Quantcast

Freedom Insider

Icon

Following the Washington Freedom of Women’s Professional Soccer

Still in the running at the 3/4 mark

By StarCityFan

The Freedom went through the entire months of June and July without a single victory. You’d think that would kill any hope of making the playoffs, but it hasn’t. In fact, the Freedom are currently in fifth place, one point out of the fourth and final playoff position.

Right now I’m predicting a 2-2-2 finish, which gives them 28 points come the end of the season and should be just enough for the fourth and final playoff spot. Their next game is at Rutgers against a struggling Sky Blue FC team. I’m figuring a tie in that match. After that, they play the league-leading FC Gold Pride on the West Coast, which I doubt they’ll get points out of. Then they finish the season with three out of four games at home: Chicago on Thursday the 19th (one of the games added to the schedule after Athletica folded), Sky Blue on the 28th and Atlanta on September 11. The one final road game is against the Red Stars on September 5. I figure they should be able to get at least two wins and a tie out of that stretch.

All this of course assumes that their performance against Philadelphia on Wednesday night is now the standard, rather than how they’ve played in most of their prior summer matches.

One promising note is that the surprise of Wednesday’s lineup was the lack of surprise: Every player was in her accustomed position on the field: no more benching Cat Whitehill, throwing Nikki Marshall up front, or pulling Sonia Bompastor to the back line. I get the feeling that Jim Gabarra just told the team, “Okay, I’m not going to tweak, I’m just going to put our best XI out their in their best positions. The rest is up to you.” To the relief of Freedom fans everywhere, the team responded, pulling together and working hard for 90 minutes to produce a convincing 2-0 win against the No. 2 team in the league.

So I’m hoping that that result is the new normal, while June and July will become just a bad dream. Last year set a possible template, as the Freedom came off a three-game losing streak going into their final six matches but finished 4-1-1 to make it into third place. That, interestingly, also started with a weeknight match in New Jersey.

And, for what it’s worth, the Freedom had a similar season in 2003, when they started strong, stumbled badly in midseason, then recovered with help from a series of outstanding performances by Abby Wambach to claw into the playoffs in the fourth and final position. From there, they won two consecutive away games, one against the regular-season champions, to claim the final WUSA championship. Let’s hope that history repeats itself this year.

A Blast from the Past

By StarCityFan

[Note from Jim: My apologies once again to StarCityFan, who submitted this to me before the Boston match but because I have been traveling didn't get around to posting until today.]

To those of us who have been Freedom fans since 2001, there’s something special about the original players from the WUSA era. Mystique, aura, frisson, whatever you want to call it, what hangs about them is that these were the first female professional soccer players in American history. They’re pioneers, even if the pioneers were eventually let down by the organizers and management of the league that made them pioneers to start with.

What I’m trying to get at is why I and a bunch of other old-school Freedom fans would take a day off work, travel to the SoccerPlex, and hang outside to watch a meaningless soccer match on a day ridiculously hot and miserable even by the standards of this benighted summer filled with hot and miserable days.

Anyhow, the Freedom announced early in the week that on Friday, July 23, at 4:30 p.m., Washington Freedom Alumni from the WUSA era would take on members of the Montgomery County Police Department in a charity match to raise money for a fund memorializing the family of one of their police officers (Details here for those wanting to know the particulars).

As soon as it was announced, I knew I had to be there. Friend and fellow Freedom Fighter Syed – whom I regularly deliver to the SoccerPlex for WPS matches – felt the same way. We actually arrived almost two hours early, in the hopes of getting a chance to hobnob with our heroines before the match. We made our way first to the site of the match, Field 12, which is immediately behind the Discovery Sports Center, that large building next to the stadium field. I noted that they’d be playing on a short field, the goals lined up across the width of the full field. Staff and interns were still working on setting up. We helped them and chatted with them a little bit, but then retreated to the air conditioned building, eventually finding seating just outside the dressing rooms while we waited for some old familiar faces to show up (That probably sounds kind of stalkerish, but it’s not as if we were lurking in some side corridor – the dressing rooms are right next to the main hallway of the facility).

