteman Nikki Stanton  
    Tori Huster  

Then it was time to look at the remaining players and remove those who just aren’t ready yet in my best estimation. Some were rookies, some had been in the league for a few years but were just becoming starters, and still yet some had shifted positions and I wanted a bit more “burn in” before they were called up.

The players given “Give Them Time” are listed in blue.
The players given a “Soft Pass” are marked in red.

Goalkeeper Defenders Midfielders Forwards
Adrianna Franch Abby Dahlkemper Allie Long Alex Morgan
Alyssa Naeher Amber Brooks Andi Sullivan Ashley Hatch
Ashlyn Harris Becky Sauerbrunn Danielle Colaprico Carli Lloyd
Michelle Betos Casey Short Julie Ertz Christen Press
Abby Smith Emily Menges Lindsey Horan Crystal Dunn
Aubrey Bledsoe Emily Sonnett Megan Rapinoe Lynn Williams
Jane Campbell Jaelene Hinkle Morgan Brian Mallory Pugh
Katelyn Rowland Katherine Reynolds Rose Lavelle Shea Groom
Haley Kopmeyer Kelley O’Hara Samantha Mewis Cheyna Williams
  Taylor Smith Sofia Huerta Chioma Ubogagu
  Caprice Dydasco Tobin Heath Jasmyne Spencer
  Cari Roccaro Vanessa DiBernardo Margaret Purce
  Carson Pickett Christina Gibbons Rachel Hill
  Christen Westphal Dani Weatherholt Savannah Jordan
  Erica Skroski Daphne Corboz Beverly Yanez
  Kristen McNabb Kristen Edmonds Jessica McDonald
  Mandy Freeman Meggie Dougherty Howard Merritt Matthias
  Ali Krieger Morgan Andrews Stephanie McCaffrey
  Arin Gilliland Sarah Killion Sydney Leroux
  Estelle Johnson Christine Nairn  
  Gina Lewandowski Kealia Ohai  
  Lauren Barnes Kristie Mewis  
  Megan Oyster Lo’eau LaBonta  
  Meghan Klingenberg McCall Zerboni  
  Sam Witteman Nikki Stanton  
    Tori Huster  

After the first two rounds of cuts I had 33 players left. A mix of older and younger players that was really difficult to break down much more than I had. It was from this group I’d make my 23. 

Goalkeeper Defenders Midfielders Forwards
Alyssa Naeher Becky Sauerbrunn Julie Ertz Alex Morgan
Adrianna Franch Casey Short Lindsey Horan Christen Press
Ashlyn Harris Kelley O’Hara Samantha Mewis Mallory Pugh
Michelle Betos Abby Dahlkemper Tobin Heath Ashley Hatch
  Amber Brooks Allie Long Carli Lloyd
  Emily Menges Andi Sullivan Crystal Dunn
  Emily Sonnett Danielle Colaprico Lynn Williams
  Jaelene Hinkle Megan Rapinoe Shea Groom
  Katherine Reynolds Morgan Brian  
  Taylor Smith Rose Lavelle  
    Sofia Huerta  
    Vanessa DiBernardo  

My person preference when I’m putting together a roster is a balance between defenders, attacking players who are strong defenders and attacking players who bring the heat with the usual 3 goalkeeper set up.

I started to pair down by looking first at the goalkeepers.

Goalkeepers

Alyssa Naeher, Adrianna Franch, Ashlyn Harris, Michelle Betos were the goalkeepers that survived my first two rounds of cuts.

At 29, 26, 32 and 29 it’s not a young group by any means.

For this roster I wanted Naeher’s experience as the current number one. Adrianna Franch, the best goalkeeper in the NWSL in 2017, was my second choice.

Third choice was down to Ashlyn Harris or Michelle Betos. In the end I went with Betos. I want to see how her time away from the NWSL has done to her game.

I would give each of the three a game to see just what they could do against high level attacks.

Just like that 3 of the 23 slots were decided.

Defenders

Going from 10 really solid defenders down to six is never easy. I am the type of roster builder that usually tries to sneak an extra defender or two in, but with the 23 I’m building I don’t have room for more than the 6 I went with.

Amber Brooks, Emily Menges, Jaelene Hinkle and Katherine Reynolds were the four that ended up chopped last.

Dahlkemper, Sauerbrunn and Sonnett are three centerbacks that give me the type of tenacity and reliability I’m looking for. Sauerbrunn has been the rock of the USWNT backline over the last 3 years in a way that has saved more goals than her lack of speed has created. In Dahlkemper and Sonnett I’d get a pair of up and coming players who are hungry to prove their worth.

And with O’Hara, Short and Smith you have speed, defense and each has an attacking soul deep down that tends to pop up in key moments.

I’d start O’Hara and Short, use Smith as a sub if needed for Short and shift O’Hara to the left. With the centerbacks I’d like start safe with Dahlkemper and Sauerbrunn and bring in Sonnett as needed.

9 players down, 14 to go. 

Attacking Players

This is a bit of a two for one.

Let’s look at the center of the park and then the forward attack.

