All Scores

Alex Morgan: ‘Getting removed from the USWNT gave me a reset’

Alex Morgan scored twice against Haiti in the USWNT’s Concacaf W Championship opener. (Brad Smith/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

Alex Morgan told ESPN that her eight-month removal from the USWNT provided a chance for the star forward to “reset.”

Following last summer’s Olympics – in which the team walked away with a bronze medal – Morgan was left off the USWNT roster through the fall, winter and spring. Questions arose about whether her time as one of the team’s top players had passed.

Rather than become discouraged, Morgan made the best of the time away from the team.

“Getting removed from the national team gave me a reset,” Morgan said. “At this point in my career, I’m playing soccer because I genuinely love it. And I’m having fun,” she said. “It’s not that I need it to fulfill myself, or need it to feel value in myself, or that I need it financially — I’m playing because I want to keep playing.”

For four straight USWNT camps, from October through February, Morgan was not called in. Then came a fifth in April. Andonovski informed the forward she wouldn’t be joining the team again, and that snub came as a surprise, Morgan told ESPN.

“It was a hard discussion,” she said. “But one of the things I really respect about Vlatko is just his honesty — having those hard conversations is not easy for anybody. I was disappointed, but at the same time, it wasn’t about pointing fingers, it was just: OK, if my name’s not on the roster, now I need to make sure it’s going to be the next time.”

Then she began the NWSL season with debut club San Diego Wave FC.

So far this season, Morgan has 11 goals with the league-leading expansion side. That’s enough to put her in first place for the Golden Boot and to make her a frontrunner in the MVP race a little over halfway through the season. While Andonovski has cited NWSL play as an important part in his USWNT decision-making process in the past, Morgan said it wasn’t at the forefront of her mind. Still, she played like she had something to prove.

“It’s not a bitter, I’ll-show-you sort of response,” she said. “I can’t have in the back of the mind that I’m playing to get myself back on the national team. I’m playing to prove Jill [Ellis, Wave president] and Casey [Stoney, Wave coach] right in why they traded me and why I’m here — and to prove to myself right that I am worthy of scoring goals in the NWSL and being on the national team.

“But my end goal wasn’t: I want to make it back on the national team. It’s: I’m playing to make San Diego the best and most successful expansion team that there’s ever been in the NWSL. I am on one team and one team only and that’s San Diego.”

June brought another call from Andonovski. This time, and after eight months away, he was inviting her to the USWNT camp and World Cup qualifiers.

That decision paid off in the team’s first qualifier against Haiti: Morgan notched a brace, her first multi-goal game at the international level since 2019. She’s been one of the few bright spots in an otherwise lackluster tournament for a squad that holds high expectations.

Morgan and the USWNT will continue their journey in the Concacaf W Championship with a semifinal matchup against Costa Rica at 7 p.m. ET Thursday.

PWHL Breaks US Women’s Hockey Attendance Record in Washington DC

Fans hold signs and cheer during a 2025/26 PWHL Takeover Tour game in Washington, DC.
A record-breaking crowd of 17,228 PWHL fans saw the New York Sirens defeat the Montréal Victoire 2-1 at DC's Capital One Arena on Sunday. (Matt McClain/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

The PWHL is continuing to break records, as Sunday's 2025/26 Takeover Tour stop in Washington, DC, saw 17,228 fans pack into Capital One Arena to see the No. 2 New York Sirens top the No. 4 Montréal Victoire 2-1 — setting a new US women's hockey attendance record in the process.

The benchmark surpasses the previous US record set this past November, when the Seattle Torrent welcomed 16,014 fans to their inaugural home opener.

Sunday's DC crowd also sees the US mark inch closer to the overall professional women's hockey attendance record, set in April 2024 when 21,105 PWHL fans sold out Montréal's Bell Centre to watch the Victoire take on the Toronto Sceptres.

"Washington, DC, showed up in such a big way, and the energy our fans brought into the arena turned this game into something truly special," PWHL EVP of business operations Amy Scheer said of the first-ever PWHL game in the nation's capital. "Moments like this capture the joy of our sport and the momentum behind the league."

The third-year league is currently racing through its best-attended month on record, drawing more than 154,000 fans across the last 16 games while averaging crowds of 8,726 across all 49 games so far this season.

KC Current Coach Says Temwa Chawinga Injury Return Remains Unclear

Kansas City Current striker Temwa Chawinga looks across the pitch during a 2025 NWSL match.
Reigning back-to-back NWSL MVP Temwa Chawinga suffered an adductor injury on October 18th. (Amy Kontras/NWSL via Getty Images)

The Kansas City Current delivered some concerning news this week, with the NWSL club revealing that star striker Temwa Chawinga remains sidelined with an hip adductor injury while the league's 2026 preseason gets underway.

