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Portland Thorns win Women’s International Champions Cup on late goal

The Thorns lift the trophy after defeating Lyon in the Women’s ICC title game. (Abbie Parr/Getty Images)

The Portland Thorns took down Lyon, 1-0, to capture the Women’s International Champions Cup in Providence Park on Saturday night.

In the first half, each side worked to dictate possession and build out of the back.

The Thorns’ offense took some time to click, drawing eight offsides calls throughout the match. Sophia Smith ran at Lyon’s backline, creating solid chances in the final third, but was unable to convert.

Lindsey Horan, Crystal Dunn and Christine Sinclair all subbed in at the start of the second half, taking the pitch for Portland for the first time since the Tokyo Olympics. After the break, the Thorns committed to a high press, putting pressure on Lyon right from the whistle.

Portland’s moment finally came in the 87th minute. Morgan Weaver got on the end of a lofted ball from midfield and slotted in a shot from a tight angle to put the Thorns up 1-0 with minutes left to play.

Weaver’s late-game finish sealed the victory over Lyon and the Thorns’ first Women’s ICC title since the tournament began in 2018.

“It shows that we can compete with anyone and we’re so ready to,” Weaver said after the win.

The Thorns add the ICC trophy to their 2021 Challenge Cup title. Portland now turns to the back half of the NWSL season in first place and as favorites to win the NWSL championship.

Unrivaled 3×3 Finalizes 2026 Roster as Big Name Players Drop Out

Team Collier's Angel Reese and Team Clark's Sabrina Ionescu eye the ball during the 2025 WNBA All-Star Game.
WNBA stars Angel Reese and Sabrina Ionescu will not participate in the second season of Unrivaled. (Mike Lawrence/NBAE via Getty Images)

The season two roster for Unrivaled 3×3 Basketball is officially complete, with the offseason league announcing its final three players on Thursday — and revealing that some big names from the venture's inaugural campaign will not feature on the 2026 court.

New York Liberty guard Sabrina Ionescu and Chicago Sky forward Angel Reese will not return for Unrivaled's second season, though league EVP and GM Clare Duwelius told The Athletic this week that they had "lots of conversations" with the players.

DiJonai Carrington will miss the 2026 campaign as well, as a mid-foot sprain suffered during September's WNBA Playoffs forced the Minnesota Lynx guard to withdraw from next year's competition.

With Carrington leaving the eight-team league's final open roster spots at three, Unrivaled rounded out their 2026 numbers with Chicago Sky guard Rebecca Allen, Indiana Fever guard Aari McDonald, and Seattle Storm center and 2025 WNBA Draft overall No. 2 pick Dominique Malonga.

Malonga joins the 3×3 upstart after abruptly terminating her overseas contract with Turkish club Fenerbahçe following a post-WNBA season wrist surgery.

Unrivaled also dropped the list of their 2026 head coaches this week, with returning managers Nola Henry and Teresa Weatherspoon joined by fresh faces including ex-Storm boss Noelle Quinn.

How to watch Unrivaled in 2026

Unrivaled will tip off its expanded 2026 season on January 5th, with live coverage airing on TNT.

Racing Louisville Shoots for Franchise History on NWSL Decision Day

Racing Louisville forward Emma Sears warms up before a 2025 NWSL match.
Racing Louisville forward Emma Sears will play for a historic NWSL postseason berth on Decision Day. (Soobum Im/NWSL via Getty Images)

NWSL Decision Day is just around the corner, as the final 2025 regular-season weekend puts the last playoff slot — and perhaps a bit of Racing Louisville history — on the line.

With seven of the eight spots in the 2025 NWSL Playoffs secured, No. 8 Louisville can punch a franchise-first postseason ticket with a win over No. 13 Bay FC on Sunday.

"I think it's an incredible position that we're in," Racing manager Bev Yanez said last week. "It's a privilege to be in this position, and I think the reality is we still control our destiny, and that needs to be the focus for us."

If Racing's match ends in a loss or a draw, however, the No. 9 North Carolina Courage can sneak in with a win — leaving Louisville out of contention.

Louisville's playoff hopes could very well rest on the blazing form of USWNT rising star Emma Sears, after the 24-year-old forward registered a hat trick against New Zealand in a full 90-minute performance on Wednesday.

"She's got an instinct inside the box and a desire to score goals that you can't teach," USWNT manager Emma Hayes said of Sears.

Racing Louisville has finished the regular season in ninth place every year since the 2021 expansion team's exception, with Sunday offering the chance to change their fate.