Cat Whitehill and Abby Wambach were the first to show, I think, and we waved to them. Coaches Jim Gabarra and Nicci Wright went back and forth a couple of times. Eventually a small group of “classic” players wandered by with uniforms in hand: Carrie Moore, Casey Zimny, and Jacqui and Skylar Little, at least (I’ll refer to the players by their maiden names for now to ease confusion). One of the twins pointed at us and said, “And that’s who we’re here for!” They said hello briefly and went into the women’s dressing room.

Sarah Kate Noftsinger showed up down the hall, but then took a call on her cellphone and headed back in the other direction. Jennifer Grubb came through and had to be pointed to the correct room. Mia Hamm wandered by with her little girls in tow, then dropped them off in a small group of people talking with each other before heading back out front. It took me until that moment to realize that the good-looking guy talking with Jim and Cat had to be Mia’s husband, Nomar Garciaparra (What can I say? I’m not much of a baseball fan).

Most of them came out of the dressing room after a bit. They were all wearing WPS-style uniforms but with their classic numbers, except Skate, who for some reason was No. 1 instead of her traditional No. 12. We applauded as they headed down to the field, then followed them, watching as they warmed up. The magic of the afternoon might have been summarized by a short video clip that unfortunately I accidentally deleted: I was taping the players getting some water after warming up when I heard some familiar voices behind me. I turned the camera around to focus on Abby Wambach and Sarah Huffman chatting with diehard fans Stuart and Charlotte (who sit in the first two on-field seats). Some seconds on, Mia Hamm comes down the hill behind them with one daughter holding each hand. She proceeds to the field, leaving the girls with Nomar at the bottom of the hill, and heads out to warm up herself.

I think the starting lineup consisted of Mia Hamm, Sarah Kate Noftsinger, Jennifer Grubb, Carrie Moore, and Skylar Little, with Nicci Wright in goal. But it was pretty much open substitution, even during the run of play, so it was hard to keep track. Mia and Jacqui Little traded off on a regular basis, as did Emmy Barr, Carrie, and Skylar among the defenders.

The Freedom earned a corner kick pretty much off the opening kickoff, but nothing came of it. The MoCo team seemed determined to test Nicci from long-range and kept trying to send shots her way, most of which went way, way over the goal. They eventually settled down and sent a low cross right in front of goal that looked dangerous until a Freedom defender got there first and cleared it.

Jen Grubb looked rusty in the sixth minute when she kicked a ball then went up to about her head level and out about three yards, then had so much backspin on it that it rolled right back to her. Her second attempt at a feed was much more successful. Mia took a shot shortly thereafter that slipped just wide left, then they attempted a cross that the cops defended well and got out of danger.

The police struck the first blow in the eighth minute as one of them sent in a long low shot from about 20 yards out from the left post that slipped by in front of Nicci, bounced off the inside of the right post, and went into the left side netting. That just seemed to make the WUSAers more determined, and they gradually stepped up their level of play until they were dominating possession.

In the 11th minute, Jacqui Little sent in a beautiful cross from the left flank, but the shot went just barely wide right. A minute later, Mia had some space in front of goal and was fed the ball from the right end line. This time she carefully slipped it inside the right post, then turned around and feigned a hamstring injury.

In the 15th minute, Casey Zimny fired a ball in that the opposing goalkeeper had to make a quick reaction save on. A minute later, a Freedom shot went off the right post, then after a good buildup another shot went wide left.

Nicci Wright had a big save of her own as the MoCo team put on some pressure, first another dangerous cross that was cleared but the County got possession back and got off a shot that Nicci had to grab.

In the 17th minute, Mia scored again after a succession of right-left-right crosses, finally getting a good feed from Skate that she put away. Nicci made another big save shortly thereafter, prompting the fans in attendance to burst into a spontaneous (and really bad) rendition of “Oh, Canada.” With time running out in the 20-minute first half, the cops knocked another shot off the left post.

The players gathered the water cooler and then around Jim Gabarra, who told them, “You’ve still got it – maybe not as fast, but you’ve still got it.” Amanda Cromwell, another veteran, also joined them – judging by the bench conversation, she’d misunderstood the start time.

