2022 Washington Spirit season

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PresidentBen Olsen (until May 2)
Head coachKris Ward (until August 22)
Albertin Montoya (from Sept. 2 to Oct. 1)
NWSL11th
Washington Spirit
2022 season
PresidentBen Olsen (until May 2)
Head coachKris Ward (until August 22)
Albertin Montoya (from Sept. 2 to Oct. 1)
StadiumAudi Field
Segra Field
NWSL11th
Challenge CupRunners-up
Top goalscorerLeague: Ashley Hatch (9)
All: Ashley Hatch (15)
Highest home attendance10,177
Lowest home attendance1,961
Average home league attendance6,222
 2021
2023 
All statistics correct as of October 1, 2022.

The 2022 Washington Spirit season was the club's ninth season of play and their ninth season in the National Women's Soccer League, the top division of women's soccer in the United States.

The season began with the 2022 NWSL Challenge Cup on March 19, 2022, followed by a 22-match regular season that concluded on October 1, 2022.[1]

Transfers

In the prior season, the Spirit sat in seventh place—beyond playoff contention—with a 5–5–3 record through early August when head coach Richie Burke abruptly resigned, citing "health concerns."[2] On August 11, The Washington Post published a report in which former Spirit players accused the coach of verbal and emotional abuse.[3] The Spirit continued playing under interim coach Kris Ward while additional investigations continued around the league. In September, they forfeited two consecutive matches for failing to adhere to the NWSL's COVID-19 protocols.[4] However, after those two forfeits, Washington would not lose any of their remaining 12 regular season matches, finishing the regular season in third place and earning a spot in the playoffs.[5] Ashley Hatch received the NWSL Golden Boot as the league's top scorer.

The Spirit defeated the defending-champion North Carolina Courage at home after extra time in the first playoff round, defeated OL Reign in the semifinals in Seattle, and then captured the NWSL Championship in November by defeating the Chicago Red Stars in extra time.[6] Following the season, Kris Ward was named permanent head coach.[7]

In the team's front office, CEO Steve Baldwin had also been accused of nepotism and retaliatory behavior, leading to fellow co-owner Y. Michelle Kang calling him for sell his ownership interest in the team, a sentiment echoed by players directly.[8] On October 14, The Washington Post reported that Baldwin had announced to club investors that he intended to sell the club.[9] Kang became majority owner of the Spirit on March 30, 2022.[10][11]

In the offseason, the Spirit lost two defenders from the 2021 squad: Paige Nielsen left for Angel City FC in the 2022 NWSL Expansion Draft, while fellow defender Tegan McGrady joined San Diego Wave FC. They added veteran defender Amber Brooks, who signed a one-year contract in March.[12] Following an outstanding rookie season, Trinity Rodman signed a four year, $1.1 million contract—the largest in NWSL history.[13] The Spirit roster remained largely intact ahead of the 2022 season.[14]

The club introduced two new kits for 2022. A navy blue "Community Kit," worn during the Challenge Cup showcased Washington-based charity DC SCORES. The regular season kit added a lighter blue sleeve and side stripe. Both kits added a single star marking the team's 2021 league championship.[15] The Kennedy Center sponsored the regular season jersey front.[16]

In

Position Player Transferred from Fee Date Ref
DF United States Alia Martin United States Michigan Wolverines Free December 18, 2021 [17]
MF United States Gaby Vincent United States Kansas City Current $25,000 allocation money and 2023 4th round pick December 20, 2021 [18]
DF United States Amber Brooks United States OL Reign Free March 17, 2022 [12]
DF United States Madison Elwell United States Vanderbilt Commodores Free May 12, 2022 [19]
FW United States Audrey Harding United States UNC Wilmington Free May 1, 2022 [20][21]
MF Republic of Ireland Marissa Sheva United States Utah Royals FC Free June 3, 2022 [22][23][24][21]

Out

Position Player Transferred to Fee Date Ref
DF United States Tegan McGrady United States San Diego Wave FC With 2022 international roster spot and 2022 first-round draft pick for full protection from San Diego in 2022 NWSL Draft December 1, 2021 [25]
DF United States Mary Alice Vignola United StatesAngel City FC For $30,000 allocation money and allocated player protection with Angel City in 2022 NWSL Draft December 6, 2021 [26]
MF Jamaica Chinyelu Asher Sweden AIK Waived December 8, 2021 [27]
FW United States Cali Farquharson Sweden KIF Örebro Waived December 8, 2021 [27]
FW Venezuela Mariana Speckmaier Russia CSKA Moscow Waived December 8, 2021 [27]
DF United States Paige Nielsen United States Angel City FC Drafted as seventh pick by Angel City FC December 16, 2021 [28]
FW Japan Kumi Yokoyama United States NJ/NY Gotham FC For 2023 4th round pick February 17, 2022 [29]
FW England Tinaya Alexander France Montpellier HSC Undisclosed transfer fee. September 20, 2022 [30]

Draft picks

Draft picks are not automatically signed to the team roster. Only those who are signed to a contract are listed as incoming transfers.

