After an underwhelming 2023 campaign ended without a playoff appearance for the second straight year, the Washington Spirit went back to the drawing board this offseason. (In one instance, literally.)
Washington
After sweeping changes, Spirit enters new era with patience and optimism
As the NWSL season begins this weekend, the Spirit is still a work in progress. For starters: When the whistle blows to kick off Sunday’s season opener at the Seattle Reign, the coach at the center of this picture will be in Spain. Jonatan Giráldez, the 32-year-old Barcelona leader who is set to take over the Spirit, will not arrive in Washington until June, once the Spanish season ends.
But the project is taking shape — and the club is willing to be patient for the results to follow. Entering its third full season under Y. Michele Kang’s ownership, the Spirit has aspirations of building an entertaining brand of soccer that attracts the world’s top talent. An opening test against last season’s runner-up will offer the first glimpse into how those ambitions translate to reality.
“We’ll certainly be willing and able to exhibit great patience, understanding that we’re not going to see the best version of ourselves until we can get everybody here all the time. But that certainly doesn’t stop the fact that we think we’re going to be pretty good,” said Mark Krikorian, the club’s general manager and president of soccer operations. “We have a talented roster, we have a talented staff. And we’ll put them all together and they’ll go and compete and hopefully get better day-to-day.”
Under veteran NWSL coach Mark Parsons last year, the Spirit started strong but sputtered in the season’s latter half and finished eighth, two places from the playoffs. Parsons was fired days after the season finale. In January, Kang made a splash hiring Giráldez, who has helped establish Barcelona as a European powerhouse.
For at least the first 13 games of its season — Barcelona’s final game is June 16 — the Spirit will be led by Adrián González, another Spaniard who was appointed in January to begin implementing Giráldez’s possession-based system. (Parsons’s team played a direct style characterized by long, vertical balls; it ranked last in total passes, touches and pass completion.)
After the turbulence of the past three seasons — coaching changes, an ownership battle and inconsistent on-field results — the appeal of this project is partially in its promise of stability. Giráldez and González joined the Spirit on three-year deals.
“Going into this season with the idea that these are the coaches that are basically going to stay, I think that’s really good to have a team that can be built behind them and their tactics,” said center back Tara McKeown, who will play for her fourth full-time coach since coming to Washington in 2021.
The changes weren’t limited to the club’s sporting staff. Eleven players left the Spirit via moves, waivers or retirement. A pair of draft night trades — center back Sam Staab to the Chicago Red Stars and midfielder Ashley Sanchez to the North Carolina Courage — shook up the team’s core.
Washington used the trades to move up in the draft, selecting a league-most four players in the first round. It signed six rookies to its roster.
No. 3 pick Croix Bethune, an attacking midfielder known for her creativity and flair, is a candidate to earn a starting spot. The Spirit has asked big things of its rookies before — midfielder Andi Sullivan (2018), Staab (2019) and forward Trinity Rodman (2021) were top-four draft picks and contributed immediately as starters. Bethune could be next in line.
Winger Brittany Ratcliffe and U.S. national team defender Casey Krueger joined as free agents in January. Krueger is likely to start at right back but also has experience at center back, where Washington will need depth.
Rodman will not play in the opener against Seattle, serving a suspension for a red card in last season’s final game. (She started five and played in all six of the U.S. national team’s games at the W Gold Cup, which ran from Feb. 20 to March 10.) At 21, she’s hesitant to call herself a veteran, but in this group, Rodman is a leader — and one of just six players remaining from the 2021 championship squad.
“Everyone wants the winning mentality. And not just to say it, but to have the results and to have the proof of a winning team, and a team that progresses each and every year,” she said. “I think that’s the biggest thing with [Giráldez] joining us, is to create that standard for Washington Spirit and to get us to not just keep saying that we are a winning team when we haven’t shown that, and actually putting up the numbers and results.”
Among the other returnees: Sullivan in the midfield; two-time NWSL goalkeeper of the year Aubrey Kingsbury; French winger Ouleymata Sarr; striker Ashley Hatch, who is looking to rebound from a campaign in which she tied the fewest non-penalty goals of her career.
Earlier this offseason, Krikorian said Giráldez’s hiring elevated the caliber of talent the Spirit could attract. The NWSL salary cap has expanded to $2.75 million, and teams around the league have made big moves in the global transfer market. One new international player has signed for Washington, but that deal has yet to be announced. Any additional big-name signings are more likely to occur in the summer, once Giráldez has arrived.