After a few minutes, I made my way over to the “celebrity” tent, where the WPS players in attendance were hanging out. I said hello to Huffy, Becky Sauerbrunn, Erin McLeod and Christie Welsh. After a couple of minutes, General Manager Mark Washo came over to bring out one of the celebrities in attendance, and as he walked back to the field with her I realized to my chagrin that I had walked right past Marta without realizing it. He introduced her, and then she went to the sidelines to make herself available for photographs. There was a tennis-ball toss and a few other halftime events, then the game resumed with Cat Whitehill taking over the announcer’s microphone.

The Freedom continued putting on the pressure, with multiple shots in the first few minutes, but no goals. Most notably, Carrie Moore stole the ball from a MoCo defender and came in on goal with only the keeper to beat but shot it way high. I shouted, “No wonder you’re a defender!” Cat responded – over the loudspeaker – “I heard that!”

Carrie was fouled in the 25th minute for the only disciplinary whistle of the match. We fans shouted for a card just to be obnoxious. The MoCo goalkeeper made another big save shortly thereafter, then the scoring resumed in the 27th as Skate managed to knock a long shot from the left past him and in.

In the 28th minute, Mia looked in good position to send in a nice cross but completely botched it. I reflexively shouted, “What was that?” She turned to me and said something slightly rueful along the lines about she would have done a lot better 10 years ago. I concurred.

Carrie redeemed herself in the 29th minute by scoring from slightly closer in than her previous attempt. Jacqui had an easy putaway a minute later after Mia smoked her defender to get a nice, clean, low cross off. Carrie’s fellow defender Skylar had her moment of ignominy as a cop cross from the right bounced off of her and went in for an own goal.

Play stopped briefly in the 32nd minute as a MoCo player slipped and fell, but was quickly restarted with a dropped ball after it was clear he was okay.

Skylar redeemed herself in the 33rd minute, slipping a ball just barely inside the left post and out of the goalkeeper’s reach, belying my insinuation that defenders can’t aim. Jennifer Grubb closed out the scoring in the 38th minute with a shot from about the top of the box and directly out from goal.

As we entered stoppage time, goalkeeper Nicci Wright claimed a County ball coming in from the left, dropped it at her feet, and took off at high speed for the opposing team’s goal. Much to both her and our disappointment, though, the whistle blew before she even reached midfield. The final score, by my reckoning, was 7-2 (I know it’s generally been reported as 8-2, but I watched the replay of my own video and only counted seven). For those who want to see all or part of the game, I’ve put the first half online at Vimeo. I haven’t had the chance to upload the high-scoring second-half yet, but once I do, I’ll add a comment pointing to it below.

The celebration of the Freedom veterans continued the following evening as they were all invited to watch the WPS match that evening and were introduced to the crowd at halftime. And, just for the record, here are their new last names:

Emmy Barr – Giannoni
Jacqui Little – Rimando (married to the former DC United goalkeeper)
Skylar Little – Meinhardt
Carrie Moore – O’Keeffe
Lindsay Stoecker – Gerardo (showed up for the WPS match but did not participate Friday)

Meredith Beard (née Florance, but she was already Beard when she played for the Freedom) was also at the WPS match only. Amy Gray’s name was announced, but she was not in attendance.

The capper on it all though, was the long-awaited announcement that the next member of the Hall of Freedom was WUSA captain and ironwoman Jennifer Grubb. Our host here on this blog can assure you that when he worked for the Freedom I gave him no end of grief on what I considered an egregious snubbing of Captain Grubb. So I was delighted when that was finally remedied.

And to close I will just note that on a 100-degree day with miserable humidity one player and one player only stayed on the field the whole time: Jennifer Grubb, ironwoman to the end.

So much for No. 1, how about No. 7?

By StarCityFan

Washington Freedom (4-6-5, 17 points, 4th place) at Atlanta Beat (3-7-4, 13 points, 7th place)
Wednesday, July 28, 7:30 p.m. EDT
KSU Soccer Stadium, Kennesaw, Ga.
All-time series: Freedom lead 2-0-0
Last meeting: Freedom 2, Beat 0

Once upon a time this looked like an easy three points. Unlike Philadelphia, Atlanta was behaving like a proper expansion team, losing five matches in a row and being little threat to the competition. Of course, that was before the St. Louis Athletica folded and Atlanta picked up a bunch of their key players: Hope Solo, Lori Chalupny, Tina Ellertson, Eniola Aluko and Aya Miyama.