I tend to forget just how stacked the center midfield is for the US because Ellis doesn’t call a lot of the players in.

No matter who I went with in this pool I was going to get center midfielders who can do work. I ended up keeping Julie Ertz, Samantha Mewis, Andi Sullivan, Danielle Colaprico, Rose Lavelle, and Vanessa DiBernardo.

I want a little bit of what each brings. Is it a lot of options in the center, yes. But with Ertz ability to be the 6, 8 or 10, Colaprico’s skill on the ball, Sullivan’s talent for disruption, Lavelle’s vision, Mewis’s crazy soccer smarts and DiBernardo’s everything, it is a 6 pack worth having.

Yes, I cut Horan from this, mostly because I think with the midfield I’m thinking of, Colaprico or DiBernardo could do the job with a few less yellow cards. 

Any three put out there will have all the keys needed to prevent being run over. And the level of finesse to physicality can be turned up or down depending on the team of the moment.

No team wins without attackers, right? So for my wingers/wide forwards/forwards I went with the idea of “if it isn’t broken, don’t try to fix it too much”.

Having Alex Morgan, Christen Press, Mallory Pugh, Lynn Williams, Ashley Hatch, Tobin Heath, Megan Rapinoe, and Sofia Huerta all on the same team feels a little like playing a video game. They are all so good.

I added Ashley Hatch because the forwards need a little more spark at times. Dunn used to have that role but England has hurt Crystal Dunn’s game on the USWNT. I wish it hadn’t but she didn’t look like the same player in her minutes with the team. I hope she can come back to the NWSL and find her mojo. But until then I have to go with another attacker.

And yeah, no Carli Lloyd. They are a better team when she isn’t there to force the line up in her image.

So the full 23 would be:

Goalkeeper Defenders Midfielders Forwards
Alyssa Naeher Becky Sauerbrunn Julie Ertz Alex Morgan
Adrianna Franch Casey Short Samantha Mewis Christen Press
Michelle Betos Kelley O’Hara Tobin Heath Mallory Pugh
  Abby Dahlkemper Andi Sullivan Lynn Williams
  Emily Sonnett Danielle Colaprico Ashley Hatch
  Taylor Smith Megan Rapinoe  
    Rose Lavelle  
    Sofia Huerta  
    Vanessa DiBernardo  

So is my 23 the 23 best players in the NWSL that the US could take? Maybe. I went with some young choices in hopes of growing the players and trying a few new things. I think the 23 I went with would at least be a bit of an entertaining mix.

If you were going to pull together a 23-player roster for a December tournament, if all spots were open, who would you go with

The Path to Madness and Heartbreak: Letting Go of 2015


The 2015 Women’s World Cup is one of the most exciting sporting events we’ve ever watched. It had drama, emotional release of all those years of waiting, and is still the most-watched soccer game for the US. It was the very best result the US could have hoped for.

Even now if the first few chords of Rihanna’s “American Oxygen” came on, the power of memory would transport many back to those Canadian fields where America broke a 16-year drought that felt like a lifetime of frustration.

And now it’s time we let it go.

As much as it was important and brought forth a new wave of excitement for the USWNT itself and for women’s soccer as a whole, we have to step away from the shadow it casts and move down the road. 

We see it all the time in the suggestions both fans and media make toward the roster. It’s in the small details people hold as fact that haven’t been true in two years. Things have shifted and it’s time we face the facts. The team of now is no longer the team of then, and trying to fix this team with those players only leads to madness and heartbreak.


Letting Go of Important Players

It’s never easy to say goodbye to the players who were key to big moments. No matter how much the program needs to grow past who they were and who they are now, there is always a bittersweet taste left in doing so.

The last two years have changed the very core of who this team is. They are no longer the outstanding defensive team that matched the record for minutes played without allowing a goal at the World Cup. They no longer have a goalkeeper and backline that are unyielding in the face of the world’s best attacking players.

They are above average in the world in terms of the defense but no longer sit at the very top. They have changed into a hyper-attacking style of defense that Ellis has used to start, and in some cases equally participate in, the attack in a way they did much less of in 2015. In this system, we’re going to see more attacking players converted rather than defensive players. It leads to the kind of high risk, high reward play that O’Hara and Short have shown us Ellis is comfortable with, even as the rest of us find ourselves squirming from play-to-play.

The game played in 2017 doesn’t put as much value on the “defend first, attack second” outside backs of years past. North Carolina, Sky Blue, Chicago all have defenders in the USWNT’s usual rotation of players, and all use an attacking style of outside back, either as a result of, or because Ellis is seeing how well it works and using those players in a similar way herself.

In talking about letting go of players, we have to talk about the two that seem to be the hardest to give up.

We have to talk about Ali Krieger and Hope Solo.

I’ve written about my thoughts on Krieger and her quest for 100 caps. She is as deserving as anyone to hit the milestone, but 2017 Krieger is no longer 2015 Krieger.  And 2017 Krieger isn’t a good enough outside back to make it into the Starting XI over O’Hara or Short or Smith. And when building a team for the future, Krieger isn’t who you pick over some of the players making their way onto this team. Screaming into the void about how Ali Krieger would solve this, that, and the other thing is just screaming for the honor of defending her honor at this point.

