USWNT player ratings: Lack of ideas as U.S. barely survives Portugal

Lots of not-great, and some quite bad!

The U.S. women’s national team, by a margin of about three inches, survived a feisty Portugal side to get through to the knockout round of the World Cup.

That’s about all the good news there is to discuss. The USWNT were totally unable to solve the Portuguese midfield diamond throughout a troubling 0-0 draw, struggling for possession and also lacking chances to break out in transition.

The stats may show the USWNT holding a 17-6 shot advantage, and this is another game in which a U.S. opponent were held without a shot on goal. However, anyone that watched the match would be able to tell you that the Portuguese troubled the U.S. from start to finish, seeing the game’s best chance end with Ana Capeta hitting the post deep in stoppage time.

It was a dispiriting and disappointing showing in which no player really looked like they’d been given a platform to be their best. If the USWNT is to go on and make history as the first team to win three consecutive World Cups, this has to be by far their worst performance of the tournament.

Here’s a breakdown from a game in which no one looked particularly good.

As a reminder, here’s the Pro Soccer Wire player rating scale:

Our scale:

  • 1: Abysmal. Literally any member of our staff would have been been able to play at this level.
  • 6: Adequate. This is our base score.
  • 10: Transcendent, era-defining performance. This is Carli Lloyd vs. Japan in the 2015 final.

Morgan: USWNT not happy with Netherlands draw

The fate of Group E is in the balance after the 1-1 result

Alex Morgan has admitted that the U.S. women’s national team is “not happy” after only managing to draw the Netherlands 1-1 in their second game of the World Cup.

The U.S. fell behind midway through a subpar first half after Jill Roord found the net with a low drive from the top of the box.

Fueled by Lindsey Horan, the USWNT stormed back in the second half but still only managed to draw in a result that leaves Group E hanging in the balance.

The USWNT is level on points with Netherlands atop the group, sitting in first place due to a two-goal advantage in goal differential. But with the Netherlands facing Vietnam in their final group match, a heavy win would put the pressure on the U.S. to follow suit against Portugal.

Morgan was well aware of the repercussions of the USWNT’s failure to win against the Dutch, and could not hide her frustration with the result.

“We knew [the equalizer] was coming. We knew it was inevitable and not to get the second one, I think it’s a bit unlucky,” Morgan told ESPN.

“We played in their half almost the entire second half. I don’t even think they had really dangerous opportunities in the second half. So just to see us come into the locker room, regroup and come out in the second half and put on that display, I’m really proud of the group.

“But yeah, we’re not happy if we’re not getting the win. Obviously, it puts first place of the group up for grabs now. So we have to close the job when we play Portugal in a few days.”

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USWNT player ratings: Disappointing showing vs. Netherlands ends in draw

A good start and finish sandwiched some worrying stuff for the USWNT

The U.S. women’s national team was far from its best against the Netherlands, struggling for a long spell in the middle of the match before recovering for a 1-1 draw.

Jill Roord’s goal on the first shot conceded all tournament by the USWNT deflated the group, and until Dutch star Daniëlle van de Donk clattered into club teammate Lindsey Horan, it was starting to get hard to see a way back in for the favored Americans.

However, Horan — after a fairly heated argument with van de Donk in the seconds that followed — powered home a header, and the U.S. took the game over for the final half-hour.

The good news? Those final minutes were the “real” USWNT. The bad news? They arrived for a reason the team can’t control, and since a winner didn’t arrive (nor did any substitutions after Rose Lavelle’s entry at halftime), the flaws on the day aren’t going to be papered over by three points.

With all that in mind, let’s dig into who delivered, and who didn’t.

As a reminder, here’s the Pro Soccer Wire player rating scale:

Our scale:

  • 1: Abysmal. Literally any member of our staff would have been been able to play at this level.
  • 6: Adequate. This is our base score.
  • 10: Transcendent, era-defining performance. This is Carli Lloyd vs. Japan in the 2015 final.

Morgan admits USWNT wasn’t ‘always clicking’ against Vietnam

The USWNT will have to improve ahead of its second game against the Netherlands

Alex Morgan admitted that the U.S. women’s national team was not at its best in its World Cup opener against Vietnam.

The USWNT defeated Vietnam 3-0 in a game it controlled from start to finish, but it squandered a number of chances — including a missed penalty by Morgan — in a match it could have easily won by many more goals.