More recently, alas, it’s Washington that’s looked like the expansion team. Since the beginning of June, the Freedom have gone 0-4-4 and are on a three-game losing streak, while the Beat have gone 3-2-3 and are on a two-game winning streak.

When these two teams last played, the Freedom won 2-0 thanks in large part to a stellar, seven-save performance from Erin McLeod in goal. Unfortunately, McLeod is now gone for the season, and Washington will instead rely on their single pickup from the Athletica refugees, rookie goalkeeper Ashlyn Harris. Harris was the primary goalkeeper for the North Carolina Tarheels her sophomore and senior years and split the time her junior year. She’s also spent significant time on the US U-19 and U-21 teams as well as receiving a callup to the full national team last year.

Players to worry about:

Hope Solo – Despite her well-deserved reputation, the Freedom always seem to have Solo’s number. Their all-time record against Team Solo is 2-0-1, with the draw being the first match between the two teams, in which the Freedom managed to claw back from a 3-1 deficit with a header from Sonia Bompastor in stoppage time to eke out a draw. However, this trend is not something we can count on. If Hope is on her usual form, it could be a frustrating night.

Johanna Rasmussen – With Eniola Aluko away on national team duty and Ramona Bachmann not having much impact so far, the Danish forward is the Beat’s primary scoring threat, though with only two goals on the season that’s not saying much. Still, the Freedom’s defense, backed by a rookie goalkeeper, may be vulnerable.

Kia McNeill – If I were to compose a drinking game for this match, one of the entries would be “Kia McNeill fouls Abby Wambach (Double if she gets carded).” And against the Freedom, McNeill has a knack for being in the wrong place at the wrong time: Bompastor scored her aforementioned header goal after the ball bounced off McNeill’s head first, then in last year’s match at RFK Homare Sawa’s shot bounced off McNeill’s leg and into the net for the game-winning goal. We’ll have to see if the Hope/Kia curse holds or gets broken.

Players to root for:

Ashlyn Harris – Well, duh! Goalkeeper staffing has been an adventure for the Freedom through much of the WPS era, first with Erin McLeod’s green card issues, then with coach Nicci Wright having to don the gloves when Kati Jo Spisak got injured while McLeod was on national team duty. On the other hand, there seems to be a WPS tradition of unsung goalkeepers rising to the task, with Jillian Loyden last year earning Player of the Week honors when she stepped in for Hope Solo, and Karen Bardsley this year proving to be All-World after Jenni Branam was injured. Let’s hope Harris is another name to add to this list.

Abby Wambach – My impression is that the key difference between the Freedom and FC Gold Pride last Sunday was that their world-class striker was better than our world-class striker. Abby had as many chances at Marta, but they all seemed to go off-target or right to the goalkeeper. She seemed to start off the year strongly but has faded in the stretch. Washington needs a Player of the Week performance out of her again, and soon.

Sarah Huffman – Huffy would be my Woman of the Match from Sunday. Full of energy and all over the field, she worked hard to make things happen. Her finest moment might have been one occasion when she was triple-teamed when deep on the right flank but nevertheless cut and weaved into enough room to get off a promising-looking cross. We need more of that.

The bottom line is that, barring a possible Sky Blue FC collapse, there are no easy points any more. Atlanta has bolstered its lineup, FCGP is unstoppable, Philadelphia is formidable and Chicago and Boston are getting their acts together. Washington needs to do the same if they’re to remain in the playoff hunt.

Make or break time for the Freedom

By StarCityFan

Washington Freedom (4-5-5, 17 points, 4th place) at FC Gold Pride (11-3-1, 34 points, 1st place)
Saturday, July 24, 7 p.m. EDT
Maryland SoccerPlex, Boyds, Md.
All-time series: Even at 2-2-1
Last meeting: Gold Pride 3, Freedom 2

FC Gold Pride and the Freedom have been going in opposite directions since I wrote the preview for their last meeting: the league leaders have won three in a row to pad their lead, while the Freedom have lost two, holding at the same number of standings points. The Freedom in fact have not won a match since downing the Philadelphia Independence, 2-1, at the SoccerPlex on May 30.