Player Pos. Previous Team Notes Ref.
England Tinaya Alexander FW United States LSU Tigers 14th overall pick [31]
United States Madison Elwell FW United States Vanderbilt Commodores 15th overall pick
England Lucy Shepherd FW United States Hofstra Pride 23rd overall pick
United States Audrey Harding FW United States UNC Wilmington 38th overall pick
United States Jordan Thompson DF United States Gonzaga Bulldogs 50th overall pick

New contracts

Position Player Date Notes Ref
DF United States Camryn Biegalski December 8, 2021 Team option exercised [32]
GK Canada Devon Kerr December 8, 2021 Team option exercised [32]
DF Mexico Karina Rodríguez December 8, 2021 Team option exercised [32]
DF United States Morgan Goff December 22, 2021 Re-signed for one year with 2023 option [33]
MF United States Taylor Aylmer December 22, 2021 Re-signed for one year with 2023 option [34]
FW United States Ashley Hatch December 22, 2021 Re-signed for two years with 2024 option [35]
GK United States Nicole Barnhart January 31, 2022 One year [36]
FW United States Trinity Rodman February 2, 2022 Three years including 2025 club option [37]
DF United States Kelley O'Hara March 3, 2022 One year [38]
FW United States Audrey Harding August 25, 2022 Through end of 2022 season [21]
MF United States Marissa Sheva August 25, 2022 Through end of 2022 season

Pre-season

Due to obstacles in using D.C. United's practice facilities in Loudoun County, Virginia, the Spirit trained at other venues in Northern Virginia including Episcopal High School and The St. James sports complex.[39] In February, they moved to IMG Academy in Bradenton, Florida with a 38-player training camp roster. That roster included most of their winter draft picks and several non-roster invitees.[40]

The team played a series of friendlies to prepare for the forthcoming season. They lost the first match decisively to Kansas City Current 6–0, with goals from six different Kansas City players.[41] In mid–February, several American players returned to the US national team to compete in the 2022 SheBelieves Cup, while Devon Kerr, Sydney Schneider, Karina Rodríguez, and Julia Roddar were called up to Canada, Jamaica, Mexico, and Sweden, respectively. Returning to Washington for two additional intra-team scrimmages, the Spirit winnowed their roster to 30 players on March 2 ahead of the 2022 NWSL Challenge Cup.[42]

Challenge Cup

The Challenge Cup is the NWSL's primary league cup tournament. It was first played in 2020 following the cancellation of the regular season due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Angel City and San Diego, new expansion clubs, competed for the first time in the Challenge Cup. In the 2021 cup, Washington had failed to advance beyond the group stage. The twelve league teams were divided into three groups, with Washington initially competing twice against the other three teams in its group: Gotham, North Carolina, and Orlando.[43] As defending league champions, the Spirit entered the tournament with "the target on their backs."[44]

Group stage

Washington fought to a scoreless draw against Orlando on the road on the cup's opening weekend. Trinity Rodman and Ashley Sanchez created several opportunities in the first half but did not score.[45] Back at Segra Field for the first time in 2022 against Gotham FC, Rodman tackled Margaret Purce on a corner kick in the box, earning Gotham a penalty kick which Kristie Mewis converted. Down at halftime, Washington inserted 2021 scoring leader Ashley Hatch, who equalized on a pass from Sanchez.[46] The Spirit moved to Audi Field for the next match against North Carolina. They fell behind 2–0 with just two shots through 58 minutes, but rallied for two goals in the second half with goals from Rodman and Hatch.[47] Washington earned a dominant 4–1 win in their final home match against Orlando, a game that saw goalkeeper Devon Kerr make her first start since signing with the team in 2020.[48] Traveling to New Jersey to face Gotham a second time, the Spirit fell behind after Nahomi Kawasumi opened the scoring in the fourth minute. An equalizer from Sanchez and two goals by Rodman enabled a 3–1 win.[49] In the final group stage match against North Carolina — the first time the Spirit saw a national television audience — Washington managed a 2–2 draw.[50] The point helped North Carolina clinch the Challenge Cup East Division, but left the Spirit needing an unlikely win from then-winless Angel City over Portland the next night to advance to the semifinals. With that win from Angel City, the Spirit advanced to face OL Reign in the semifinals.[51]