The U.S. will have to be sharper in its second game, a World Cup final rematch against the Netherlands on Wednesday night U.S. time, which is Thursday afternoon in New Zealand.

Speaking at a press conference, Morgan said the USWNT needs to work out some of the kinks from the Vietnam match moving forward.

“I think we saw a lot of glimpses of our potential, but I feel like we weren’t always clicking on the field,” the USWNT co-captain said.

“I feel like some of the plays that we had were a little forced or rushed. So I think it’s having a little more patience, switching a little bit more, having our movements be a little more synchronized. And so I think we’re looking to apply that for this next game and moving forward.”

Several of the underdogs at this World Cup have performed admirably against strong opponents, including CONCACAF sides Jamaica and Haiti, who tied France and narrowly lost to England, respectively.

“We’re seeing that every game is really competitive,” U.S. defender Sofia Huerta said. “We’re glad to see the CONCACAF teams come here and perform so well and make a name for themselves, because every time we have to qualify [for the World Cup] and we’re in the CONCACAF tournament, it’s difficult. I don’t think people realize how hard it is to play some of those teams.”

Morgan added: “There haven’t been many games where teams are able to break through easily against opponents.

“So we knew that would be the case with Vietnam, but we were trying to be patient. I feel like at times we could have just stood on the ball a little more and kind of been a little more decisive with our play. So I think that’s something we could apply to the next game.”

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USWNT player ratings: Smith stands out as U.S. eases past Vietnam in World Cup opener

Smith was at the center of most of the USWNT’s best in their win

It may not have been the blowout some expected, but the U.S. women’s national team started the World Cup off with a 3-0 win over Vietnam.

A first-half brace from Sophia Smith — one goal was clinical, the other needed a fairly hefty slice of luck — set the USWNT on their way. After some missed chances, including an Alex Morgan penalty kick that was saved by Vietnam’s Tran Thi Kim Thanh, Lindsey Horan added the third on an assist from Smith.

In the context of Vietnam’s recent results, including only falling to Germany 2-1, it’s a decent result. It’s also not the rout that fans may have thought was coming, though on another day the goals may have been flowing with just a touch more sharpness from the attacking players.

As a reminder, here’s the Pro Soccer Wire player rating scale:

Our scale:

  • 1: Abysmal. Literally any member of our staff would have been been able to play at this level.
  • 6: Adequate. This is our base score.
  • 10: Transcendent, era-defining performance. This is Carli Lloyd vs. Japan in the 2015 final.

Morgan: Nobody on USWNT is talking about a three-peat

The USWNT has the chance to make history in Australia and New Zealand

Alex Morgan has said the U.S. women’s national team is aware of its potential to win an unprecedented third straight World Cup, but insisted nobody on the roster is bringing that subject up.

The USWNT has touched down in New Zealand, where it will begin its quest for a three-peat on July 21 against Vietnam.

No country, men’s or women’s, has ever won three straight World Cups, while Morgan, Megan Rapinoe, Julie Ertz, Alyssa Naeher and Kelley O’Hara have the chance to join Pelé as the only players to win three World Cup titles.

Though the USWNT is aiming for history in Australia and New Zealand, Morgan said that each World Cup is its own entity, adding that having 14 World Cup first-timers on the roster makes it difficult to focus on anything other than the present.

Asked how often the term “three-peat” is thrown around, Morgan said: “It’s actually never thrown around with the team. It’s thrown around with the media, I think a lot of fans talk about it, but honestly, we have 14 first-timers for the World Cup and we see this as our own journey.

“Each four-year block is its own. We’re coming to the end of this four-year block after the [2019] World Cup. We’re looking to obviously make history, that’d be great to three-peat but for this team, that’s not in the back of our minds. It’s really just winning each game.”

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USWNT names Lindsey Horan, Alex Morgan as World Cup captain(s)

The most-discussed armband in American soccer has been sorted out

Why have one captain when you can have two?

The U.S. women’s national team announced Friday that Lindsey Horan and Alex Morgan are both captains for the upcoming World Cup.

With Becky Sauerbrunn left off the roster due to injury, the two veterans will lead the USWNT’s push to lift an unprecedented third straight World Cup trophy.

Per a U.S. Soccer press release, Horan will wear the armband when both players are on the field (which figures to be most of the tournament).

