How the Portland Thorns handled the Kansas City Current en route to an NWSL championship

A masterclass in control gave the Thorns their third NWSL title

The NWSL championship game ended up being a fairly decisive 2-0 win for the Portland Thorns. A tumultuous season off the field didn’t manifest at all in the final, where they pounced on an early mistake to get a lead over the Kansas City Current, and never looked back.

It was an impressive, imperious kind of performance, and one built around a perfect blend of individuals stepping up, good management, and calm leadership. The clash of styles went decisively in their favor from minute one, leading to celebrations at Audi Field heading towards the Rose City Riveters on the north side of the stadium rather than to the Blue Crew behind the opposite goal.

Here are four major factors that explain how the Thorns earned their third star:

Experience pays off

There were aspects of Saturday’s final that recall the 2019 NWSL championship, in which the North Carolina Courage jumped all over the Chicago Red Stars and effectively put the game to bed in the first half-hour.

To be clear, Kansas City certainly had a better day in DC than Chicago did in Cary. For one thing, it has to be said that the Red Stars were very much not a model club at the time, while Current players are glad to tell anyone that asks how the investment in them has brought them to a better place mentally. When the going gets tough — and it did in the first half of this game — Kansas City has a mental toughness that hasn’t been depleted by their own coach or ownership. It matters on the field.

Still, there were some broad similarities that gave a hefty edge to the traditional power in this game. The Thorns have a roster full of players with championships, and a larger staff of people who have operated through the strange barrage of requests and activities that come with a championship weekend. Kansas City, an organization with barely two years of existence in their current form, can hardly be blamed for being a little behind Portland on this front. They’re doing amazing things, but some gaps can only be filled out with time.

This also hits on the field, where the Thorns have a squad full of players who were indisputably leaders for title-winning teams in the past: Becky Sauerbrunn, Christine Sinclair, and Meghan Klingenberg all started, and Crystal Dunn came in off the bench. Emily Menges and Tegan McGrady were on the bench as well. That’s a group that has collectively been in the starting lineup for eight NWSL championship wins.

Kansas City’s players had alluded to the value of the experience AD Franch and Kristen Hamilton brought when they came in via trades last year, but when it comes to appearing in and winning an NWSL final, they were the list for the Current. Desiree Scott mentioned more than once that despite having seemingly been through everything one can go through in women’s soccer, she’d never played in an NWSL final before. There’s experience, and experience in this particular maelstrom.

All of which is a long build-up to the most decisive factor in this game: the Current showed some nerves. Their defenders seemed to be less instinctive and certain than normal, and the entire group’s first touch was not up to the regular standards they’ve set over the year. Portland’s structured, counter-pressing approach took advantage of the apprehension in the ranks time and again.

Thinking long-term, Kansas City will benefit immensely from going through this experience, and it would be foolish to bet that this group — after such a rapid turnaround this year — caught lightning in a bottle. They’ll be back, and be better when they make their return.

On Saturday, however, the difference in experience showed.

Unsung heroes

Smith’s powerhouse performance, summed up with the perfect celebration for the moment, got deserved plaudits, as did Franch for making numerous saves to keep KC in the match.

However, it would be remiss to not mention that Sauerbrunn’s vaunted organizational ability was on full display. The Current’s nebulous, improvisational shape going forward can be a nightmare to sort out, especially given the speed found throughout their team. And yet, Portland always seemed to know exactly what was being cooked up, and Sauerbrunn was at the heart of those solutions for 90 minutes.

Natalia Kuikka also has to be recognized for a quietly superb performance at right back. The Finnish international had a bit of a mid-season lull this year, but rounded into form and stood out against a KC attack that skewed pretty heavily towards attacking her side. The Current really tried to find a way through, attempting 10 dribbles out towards the touchline in Portland’s half, and only one from Kizer worked out positively.

Those red triangles are all where Kansas City dribbles didn’t pan out. There were also no key passes (those are the yellow squares above) from Kuikka’s flank, and only two successful crosses, one of which came deep enough that it’s more of a midfielder’s job anyway.

Sauerbrunn looked at ease, but only because she was putting on a masterful show in terms of thinking the game and denying Kansas City by superior positioning. Kuikka, meanwhile, had a ton of more tangible work to do, winning tackles and individual battles. If you want to know how Bella Bixby ended up without having to make a single save on a night where the game state and attack-minded opposition should have meant a lot of work, look no further than these two (very different) performances.

Adjustment analysis, part one

Both coaches made interesting moves, with Portland making their big change before kickoff and Kansas City opting for a major shift as the game was going on.