Krieger is likely to make the switch to centerback permanent going forward. As outside backs get older some are able to find a second life in central defense. Some get an extra few years making the swap and at club-level Krieger is surely good enough to keep playing as a centerback. Maybe even as an outside back.

But for the USWNT? She’s not better than O’Hara or Short in the system they want to play. She doesn’t have the speed to get back, cut players off and keep the fastest forwards at bay anymore. She can mentally make the runs but defenders, and outside backs even more so, slow down as they age. And Krieger isn’t immune to Father Time.

As sad as many find it, myself included, calling Krieger up and starting her at right back simply are no longer options going forward as the team prepares for France 2019. And neither is calling in Hope Solo.

As much as many of us long for the days when Solo seemed ten feet tall and bulletproof in goal, those days are gone. She has had two major shoulder surgeries and as far as we know from the second, she hasn’t been medically cleared to dive on her shoulder yet, much less fully train with any team. Goalkeepers do have a habit of being able to outlast field players but it’s time to accept that Alyssa Naeher is the new Number One. As much as Solo might tease on social media about a comeback to club, a comeback to country is a bridge she and USSF have both burned down.

Moving past Solo was going to happen sooner or later. She wasn’t going to wear the #1 for the US for more than another cycle, and that was if she was able to come back at all from her latest surgery. Add on top the issues she has with the federation and the issues the federation has with her, and as messy as the break up was, it was always going to happen sooner rather than later. 

At this point, we have to want them to move away from her. As much as Solo has given to the USWNT she has managed to dig herself into a hole with breathtaking efficiency.

To paraphrase a popular song, Solo and USSF are never, ever, ever getting back together.


Remembering Without Idealizing

It is possible to both remember fondly the team that won the 2015 World Cup and understand the current state of the USWNT. It is possible to understand that it won’t be helped by either bringing those same players back in or reverting to the style that won those games. As much as Morgan Brian and Carli Lloyd aided in 2015 win, in the world of 2017 we can do better in those positions and we must in order to keep up with the rest of the world.

Carli Lloyd played 16 minutes of the most out-of-her-mind soccer that has ever been played. And it’s possible to remember how wonderful those three goals were without over-compensating for her as an overall player, and her in the current women’s soccer environment. She is not good enough to start for the USWNT anymore. And while that is a hard pill for some to take it is a face we’ve seen each time she isn’t in the XI for the USWNT. They play better without her reorienting the attacking formation around herself. 

Morgan Brian gets this treatment all the time. “She was an amazing attacking midfielder in college” someone cries into the void. And she was.

But she isn’t that player for the USWNT, and with her injury history, there is a chance she won’t be one of the 23 players on the roster for the 2019 Women’s World Cup. And that sucks, but it’s reality. And as much as soccer media and soccer fans like to think about all possibilities, we do have the ground ourselves in the possible. Without it, we’re just writing a novel that has as much to do with the world we live in today as any fantasy novel written by an able craftsperson would.

Maybe Brain gets healthy this offseason. Maybe she beats out Ertz, Mewis, and Horan and works her way back into the Starting XI for the USWNT. Maybe in 2019 she’s the best midfielder on the team and in the world. Wouldn’t that be great? It would be. But right now there are so many “what ifs” attached to it that it’s a murky future at best.

This trickles to players who will almost certainly be on the roster for 2019 and likely will still be starting. It isn’t reserved just for players hurt or past their prime.

Becky Sauerbrunn, the overworked captain, isn’t in 2017 what she was in 2015. Is she still the best centerback in the USWNT pool? Yes, I believe she is. But is she invincible? No. She has lost a little spark as of late which we can only hope she finds after some rest and time off. But fooling ourselves that she will be 2015 Sauerbrunn forever doesn’t change the basic facts. It just keeps our heads in the past and makes our pain more certain when things don’t work out that way.

Honoring the deeds done by players while still accepting who they are now has to become something we are okay with doing.


What Does Letting Go of 2015 Mean?

It’s hard to let go of 2015. Of the defense that was such a strong unit. Of the style of attacking that was so of its moment but ended up winning the day with one of the most magnificent performances we’ve ever seen. Of the players whose names we wear so proudly on our backs.

But moving on is needed to be able to understand the team as they are now. Comparing Naeher to Solo at every turn does nothing but lead to frustration. Comparing her to the players of now, Harris and Campbell, is going to at least keep us focused on the moment.

It’s okay to miss the players and the moments that are important to us. Going back and watching games is something we all do. It’s natural to want to feel a little tingle of that glory again. But wishing players back and pretending that we can’t see the writing on the wall does nothing but lead to anger and frustration, for everyone.

The team of 2017 has faults and flaws and needs improvement in areas that I’m not sure we’ll see in time to save their hopes for a fourth star in France. But wishing the 2015 team was in its place? Pretending like they can ride back in and save the day? That way madness lies. Madness and heartbreak.