As tempered as expectations may be, they are still high. In its 12th season, the NWSL has expanded to 14 teams and increased the number of playoff spots to eight. Another year on the outside looking in would be a disappointment.
For now, the Spirit is prepared to let its plan come to fruition at a natural pace.
“Every project needs time. This is a process,” González said. “If we try to focus on what we do every day, I’m sure the results are going to come.”
Washington
Monte Coleman, a mainstay of Washington’s Super Bowl teams, dead at 68
Monte Coleman, a linebacker who played for all three of Washington’s Super Bowl championship teams, has died. He was 68.
The Commanders announced his death on April 26, a post on the team’s X account stating: “We mourn the loss of one of the greatest to ever suit up in the Burgundy & Gold, Monte Coleman.
“Our heartfelt condolences are with his loved ones.”
Team owner Josh Harris offered provide further thoughts.
“Monte Coleman was one of the greatest players in Washington history,” read Harris’ statement. “He was one of the pillars of our championship defenses having played for all three Super Bowl winning teams. His durability and leadership set the standard for what it meant to suit up for the Burgundy & Gold.
“Monte will be sorely missed. Our thoughts and prayers go out to the Coleman family, his friends and all who knew him.”
Drafted in the 11th round from Central Arkansas in 1979, Coleman quickly became a fixture in Washington, playing all 16 of his NFL seasons for the organization. Though he wasn’t adorned with personal accolades at a time when the likes of Hall of Famers Mike Singletary, Harry Carson and Jack Lambert were among the league’s best-known off-ball linebackers, Coleman was nevertheless a linchpin of defenses that were so crucial to Washington’s success under head coach Joe Gibbs in the 1980s and early ’90s. The club played in Super Bowls 17, 18, 22 and 26 during that period, winning all but Super Bowl 18, when the underdog Los Angeles Raiders derailed them.
Coleman was a steadying presence for those teams and led the league in tackles in 1980 with 118, the first of three seasons when he hit the century mark. He finished his career in 1994 with 17 interceptions and 49½ sacks. His 215 regular-season appearances are second-most in franchise history, trailing only Coleman’s longtime teammate, Hall of Fame cornerback Darrell Green. Coleman also played in 21 playoff games, including those four Super Bowls − totaling 1½ Super Sunday sacks.
A mainstay in the Washington community, Coleman was named to the team’s Ring of Fame in 2015.
He also served as the head coach at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff from 2008 to 2017.
“Coach Coleman represented everything we strive for at UAPB excellence, integrity, and a relentless commitment to developing our student-athletes,” the school’s vice chancellor and director of athletics, Chris Robinson, said in a statement.
“His legacy is not only written in championships and honors, but in the lives he changed every single day.”
No cause of death was provided.
All NFL news on and off the field. Sign up for USA TODAY’s 4th and Monday newsletter.
Washington
Photos: The aftermath of the White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting
Armed Secret Service agents stand on stage during a shooting incident at the annual White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner at the Washington Hilton on Saturday in Washington, D.C. According to reports, President Donald Trump, along with other government officials, were rushed from the Washington Hilton after reports of gun shots.
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
hide caption
toggle caption
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
The annual White House Correspondents’ Dinner ended abruptly Saturday night after gunfire was exchanged between suspect Cole Allen and Secret Service agents at the Washington Hilton hotel in Washington, D.C. One agent was injured after having been shot in his bulletproof vest and has been released from the hospital.
President Trump, first lady Melania Trump, and several White House staff and cabinet members, who were not injured, were rushed from the hotel.
Allen, who is believed to have traveled from Torrance, Calif. to Washington, D.C., was arrested on the scene and is currently in custody.
White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy Stephen Miller and his wife Katie Miller are taken out of the ballroom by security agents during a shooting incident at the annual White House Correspondents Association Dinner at the Washington Hilton on Saturday.
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
hide caption
toggle caption
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
Attendees at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner hide under tables after reports of gunshots at a security screening area at the Washington Hilton hotel on Saturday.
Tyrone Turner/WAMU
hide caption
toggle caption
Tyrone Turner/WAMU
Members of the National Guard respond with weapons drawn at the Washington Hilton on Saturday night in Washington, D.C. President Donald Trump, first lady Melania Trump, Vice President JD Vance and other cabinet officials were rushed out of the hotel during the event when a gunman shot a U.S. Secret Service agent at a security checkpoint inside.
