NWSL Weekend Take-Off: Sinead Farrelly returns, Thorns and Wave flex

A big moment, two teams in top form, and lots of wind in the NWSL weekend that was

It’s only week two in the NWSL, but we’re already getting mid-season levels of intensity and weirdness.

One long weather front extending from the Atlantic coast to deep into the Midwest resulted in a lightning delay in New Jersey and a goal scored by a gust of wind in Chicago. We had a two-goal comeback, a remarkable return to the field for Sinead Farrelly, and a month’s worth of league drama packed into one game between Angel City FC and the Orlando Pride.

If you’re the Portland Thorns or San Diego Wave, another thing at mid-season levels is the performance quality. These two seem, at least right now, head, shoulders, and arguably whole torsos ahead of the rest of the pack. It’ll come around for at least a few other teams, but for now, two of the preseason favorites seem to be meeting any expectation fans might have placed on them.

Let’s get into this weekend’s action:

Four thoughts on the Kansas City Current’s stunning late win over the Houston Dash

The NWSL playoffs opened with a relentless thriller

The NWSL playoffs started off with a bang, as a high-tension affair in front of a huge crowd saw the Kansas City Current stun the Houston Dash to sneak out with a 2-1 victory.

An early penalty kick from Lo’eau LaBonta silenced a huge Houston crowd, but Sophie Schmidt’s expertly-taken volley got the home side level in the 21st minute. Both teams then had numerous outstanding chances go narrowly awry, setting up a dramatic finish. In the tenth minute of stoppage time, Current wingback Kate Del Fava, with virtually the last kick of the game, guided a cross that sneaked past Ally Prisock over the line.

For Houston, it’s a truly hard-luck result. For one thing, it’s the latest stoppage-time game-winner in NWSL history. They also out-shot KC 20-6, and though the Dash had to dodge some bullets in what was an end-to-end game, they’ll also wonder how the heck they didn’t win this one.

“It is football, it was cruel with us today,” said Dash interim head coach Juan Carlos Amorós, and you could hardly argue with him. However, KC will want it put on the record that having AD Franch in the form of her life, and a standout display from veteran Kristen Edmonds, was also a big factor.

Here are four takeaways from this one, plus the highlights:

Dash’s day, regardless of the result

A team that has historically struggled to get any attention in Houston finally got the big stage. Yes, this team got some love for winning the 2020 Challenge Cup, but do you remember 2020? Covid safety measures meant fans were pulling up in their cars to applaud from a huge distance, and then everyone went back to toughing out a miserable year. That team celebrated hard, but they also celebrated in isolation.

Today, after years of near-misses, big misses, and frankly some neglect from their former owners, the Dash got their party. A crowd of 21,284 turned up for the first Houston playoff game ever, setting an NWSL record as well as a club record.

 

The important thing here is that the Dash, for the first time in their existence, seem to have a way forward. There’s a path for this team to not just have this one playoff appearance before fading into mediocrity, but to be a year-after-year playoff team. Juan Carlos Amorós has found a system that works (and entertains), and numerous players have taken clear steps forward as individuals.

There is, in other words, reason for a casual fan to buy tickets, and that’s how you truly break through. The people that showed up to PNC Stadium for the first time got drama, tension, and end-to-end play. The tactical stalemate that infects so many knockout games in leagues everywhere was simply not part of the equation.

It’s a brutal loss, but for the Dash, it’s also the start of something.

NWSL Celebration of the Year watch

Lo’eau LaBonta appears to be dead set on making sure KC celebrates every goal, and Pro Soccer Wire is hopeful that this drive spreads league-wide.

This week, it’s a Rockettes tribute, as the Current’s celebrations are expanding into full-team productions rather than one person putting on a display.

Lavogez’s injury is a challenge

It wasn’t all good for Kansas City, who watched Claire Lavogez carried off with a worrisome-looking injury.

“Claire’s too early to tell,” KC coach Matt Potter told media after the match. Potter indicated that Lavogez did manage to come to the bench on crutches later in the second half, but it’s still a potentially difficult injury to navigate for the Current. As they’re currently built, Lavogez is the one player who sometimes slows the game down, adding a bit of pause to a team that can otherwise skew towards being go-go-go.

KC also struggled with the more human concern of seeing Lavogez in such obvious pain. Multiple Current players checked in on her, and it took the entire team about 15 minutes to regain their tempo and focus levels. Houston very nearly put themselves in front during this spell, and while the Current deserve massive credit for sorting themselves out, it also makes one wonder how they’ll cope if the French veteran is out next weekend when they take on OL Reign.

Salmon sub raises eyebrows

On one hand, Amorós made a bold substitution that nearly worked like a charm. In the 75th minute, he pulled Ebony Salmon — the Dash’s leading scorer — for veteran winger Elizabeth Eddy, moving Michelle Alozie into the vacated No. 9 role.

Alozie caused the KC back three fits, and in stoppage time found herself in alone on Franch. It’s exactly the situation you want for your striker, but Franch was in heroic form all night, and produced arguably her biggest save of the year to block Alozie’s angled shot. The Current would go on to score the winner six minutes or so later.

However, that’s the kind of chance Salmon has been burying since being traded from Racing Louisville, and like he said, sometimes the game is cruel. With Salmon having just returned from international duty with England, it’s fair to wonder whether 75 minutes was all she had to give on the day.

“I think we needed a bit more on that forward line. I think Liz was coming with fresh legs,” explained Amorós when asked directly about the choice. “Nothing more than a tactical, technical decision.”

Enjoy the highlights from a wild one

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Ebony Salmon is proving Racing Louisville wrong one goal at a time

The English striker has been in inspired form since joining Houston in June

Ebony Salmon was seen as a major coup when Racing Louisville signed her last season, and her early NWSL returns showed that thinking was not incorrect.

Salmon scored six goals after arriving early in the season, hitting the ground running in a new league and new country at the age of 20.

But everything started to change for the England international when Kim Björkegren took over as Racing Louisville head coach in the offseason.

Under Björkegren, Salmon played in just five regular-season games in 2022, with all of those appearances coming off the bench. In an interview with The Striker, Salmon said that Björkegren did not address her lack of minutes with her, and she was forced to request a trade.

Racing shipped Salmon out at the end of June in exchange for $175,000 in total allocation money.

It’s looking like a major bargain.

Salmon, now 21, has been on fire since her move to Houston. She’s now scored six goals in five matches, with the Dash having won three in a row after Salmon’s brace helped them to a 2-1 victory at OL Reign on Sunday.

“Throughout my career I have (always) scored goals,” Salmon said after Sunday’s game. “One thing I focused on, especially after my move to Houston was consistency, which I am starting to find with scoring.”

Salmon’s form has Houston up to third in the NWSL standings as the Dash mount an unlikely challenge for the NWSL Shield.

Next up for the Dash? A visit from Racing Louisville in a game Salmon has likely had circled on her calendar since the moment she arrived in Texas.

“It is a big game for me,” Salmon said. “It is a chance for me to prove people wrong and I think I have been doing that since I got traded.”

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