For the Thorns, Rhian Wilkinson elected to make an enormously difficult choice, keeping Hina Sugita — a sleeper Best XI candidate after a thoroughly impressive first year in the league — on the bench in favor of Sinclair.

Asked post-game from a crowded Audi Field media room about that change, Wilkinson said it was “a huge decision, and it was a really hard decision,” before adding that for the challenge of Kansas City, she wanted a more clear structure. “I played a really distinct six, eight and 10 in the midfield, and Hina for me, she’s an eight or a winger,” explained Wilkinson. “I think Rocky (Rodríguez)’s been flying the last few games, so she just sort of started ahead of her.”

The Thorns had deployed a 4-3-3 for their semifinal against the San Diego Wave, with Sugita and Rodríguez both operating as attack-minded No. 8s having the freedom to go forward. Wilkinson said that against the Wave, she wanted her team to focus on playing through lines more, whereas she shifted her side into more of a 4-4-2, with Sinclair being available for passes to feet rather than in behind.

“I wanted to play with the front two, and Sincy’s one of the best in the world at reading that front-two position and being alongside Sophie and feeding her,” said Wilkinson. “It wasn’t a breaking the lines type of game like in San Diego, where we played two eights-tens.”

It’s the kind of gambit that could have blown up in Wilkinson’s face, but in the end, the team she put on the field created a Portland Thorns kind of game. That’s no mean feat against a Kansas City team that has thrived at forcing just about everyone into a style that favors the Current.

Adjustment analysis, part two

Matt Potter had no surprises in his starting lineup, with the exact same 11 that started the semifinal being picked for the final. He did make a shift, though, pushing Lo’eau LaBonta higher and playing with Scott and Alex Loera as a double-pivot as opposed to Scott being the lone holding presence.

That change didn’t really come off, though Potter said post-game he saw moments where their play through the middle went as planned until it came time to play the final ball.

Where things were really going awry was along the back line. Sophia Smith told Pro Soccer Wire on Thursday that she felt like she’d find more space against a back three, and it turns out the forward knows what she’s talking about. Kansas City was struggling to protect its defenders from being isolated, with support arriving late or not at all, and for the first 30 minutes, they had to make plenty of emergency blocks at full stretch just to keep the score at 1-0.

Potter’s answer ended up being to convert Kate Del Fava from a right wingback to a true right back, staying home to support Addisyn Merrick and shifting Kansas City into a back four. Further forward, the domino effect saw LaBonta and Hamilton have to trade shifts providing width on the right, while most of the Current’s attacking thrust ended up centered on Hailie Mace on the left.

Potter wasn’t thinking purely about stopping the bleeding, though, and said he made the change in part to take advantage of the spaces Portland’s more rigid structure left open.

“Well, I think they were attacking well in wide areas, but when they create the structure that they do, it creates pockets of space in the midfield that we wanted to try and take advantage of,” Potter told reporters after the match. “By keeping Kate home a little bit for a period of time, the hope was to get Kristin Hamilton and Cece (Kizer) on the ball in central areas a little bit more.”

“You’ve got to give up things to get things and there’s a risk/reward factor in the game,” added Potter. “The identity of this team’s lived all year is to have no fear, and to try and take the game to the opponent. Why would we change that because we’re here? We are what we are, they deserved that opportunity to go express themselves again, and you know with a little bit of a ball bouncing one way or another, then maybe we are talking about a different game.”

As much as Portland managed this game in incredibly efficient fashion, Potter’s not off-base by saying that the Current just needed a bounce. Specifically, the bounce that cost them the second goal is one that could have easily played out with the ball nestling into Franch’s gloves, or not skipping so hard off the grass that Addisyn Merrick could have cleared it away before it got over the line. While the first half was triage for Kansas City, the second half saw them gain some footing, only for that goal to put things out of reach.

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Portland Thorns’ Rhian Wilkinson says abuse issues are worldwide in women’s soccer

“How do we focus on positives, and then push and demand more transparency?”

As is the case with so many players, coaches, and staffers in the NWSL, Portland Thorns head coach Rhian Wilkinson has an unfortunate amount of experience navigating an unhealthy club environment.

Speaking to reporters at Audi Field ahead of the NWSL’s championship final between her side and the Kansas City Current, Wilkinson said that while the NWSL’s myriad problems — most notably spelled out by the Yates investigation on abuse and misconduct in the league — must continue to be addressed, the same issues are prevalent all over the world.