Al Drago/Getty Images
hide caption
toggle caption
Al Drago/Getty Images
Secret service agents respond after shots were fired during the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on Saturday.
Tom Brenner/AP
hide caption
toggle caption
Tom Brenner/AP
Secret service agents respond to shots fired during the White House Correspondents Dinner on Saturday.
Tom Brenner/AP
hide caption
toggle caption
Tom Brenner/AP
Vice President J.D. Vance walks back stage at the annual White House Correspondents Association Dinner at the Washington Hilton on Saturday. Several government officials were rushed from the hotel after a shooting incident at a security screening area.
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
hide caption
toggle caption
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
DC Fire and EMS units arrive at the Washington Hilton Hotel where shots were fired at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on Saturday.
Andrew Leyden/Getty Images
hide caption
toggle caption
Andrew Leyden/Getty Images
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his wife, Cheryl Hines, are evacuated from the annual White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner in Washington on Saturday.
Tom Brenner/AP
hide caption
toggle caption
Tom Brenner/AP
President Donald Trump holds a press conference at the White House in Washington, DC, shortly after a shooting incident at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on Saturday.
Celal Gunes/Anadolu via Getty Images
hide caption
toggle caption
Celal Gunes/Anadolu via Getty Images
Law enforcement officials respond to an address connected to Cole Tomas Allen, the shooting suspect at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, as people stand and watch on Saturday in Torrance, Calif.
Ethan Swope/AP
hide caption
toggle caption
Ethan Swope/AP
FBI officers leave the scene after responding to an address connected to Cole Tomas Allen, the shooting suspect at the White House Correspondents Dinner on Sunday in Torrance, Calif.
William Lang/AP
hide caption
toggle caption
William Lang/AP
FBI agents work on Sunday at an address in Torrance, Calif., connected to Cole Tomas Allen, who was identified as the shooting suspect at the White House Correspondents Dinner the night before.
Damian Dovarganes/AP
hide caption
toggle caption
Damian Dovarganes/AP
Members of the media work near the Washington Hilton hotel on Sunday, where a shooting incident occurred the night before at the annual White House Correspondents’ Association dinner.
Kylie Cooper/Reuters
hide caption
toggle caption
Kylie Cooper/Reuters
Shattered glass at the Washington Hilton hotel on Sunday, where a shooting incident occurred the night before at the annual White House Correspondents’ Association dinner.
Kylie Cooper/Reuters
hide caption
toggle caption
Kylie Cooper/Reuters
Washington
Trump, first lady evacuated after security incident at Washington dinner
Merve Berker
26 April 2026•Update: 26 April 2026
US President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump were evacuated Saturday night from the annual White House Correspondents’ dinner in Washington, DC, after a security-related incident at the event.
Trump and top-level administration officials seated by him at the head table were escorted out by Secret Service agents as part of heightened security measures, while other guests remained inside the Washington Hilton ballroom.
The president and Vice President JD Vance were later reported to be “safe and secure.”
Witnesses reported hearing loud noises during the event.
“We were sitting here, and we just heard a loud ‘pop, pop, pop.’ Everybody just went under the table, and we didn’t know what was happening,” broadcaster NewsNation quoted its White House correspondent Kellie Meyer as saying.
The head table was rushed off the stage as part of security measures, while other guests remained inside the ballroom.
Meyer said she observed Cabinet members being escorted out of the venue.
Further details were not immediately available regarding the nature of the incident or any injuries.
Host Weija Jiang later informed guests that the event would resume at a later time.
-
Business40 seconds agoThe War in Iran Has Upended the Global Economy. The U.S. Has Been Mostly Spared.
-
Science7 minutes agoPregnancy With Lupus Is Risky. Would She Be Able to Carry Her Baby to Term?
-
Health13 minutes agoCellular Rejuvenation Has the Potential to Reverse Aging
-
Culture25 minutes agoWhere Have All the Book Reviews Gone?
-
Lifestyle31 minutes ago7 ‘Body Types’ in the Met’s ‘Costume Art’ Fashion Exhibition
-
Technology43 minutes agoThe Verge’s 2026 Mother’s Day gift guide
-
World49 minutes agoDeath toll from Colombia bus bombing rises to 20 during wave of violence
-
Politics55 minutes agoWhite House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting latest in years of attacks targeting Trump, conservatives