The team currently lists the reigning back-to-back NWSL MVP under a season-ending injury (SEI) designation, a category earned after Chawinga picked up the injury in mid-October, leaving the Kansas City attacker benched for the Current's quarterfinal loss to eventual 2025 NWSL champions Gotham FC.

"It's hard because of the nature of the injury," incoming Kansas City head coach Chris Armas told The Athletic last week. "With Temwa, we've got to be very careful, but she's looking great and doing lots of good work on the return to play."

Also on the Current's SEI list is standout winger Michelle Cooper, with the 23-year-old rising USWNT star suffering a foot injury in Kansas City's final regular-season match of 2025.

"It was a little bit of a tough ending here after, honestly, an amazing historic season," said Armas. "Hopefully they are back as soon as possible, but it's still unclear."

Both Chawinga and Cooper will have some time to recover before Kansas City kicks off their 2026 NWSL regular season against the Utah Royals on March 14th — with teams allowed to lift a player's SEI status any time once the season begins.

Top Women’s Tennis Stars Advance to 2nd Round at 2026 Australian Open

US tennis star Coco Gauff reaches for a backhand volley during her opening match at the 2026 Australian Open.
US tennis star Coco Gauff advanced from 2026 Australian Open first round with a straight-set win over Kamilla Rakhimova on Sunday. (Daniel Kopatsch/Getty Images)

The world's top tennis stars are rolling in Melbourne, as the first round of the 2026 Australian Open wrapped early Tuesday morning with only a few ranked seeds suffering early defeats.

World No. 15 Emma Navarro was the highest-ranked US player to fall in the first round, with the 24-year-old exiting the season's first Grand Slam in a 6-3, 3-6, 3-6 loss to Poland's No. 50 Magda Linette on Sunday.

No. 11 Ekaterina Alexandrova also stumbled in the first round, with her Melbourne run ending in a three-set loss to Turkey's No. 112 Zeynep Sönmez on Saturday before No. 68 Peyton Stearns ousted fellow US star and 2020 Australian Open champion No. 30 Sofia Kenin in straight sets on Sunday.

Many contenders still remain in the hunt, however, as the entire WTA Top 10 cruised through their opening matchups to advance to the Slam's second round.

That said, fans will miss out on one highly anticipated showdown, as wild card entry Venus Williams's first-round loss ended the 45-year-old tennis icon's path to a second-round clash with US favorite No. 3 Coco Gauff.

How to watch the second round of the 2026 Australian Open

The 2026 Australian Open continues when the Slam's second round kicks off with a Tuesday night slate that features stars like No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka, No. 3 Coco Gauff, and No. 7 Jasmine Paolini.

Tuesday's action begins at 7 PM ET, with all Melbourne matches airing live across ESPN platforms.

UConn Women’s Basketball Claims Historic Victory Over Rival Notre Dame

UConn junior guard KK Arnold reacts to a play during a 2025/26 NCAA basketball game against Notre Dame.
The No. 1 UConn Huskies thrashed Notre Dame by 38 points on Monday. (Joe Buglewicz/Getty Images)

The ongoing dominance of UConn basketball has started to break records, as the top-ranked Huskies humbled unranked Notre Dame 85-47 on Monday — keeping their perfect 2025/26 NCAA season intact.

Monday's 38-point margin of victory marked the largest in the teams' 20-year rivalry, with the win also snapping the Huskies' three-game head-to-head losing streak against the Fighting Irish.

"UConn showed why they're the best team in the country," Notre Dame head coach Niele Ivey said postgame.

Even more, UConn sophomore forward Sarah Strong added her own individual history to Monday's tally, becoming the third-fastest Husky to reach 1,000 career points, with the 19-year-old trailing only program legends Maya Moore and Paige Bueckers — who each did so in 55 games to Strong's 59 — in the race to reach that stat.

"I would love to see if anybody has scored 1,000 points by taking less shots than she's taking," said UConn head coach Geno Auriemma. "She's so efficient."

"It means a lot to me I guess, but I wouldn't be able to do it without my teammates," Strong said after leading the Huskies with an 18-point, 11-rebound double-double on Monday night.

How to watch UConn basketball this week

UConn now returns to Big East play, with the No. 1 Huskies taking on unranked Georgetown at 7:30 PM ET on Thursday, airing live on TNT.