With only 10 games left in the season, it’s crunch time. Starting today, Washington plays four games in 12 days that could decide its postseason fate. By the end of the evening on Aug. 4, the Freedom could at best have 29 points, likely good enough for second place and close to clinching a playoff spot, or they could still be mired at 17 points and needing to win most or all of their remaining games to reach the postseason.

Having to play the first-place team in that situation does not bode well, and against Team Marta (Sol last year, Gold Pride this year), Washington is 0-4-1. However, the Freedom did put on a battle the last time these teams faced each other, roaring back from a 3-0 deficit with two late goals to make the game competitive. And I may be a bit biased, but I think that if Kari Seitz had been refereeing that match, Gold Pride would have finished the game with 9 or 10 players. Seitz, you might remember, had the guts to red-card Los Angeles Sol defender Allison Falk in last year’s championship for fouling Natasha Kai when she was the last defender able to interfere with Kai’s attack on goal. Unfortunately for the Freedom, this referee was not so bold, despite one brazen foul and several very arguable ones in similar situations.

Again, I’d like to see Nikki Marshall up top. She gave the Gold Pride back line fits even in the few minutes she played in the prior match, scoring one goal and threatening repeatedly. With Abby Wambach back, that should give the Freedom the “lightning-and-thunder” combination they’ve been missing ever since Lisa De Vanna broke her leg. Lene Mykjåland, alas, has not been living up to expectations – I keep wondering if our Scandinavian is having issues with the heat of this miserable summer.

Sarah Huffman and Allie Long are back from national team camp and should bolster the midfield. If Marshall plays forward, Kristi Eveland will be in the back line, as she was in the previous game against Boston. The defense needs to hang tough for the full 90 minutes, though I think the key won’t be shutting Gold Pride down (practically impossible with Marta, Christine Sinclair and Tiffeny Milbrett up front) so much as scoring enough goals to stay ahead of them. So I’m hoping for an old-fashioned Washington Freedom 4-3 barnburner. Let’s see if they can chalk up their first-ever win against Team Marta.

P.S. There was a preview of last weekend’s Boston Breakers match, but it vanished in the ether somewhere between my email and the website.

[Note from Jim: It is lost somewhere in the website - I had it all ready to go, hit publish and it vanished. I was away from my computer all day Sunday so I couldn't fix the problem and have been traveling since then so my apologies to StarCityFan and all the readers.]

MMR: Freedom fall behind early, lose to FC Gold Pride

I don’t really know what to say about yesterday’s ugly loss other than I guess it was nice to see the Freedom continue to try to fight back until the final whistle. If you want more analysis than that, check out some great recaps here, here or here.

The losses of Abby Wambach, Sarah Huffman and Allie Long to WNT duty certainly hurt but the real issue is the Freedom have not found a suitable replacement for the loss of Lisa De Vanna. What we have seen since the injury is that Lene Mykjaland is a great sub for De Vanna and Christie Welsh is a nice fourth forward – someone who can provide fresh legs at the end of the match but can’t be counted on for more than 20+ minutes at a time.

And when Wambach is away, that only leaves Mykjaland and Welsh up top. Nikki Marshall seems to be a nice option to move up when desperate but who knows what impact moving her to forward full time will have on the defense. There may not be another forward that can step in at this point in the season but this is an issue that won’t be going away before the end of the season either.

At this point I think it would be beneficial to see Jim Gabarra shake up the roster a little more in an effort to not let this season get away. Alex Singer continues to sit on the bench and maybe she needs to start playing so Marshall and/or Rebecca Moros can move to forward (Moros played both forward and midfield last season).

Will that solve the Freedom’s consistency issues? Not likely, but it could be enough to keep this team from falling out of contention by August. Hey, when you’ve gone five straight matches without a win what do you have to lose?

LINKS

Here are some stories to take your mind off the Freedom’s woes…

That will do it for today. As always, feel free to leave your opinions in the comments below.

Latest Poll

Should Jim Gabarra be fired for the team's midseason slide?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

@FreedomInsider Twitter