“We have a lot of leaders on this team among the young players and the veteran players, and among those, Lindsey and Alex have vast experience in big games, and they understand what it takes to win at the highest levels,” said USWNT head coach Vlatko Andonovski. “They are ultimate professionals and understand all the factors that go into having a united and motivated team. I know they will represent us well on and off the field at the World Cup.”

Both players have plenty of experience with the armband. Per U.S. Soccer, Horan has started a match as captain nine times dating back to 2021, while Morgan has been captain 22 times, having first been named captain in 2016. Morgan captained the USWNT in three 2019 World Cup games, including their quarterfinal win against France and a semifinal triumph over England.

Less-experienced USWNT has fewer current captains

A consequence of a less-experienced USWNT for this World Cup is that the squad has fewer players who captain their club teams than in years past.

Of the 23 players Andonovski selected for this tournament, only Morgan (San Diego Wave), Aubrey Kingsbury (Washington Spirit), and Alyssa Naeher (Chicago Red Stars) currently serve as captains at the club level. Midfielders Julie Ertz and Andi Sullivan have also spent full NWSL seasons as captain in the past, while Megan Rapinoe’s off-field presence has been lauded by USWNT players over recent years.

Still, with Horan and Morgan both projected starters, the USWNT will probably end up with at least one more player donning the armband during the World Cup. While the scheduling in the 2023 edition is not too condensed — the USWNT’s three group stage games will be played over 10 days — it stands to reason that Andonovski will look to rotate early so that he can play his strongest 11 in the knockout rounds.

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USWNT World Cup roster includes Wisconsin alum

With the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup set to begin July 20, the USWNT roster was announced Wednesday and it included a former Badger.

With the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup set to begin July 20, the USWNT roster was announced Wednesday and it included a former Wisconsin Badger midfielder. A member of the Badger women’s soccer team from 2013-2016, Rose Lavelle will appear in her second World Cup.

The 5-foot-4 athlete was a superstar for the United States women’s national soccer team during the 2019 World Cup, winning the Bronze Ball as the third-best player in the tournament.

This comes as no surprise though after her successful career with Wisconsin, after she won many awards with the Badgers. These include the 2013 Big Ten Freshman of the Year award, her being named a 2015 MAC Hermann Trophy semifinalist and Lavelle being selected for an All-American team each year from 2014-2016.

Lavelle went on to be selected first overall in the 2017 NWSL Draft by the Boston Breakers and she is one of the very best soccer players in the world, let alone country.

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‘Gutted’ USWNT players open up on World Cup without Becky Sauerbrunn

USWNT players agree that they’re “heartbroken” over Sauerbrunn’s absence

The U.S. women’s national team may be locked in on next month’s World Cup, but Becky Sauerbrunn’s absence from the roster is still weighing heavily on the group.

Sauerbrunn has battled a nagging foot injury that has persisted since late April. Facing a recovery timeline with too many variables, the USWNT captain announced last week that she would not be on a fourth straight World Cup roster.

The mood around that news understandably tempered the normal positivity surrounding the official start of a USWNT World Cup hype cycle. Sauerbrunn’s absence is clearly on the minds of everyone involved with the team.

U.S. Soccer made four players available to media on Wednesday shortly after the roster was released, and every single one of them used the word “heartbroken” when Sauerbrunn came up. The only person to not do so was head coach Vlatko Andonovski, but only because he used a different synonym.

“First, I want to say we’re all gutted for Becky,” said Andonovski in his very first words to media after the 23-player roster came out. “It’s no question that we’re gonna miss Becky. We’re gonna miss her on the field, we’re gonna miss her off the field. If there is someone that has a relationship, a connection, and someone that wanted Becky on this roster, that’s me.”

Andonovski coached Sauerbrunn for four years with FC Kansas City, winning two NWSL championships in 2014 and 2015, and like his predecessor Jill Ellis, made the defender a foundational element within the team’s structure.

“Becky will always be our captain. That’s how we feel, the staff, that’s how the team feels, that’s how everybody feels. I mean, Becky is U.S. women’s national team captain,” added Andonovski, who said he would reveal the team’s replacement captain publicly once he has a chance to gather the squad together and announce the choice internally.

USWNT ‘heartbroken’ for Sauerbrunn

Andonovski’s opinion was clearly shared by USWNT players, whether they be veterans like Crystal Dunn and Alex Morgan, or World Cup first-timers like Naomi Girma and Sophia Smith.