How to watch Racing Louisville vs. Bay FC on NWSL Decision Day

No. 8 Racing Louisville will host No. 9 Bay FC in the 2025 NWSL season's playoff-clinching finale at 5 PM ET on Sunday, with live coverage airing on NWSL+.

NWSL Decision Day to Determine 2025 Playoffs Seeding

Gotham midfielder Rose Lavelle celebrates a goal with her teammates during a 2025 NWSL match.
Gotham could secure 2025 NWSL Playoffs seeding as high as No. 4 or as low as No. 8 on Decision Day. (Ira L. Black/NWSL via Getty Images)

Most NWSL teams have something to play for this weekend, as Sunday's Decision Day finale will determine crucial seeding going into the 2025 Playoffs.

Bucking the trend are the No. 1 Kansas City Current and No. 2 Washington Spirit, who have already locked in home-field advantage — leaving every other team above the cutoff line battling for seeding this weekend.

The No. 3 Orlando Pride and No. 4 Seattle Reign will face each other with the third seed on the line, while the No. 5 San Diego Wave, No. 6 Portland Thorns, and No. 7 Gotham FC could all contend for a home playoff match depending on the day's full results.

Gotham will take on the No. 9 North Carolina in their 2025 regular-season closer, as the Courage push to leap above the playoff line while the Bats aim to avoid a difficult path forward.

Whichever team clinches the No. 8 seed — likely either Gotham, Racing Louisville, or North Carolina — will travel to Kansas City to take on the record-breaking Shield-winners in next week's quarterfinal.

Boosting the Courage on NWSL Decision Day will be a sell-out crowd — North Carolina's second sell-out match of the 2025 season.

How to watch NWSL Decision Day 2025

No. 1 Kansas City and No. 5 San Diego will kick off the 2025 NWSL season's Decision Day at 3 PM ET on Sunday, airing live on ESPN.

The six remaining matches on the weekend's slate will start simultaneously at 5 PM ET, with live coverage on either ESPN or NWSL+.

ACFC Star Sarah Gorden Calls Out Elizabeth Eddy Op-Ed on NWSL Gender Eligibility

A Pride celebration Angel City corner flag awaits a 2023 NWSL match.
Angel City said the club "remained committed to equity, inclusion, and belonging" in response this week's controversial op-ed. (Katharine Lotze/Getty Images)

Angel City center back and captain Sarah Gorden and goalkeeper Angelina Anderson spoke out on Thursday, opening their gameday press conference by addressing Monday's New York Post op-ed penned by teammate Elizabeth Eddy that urged the NWSL to adopt a "clear standard" for gender eligibility.

"Questions and controversy abound over intersex and transgender athletes," Eddy wrote, suggesting the league require players be "born with ovaries" or undergo genetic testing, with a photo of Orlando Pride and Zambia striker Barbra Banda — who faced fan harassment earlier this year — as the lead image.

The article — and its originating tweet — provoked backlash online, with Angel City issuing a statement on Tuesday saying the op-ed "does not reflect the opinion of an entire organization," and that the team "has remained committed to equity, inclusion, and belonging."

ACFC captain Gorden used stronger language, saying that the article directly caused her teammates "hurt" and "harm."

"We don't agree with the things written for a plethora of reasons, but mostly the undertones come across as transphobic and racist," Gorden, who has a history of addressing social justice issues, told reporters.

NWSL fans display a flag reading "Trans People Belong" at a 2025 NWSL match during Pride Month.
The NWSL quietly deleted the league's gender eligibility policy prior to the 2022 season. (Jack Goras/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

Gender policy abandonment "invites harassment" of NWSL players

After quietly abandoning a 2021 policy that deemed all transwomen eligible so long as their testosterone levels mirrored those assigned female at birth, the NWSL has failed to provide official gender eligibility guidelines in the three years since — though no current league athletes identify as trans.

"The league may have hoped its silence over this lack of policy would be taken as an openness to revisiting or reworking its approach, or at least neutrality when it comes to the inclusion of trans and intersex players," wrote The Athletic’s Meg Linehan in response.

"But the league and commissioner Jessica Berman's silence have instead repeatedly invited harassment of current players — to whom such a policy would not apply in any case — especially Black and queer players."

According to an NWSL Players Association spokesperson, collective bargaining — rather than the league itself — must determine all policy matters, including guidelines surrounding gender eligibility.

As for where the players union stands on the issue, the spokesperson told The Athletic that "Any position the NWSLPA takes…is and will be the product of a thoughtful, deliberate process that engages all our members and the issues that are important to them."