“I’m Canadian, and I was working in England, and this is everywhere,” said Wilkinson. “It’s a horrible thing to say. This is not only about soccer, it’s not about the NWSL. It’s not just about women, it’s everywhere. And it’s a problem everywhere.”

Wilkinson’s 14-year playing career took her to clubs in the United States, Canada, and Norway, and she amassed 180 caps for the Canadian national team. Before taking over in Portland, she was an assistant coach with England’s national team, as well as the head coach of Canada’s Under-17 and Under-20 teams.

‘An opportunity’ for NWSL

Wilkinson urged everyone in NWSL to see the situation as a chance to get things right and create a stronger, healthier league. That includes coaching the Thorns, who have seen owner Merritt Paulson step back from involvement and club executives Gavin Wilkinson and Mike Golub fired for their failure to report the reasons former head coach Paul Riley was dismissed by the club.

“I say that all the time: It is an opportunity to come (to Portland) to coach, I believe, one of the best club teams in the world, and to try and be world leaders in this. And I mean it. It’s an opportunity, we have to see it as that,” added the first-year Thorns head coach in a call for NWSL to take the current momentum behind needed changes and carry it on to make the league a standard-bearer in terms of safe practices. “How do we focus on positives, and then push and demand more transparency, make sure that we get better and better as a league? Because I need to continue to state this: I’ve played in a lot of different countries, I’ve lived in a lot of different countries, it’s everywhere.”

Wilkinson emphasized that for her, the pressure the league is under to make things right is something to be grateful for, rather than something to chafe at or to avoid. For her, the issue is one where NWSL can become a world leader, rather than stop at just correcting known problems.

“People that are finger-pointing at the NWSL, I’m glad that they’re holding us to standard, and we’re going to take that mantle,” said Wilkinson. “We’re going to lead the way, be best in practice. But it is not unique to the NWSL, and it did not scare me away from joining this league.”

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Crystal Dunn delivers catharsis for Portland Thorns in NWSL playoff win over San Diego Wave

Dunn played the hero as Portland finally broke San Diego’s defensive resistance

The Portland Thorns have been looking for a cathartic moment all year, and Crystal Dunn delivered at an absolutely perfect time.

Dunn scored deep into stoppage time to secure a comeback 2-1 win as Portland overcame the San Diego Wave to advance to the NWSL championship game for the fourth time in their history. Dunn and Raquel Rodríguez scored similar goals to bring Portland back after Taylor Kornieck had given the Wave an early lead.

The story in Portland coming into the match was barely about the game itself. Fan pressure on owner Merritt Paulson to sell the team has been present for some time now, but has gone to another level after the Yates report. While Paulson has seemingly reduced his role with the club, the pressure continued with pre-game protests inside and outside of Providence Park.

Still, fans made the choice to answer calls from the players to come support them, even as they demanded change at the top of the org chart. Thorns supporters packed Providence Park, with attendance reported at 22,305, and chose to do a pre-game display featuring hundreds of “For Sale” signs.

Portland may have gotten the vociferous support they had hoped for, but they got off to a tough start, with some sloppy collective defending saw them fall behind in the 8th minute. Alex Morgan seized on some hesitancy after a throw-in to cross from the right, setting up a wide-open Kornieck to head home from seven yards.

The Thorns were were struggling, but Rodríguez had the remedy. Portland won a corner, and the Wave could only clear the ball as far as the Costa Rican international at the top of the box. Rodríguez took a touch, and then thundered a half-volley over the crowd and past Kailen Sheridan for a spectacular equalizer.

The wonder goal amped the game up, with both Kornieck and Sophia Smith getting point-blank chances that were just inches from adding to the scoring. In the final moments of the half, Bella Bixby produced an incredible save to deny Kornieck a second as Portland’s defending inside the area continued to be an issue.

Portland had struggled in the first half, but sharpened up defensively, and really took control coming out of the break. However, it seemed like San Diego — mostly due to incredible play from center back Naomi Girma — was going to hang on and force extra time.

However, when the Thorns needed something special to break through, they turned to a player who knows how do do special things. Dunn, still building her fitness up after giving birth just five months ago, followed the example set by Rodríguez in the first half. The Wave again couldn’t fully clear a corner kick, and three minutes into stoppage time, Dunn stepped up to crush a bouncing loose ball through the crowd.

Dunn sprinted to the bench, and Providence Park went into delirium. For a moment at least, the supporters and players had a pure moment. This wasn’t a situation that required deep thought, or one where protest and support had to be in balance. For a few seconds, at least, the clouds over Portland’s season cleared.

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