“Becky is not only just a huge presence on the field, and leader on the field, but she’s a person who holds people accountable. She raises the level of standards on every team she’s on,” explained Morgan, presumably one of the top candidates to captain the team in New Zealand and Australia. “Having played with her now for over 12, 13 years, I just have immense respect for her.”

“I don’t think that there’s a bad thing that has come out of a teammate’s mouth [on] Becky, ever in her career,” added Morgan. “That’s a testament to her as a leader, a person, a player, and it’s just terrible news to have right before a World Cup.”

Crystal Dunn, who plays alongside Sauerbrunn with the Portland Thorns and has spent the last few years positioned next to her on the USWNT back line, made no bones about the news being a blow to the group’s hopes this summer.

“Losing her is bigger than just her play on the field,” said Dunn. “Her ability to gather the group and really lead us in the right direction at all times, I think, is something that we are going to greatly miss.”

“I checked in with her, we’ve had a lot of communication back and forth,” added Dunn, who called Sauerbrunn “one of my really great friends.”

“You know, it hurts,” said Dunn. “She’s doing okay. The leader that she is, and she’s always thinking about the team first, and I kind of had to tell her, ‘it’s okay to think about your situation and not only care about the team at this moment.'”

Looking ahead, the USWNT’s solution to winning a third straight World Cup without such a pivotal leader is to call on one of its greatest historic strengths: a belief that the group will fill the void through collective strength and individuals stepping up.

“Not having Becky there, it’s going to be different. It’s going to be a challenge,” said Smith. “It’s going to require a lot of players to step up. I think that’s a [task] that we can accomplish if we stick together.”

“We’re ready to take on that role while she’s not there,” added a confident Naomi Girma, who will likely shift over into Sauerbrunn’s left-center back position with the veteran missing out.

For Dunn, Sauerbrunn has left the team a blueprint on how every player in the squad can take on some of the leadership burden.

“I think everything that I’ve learned from Becky is really all about just being the best player showing up possible,” said Dunn. “That means not just on the field, but that means encouraging your teammates. That means giving words of advice when you see fit, and overall, just being the best version of yourself in that environment. So that is something that I’ve always learned from Becky, and I’ll hope to try to do my best obviously in leading the group in this World Cup.”

Andonovski — who has seen so many key players miss crucial time with the USWNT for a variety of reasons — conceded that the situation is “a part of sports,” but added that the group as assembled still has his backing to go accomplish the mission at hand.

“We’re very, very confident in the team that we have,” declared Andonovski. “We’re very confident in the abilities of the players that we have on our team that will be able to overcome the deficiencies that may occur with Becky’s absence.”

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Morgan, Dunn react as USWNT roster spots revealed by Taylor Swift and Lil Wayne

The USWNT brought out some big names to reveal its 2023 World Cup roster

U.S. Soccer brought out some of the biggest names in sports, entertainment and politics to announce the 2023 U.S. women’s national team World Cup roster.

The video posted on social media began with none other than U.S. President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden, and continued with each of the 23 players being introduced by a different celebrity.

Alex Morgan was given the honor of being introduced by her friend Taylor Swift, and the striker told reporters afterwards that she felt the pairing was ideal.

“I was really surprised to see Taylor announce me but all the other amazing celebrities, influencers and people so influential in the soccer world announcing the roster was pretty cool,” Morgan said. “I give U.S. Soccer props for that. I think they nailed it with Taylor announcing me. I was very happy about that. She had some really nice things to say and I feel like we’ve supported each other a lot, so it was really great to see that.”

Lil Wayne was charged with introducing Crystal Dunn, who said that it was “incredible” seeing the rap star reveal her spot on the roster.

“I will say getting that announcement from Lil Wayne was incredible,” Dunn said. “I mean, everybody was hitting my line like, ‘Do you know him? Do you know him?’ I’m like no, but listen, the man said my name already so I feel like we kind of know each other now.”

Swift and Lil Wayne were far from the only big names in the video, which also included the likes of Megan Thee Stallion (who seems to have taken up a newfound interest in soccer), Shaquille O’Neal, Issa Rae, Blake Lively, Mia Hamm, Jalen Hurts and many more.

Watch the USWNT roster reveal video

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