Seattle, WA
Seattle Reign FC get burned by rival Portland Thorns, 4-0
In what is becoming a familiar refrain for the Seattle Reign in 2024, 90 minutes of effort leads to no points for the Reign. One defensive lapse in the first half along with an inch-perfect shot was enough to hand the Portland Thorns the win. A questionable (at best) refereeing decision late in the second half shifted all momentum in favor of the Thorns, putting the game well out of reach of the Reign attack. Two late goals from the Thorns would put the final score at 4-0. A difficult and demoralizing result given the Reign’s place in the standings, especially since the Reign had the better of the Thorns throughout much of the match. The Reign are now 2-7-1, having just seven points from 10 matches.
Match Summary
The Reign were effective in the first half, making strong tackles, connecting through the midfield, and putting in dangerous crosses. Center referee Abdou Ndiaye was letting physical play go, for the most part, and the Reign took advantage. Though the Thorns would go into the break with the most fouls, the Reign had the stronger and more effective tackles. The Thorns were able to find space outside of the box for a few of their own shots, but they were wide and generally unthreatening. Phoebe McClernon, Lauren Barnes, Shae Holmes and Sophia Huerta were once again effective and organized in limiting any space for the Thorns’ forwards.
The Reign had their most dangerous attacks of the game off of Ji So-Yun’s set pieces. Veronika Latsko had a nice relatively open header in the box from a Ji corner that ended up about 10 yards wide, and in first half stoppage Jessica Fishlock had a glancing header from a Ji free kick that Thorns keeper Shelby Hogan just barely got a had to, and Bethany Balcer’s resulting volley header was expertly cleared off the line by Thorns defender Kelli Hubly.
Unfortunately for the Reign, the Thorns breakthrough came in the 42nd minute. A Hogan goal kick was flicked forward by Christine Sinclar into open space for Sophia Smith to run onto. She carried the ball wide into the Reign box, then cut it back to an open Olivia Moultrie at the top of the box. Moultrie’s one-time shot was inch-perfect, curling impossibly accurately to the upper V of the far post and into the net, giving Laurel Ivory no chance at heroics.
After the break, the match settled back into a relatively familiar rhythm: physical play in the middle of the pitch, some nice connections between Reign midfielders, solid defensive organization, and an all too familiar “lack of quality” in the final third. The Reign’s struggles were summed up when around the 70th minute Huerta won the ball in the Thorns’ box with a physical tackle, with an open look on goal. She tried to take a touch to her left for a better shooting angle around defenders closing in, but it was a little too heavy. Her resulting left footed shot was easily blocked, then ricocheted back into Huerta, hitting her arm and causing her to hit herself in the face.
A few minutes later, Huerta would again end up with the ball ricocheting into her hand in the box, but this time it was the defensive end. Huerta went to block a shot and succeeded, but the resulting deflection off her leg shot the ball up and back, hitting her outstretched arm. Though calling a handball PK is against IAFB guidelines in a situation where the ball deflects off a defender’s leg and into their arms, and it was not called a PK in real time, VAR sent Ndiaye to the review board. Ndiaye eventually awarded the Thorns a PK and showed Huerta a yellow card after a lengthy review. Smith buried the resulting PK, leaving the score 2-0 Thorns.
Having already brought on Emeri Adames for Latsko earlier, Laura Harvey called in Ryanne Brown and Nikki Stanton for McClernon and Olivia van der Jagt to try and tilt the field in the other direction. Tziarra King would enter a few minutes later for Olivia Athens. The substitutes initially had the desired effect, with the Reign coming in waves and having dangerous possession in the final third, though, as usual, no dangerous shots generated. After withstanding these initial waves of pressure, the field tilted sharply in favor of the Thorns, the Reign having the wind taken out of their sails. Hina Sugita and Peyton Linnehan would score in stoppage time, both goals assisted by Smith, for a final score of 4-0.
Ruthlessness
The familiar refrain for the Thorns came back to haunt them, the lack of quality in the final third. After the match Fishlock mused that everyone who finds themselves in the attack needs to be examining whether their runs are right, their passes are right, and that a lot of that is “a tiny bit off” right now. That it would have to be addressed through watching the film, taking accountability, and working hard in training. Barnes had one thing to add “be ruthless.”
On the other end, the Thorns were ruthless. Moultrie was ruthless in finishing the one good opportunity the Thorns had in the first half. The Thorns players were adamant that the ball deflecting into Huerta’s arm was a PK (which is probably an objectively incorrect application of the rule) and Smith was ruthless in finishing her PK. Tacking on two goals in stoppage while already leading 2-0 was ruthless. The Reign were not ruthless, and outside of the match against the Wave last Friday, the Reign have not been ruthless this season, a big part of why the find themselves in this hole.