March 19 Orlando Pride 0–0 Washington Spirit Orlando, Florida
19:00 EDT
Report
Stadium: Exploria Stadium
Referee: Laura Rodriguez (Colorado)
March 25 Washington Spirit 1–1 NJ/NY Gotham FC Leesburg, Virginia
19:30 EDT
Report
Stadium: Segra Field
Attendance: 3,421
Referee: Alyssa Nichols (Mississippi)
March 30 Washington Spirit 2–2 North Carolina Courage Washington, D.C.
19:30 EDT
Report
Stadium: Audi Field
Attendance: 2,155
Referee: Danielle Chesky (Virginia)
April 3 Washington Spirit 4–1 Orlando Pride Washington, D.C.
16:00 EDT
Report
Stadium: Audi Field
Attendance: 5,656
Referee: Sergii Demianchuk (Georgia)
April 17 NJ/NY Gotham FC 1–3 Washington Spirit Harrison, New Jersey
15:00 EDT
Report
Stadium: Red Bull Arena
Attendance: 2,061
Referee: Elvis Osmanovic (Florida)
April 23 North Carolina Courage 2–2 Washington Spirit Cary, North Carolina
13:00 EDT
Report
Stadium: WakeMed Soccer Park
Attendance: 3,905
Referee: Eric Tattersall (Ohio)

Divisional standings

Pos Team Pld W T L GF GA GD Pts Qualification NC WAS NJY ORL
1 North Carolina Courage 6 3 3 0 12 7 +5 12 Advance to knockout stage 2–2 2–0 1–0
2 Washington Spirit 6 2 4 0 12 7 +5 10 Advance to knockout stage based on ranking 2–2 1–1 4–1
3 NJ/NY Gotham FC 6 1 3 2 5 8 3 6 1–1 1–3 1–1
4 Orlando Pride 6 0 2 4 4 11 7 2 2–4 0–0 0–1
Source: NWSL
Rules for classification: 1) Total points; 2) Total goal differential; 3) Total number of goals scored; 4) Head-to-head points record; 5) Head-to-head goal differential; 6) Head-to-head number of goals scored; 7) Fewest disciplinary points; 8) Drawing of lots

Knockout stage

The knockout stage took place after the regular season opener on May 1, which coincidentally saw the Spirit defeat OL Reign 2–1. In addition to fixture congestion, the league was criticized for lack of venue availability: the league announced the game would be played at Segra Field after neither Lumen Field nor Audi Field were initially available.[51] Working with stadium organizers, the league moved the game back to Audi Field, although OL Reign were considered the home team. During the match, both teams created chances but remained scoreless after regulation. Megan Rapinoe debuted in second-half stoppage time for OL Reign. In the final minutes of regulation, Rapinoe's corner kick deflected onto Anna Heilferty's hand, but the referee blew his whistle to end regulation rather than reward OL Reign a penalty kick. Reign players were furious, with Rapinoe later commenting that Heilferty's hand "was out on fucking Jupiter." To determine a victor, the game moved to penalty kicks. Both teams converted in the first seven rounds; both goalkeepers saved the eighth attempt and both teams made their ninth try. In the tenth round, Sam Staab converted a ninth penalty kick for the Spirit and Aubrey Kingsbury made a game-winning save.[52]

May 4 Semifinal OL Reign 0–0
(8–9 p)
Washington Spirit Washington, D.C.
20:00 EDT
Report
Stadium: Audi Field
Attendance: 3,015
Referee: Greg Dopka (Illinois)
Penalties

Championship

The Spirit advanced to the championship game against North Carolina on May 7, 2022. Both teams rescheduled regular season matches to accommodate the final. The Courage took the lead on a Kerolin goal in the tenth minute. Washington avoided another penalty kick when another handball foul went uncalled, then equalized when Trinity Rodman passed through to Ashley Hatch for a goal against her former team. In the second half, Sam Staab tackled Kerolin in the box, but no foul was called. On the ensuing corner kick, the ricocheting ball deflected off Taylor Aylmer and into her own goal. Goalkeeper Aubrey Kingsbury's head collided with the post on the save attempt, and she was down for several minutes but remained in the game. Later in the second half, Hatch inadvertently kicked Abby Erceg in the stomach but was not issued a penalty. Finally, Jordan Baggett collided with Kerolin early in second-half stoppage time and suffered an apparent head or neck injury. She was stretchered off the field and taken to the hospital. Both coaches acknowledged team exhaustion following the game.[53] The Spirit's loss was the first since September 2021 (12–0–8 over that time). As runners-up in the cup, each player received a $5,000 bonus.[54] On May 12, the NWSL fined Hatch an undisclosed amount for unsportsmanlike conduct during the final.[55]

May 7 Final North Carolina Courage 2–1 Washington Spirit Cary, North Carolina
13:00 EDT
Report
Stadium: WakeMed Soccer Park
Attendance: 3,163
Referee: Katja Koroleva (Washington)

Regular season

Players

References

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