Momentum
The funny thing about momentum in sports is that it can often explain everything and nothing. The Reign had a bit of momentum coming into this match, having beat the Wave while down a player for essentially 90+ minutes and shutting out the best team in the league. The Reign had momentum in the first half having controlled the play and generating some quality chances. But one quick goal off a goal kick at one end and a goal-line clearance on the other later, and the Thorns were the ones up going into half.
The second half was a similar story, the Reign had the momentum, getting the ball into the box for some dangerous possession, but it was a “handball” in the box at the other end that gave the Thorns the insurance goal. Fishlock called them “nothing goals,” a fitting description of goals that came against the momentum the Reign were generating, especially since one goal was a reward for what was at best a questionable application of the rules. At the end of the day though, those “nothing” goals counted. Even just the first was enough for the Thorns to win this one, as after the second goal, the momentum began swinging to the Thorns’s sails. And the Thorns rode that momentum to two killer goals in stoppage time.
What’s Next
The Reign’s next match is home against Orlando Pride, Sunday May 19th at 3:00 pm Pacific. Orlando is coming off a 1-0 win against Bay FC and are first place in the league. After tying their first three games of the season, Orlando is bringing a six-game win streak to Seattle. The match will be available for streaming on NWSL+.
Seattle, WA
Seattle Kraken fall to Blues 5-1 in 2nd straight loss
ST. LOUIS (AP) — Dylan Holloway had a hat trick and added an assist in his return from a sprained ankle, Joel Hofer made 23 saves and the St. Louis Blues came off the Olympic break to beat the Seattle Kraken 5-1 on Thursday night.
St. Louis Blues 5, Seattle Kraken 1: Box score
Jordan Kyrou and Holloway — activated from injured reserve before the game — scored in a 23-second span early in the second period to give St. Louis a 3-1 lead.
Pius Suter added a goal and two assists to help the Blues end a three-game losing streak.
Holloway completed St. Louis’ first hat trick of the season with 3:01 left, scoring into an empty net for his 11th of the season.
Kaapo Kakko tied it at 1 for Seattle in the first period, and Philipp Grubauer stopped 26 shots. The Kraken were coming off a 4-1 loss in Dallas on Wednesday night.
Kyrou made it 2-1 at 1:12 of the second off a feed from Pavel Buchnevich on a break. Holloway poked the puck past Grubauer off a scramble at 1:35. Suter scored at 1:56 of the third.
St. Louis’ Cam Fowler appeared in his 1,100th game, becoming the 10th active defenseman in the NHL to reach the mark.
Up next
Kraken: Host Vancouver on Saturday night.
Blues: Host New Jersey on Saturday.
Seattle Kraken sign forwards Ben Meyers, Ryan Winterton to 2-year extensions
Seattle, WA
Projected Lineup: Feb. 26 vs. Seattle | St. Louis Blues
The St. Louis Blues are back in action as they host the Seattle Kraken on Thursday at Enterprise Center (7 p.m., FanDuel Sports Network Midwest, 101 ESPN).
It will be the team’s first game since Feb. 4, and Jim Montgomery said the squad is ready to get back to work.
“Yeah, I think everybody is,” the head coach said. “I mean, you can tell. Guys were anxious today, but it’s like ‘enough of practicing against each other, it’s time to play a game.’”
Captain Brayden Schenn, who missed Wednesday’s practice with an illness, took the morning skate and is expected to play. Dylan Holloway (ankle), who has played just one game since Dec. 12, will make his return to the lineup as well.
Robert Thomas has taken a leave of absence due to a personal matter. He’s expected to return to the team on Friday.
Additionally Jack Finley will make his Blues debut. Finley – who is the son of former Blue Jeff Finley and was born in St. Louis – was claimed off waivers by the team on Feb. 7.
“It was a dream of mine to play for this team,” Finley said. “It was a big part of my childhood, big part of my family’s life. So definitely full-circle moment and proud to be a Blue.”
Jeff, who played defense for the Blues from 1998-2004, will be in the building Thursday night to see his son don the jersey he wore for so many years.
“He was excited,” Jack said about his dad. “Maybe more excited than me. He loved this organization, loved this city… He’s excited to be back.”
Seattle, WA
FOLLOWUP: Triumphant return of West Seattle’s Little Free Library #8702
Two months ago, Gay showed us how a tree took out Little Free Library #8702, uphill from Lowman Beach. Tonight, Gay sent this update, with photos!
The LFL on 48th and Graham is back in business. Our friend Dana and crew from Legendary Tree got the space all ready yesterday. Matt Lukin repaired it and put it back up today.
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Shoutout to Pegasus Books for the continued support.
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