Kansas City Current star Temwa Chawinga cleaned up at the inaugural NWSL Awards on Wednesday, with the standout striker receiving three different 2025 honors — including a second straight MVP trophy.
After the Malawi international fueled the Current's Shield-winning season, Chawinga followed up her 2025 NWSL MVP award with back-to-back Golden Boot titles and a spot on this year's Best XI lineup.
"I should thank my teammates, without my teammates I know I cannot achieve these things," she told the crowd. "A lot of great players, so I'm so grateful that [media] chose me, and the players, and the coaches."
Following the most successful season in both club and league history, Kansas City landed an impressive five players on the 2025 Best XI First Team, including Goalkeeper of the Year Lorena.
Gotham FC defender Lilly Reale claimed Rookie of the Year, the Washington Spirit's Tara McKeown took home Defender of the Year, the North Carolina Courage's Manaka Matsukubo won Midfielder of the Year, and Bev Yanez earned Coach of the Year for leading Racing Louisville to the 2021 expansion club's best-ever finish and first postseason appearance.
"I'm a firm believer that I'm only as good as the people around me," Yanez said after becoming the first person to ever make the NWSL Playoffs as both a manager and a player. "I've been supported not only from a staff perspective, but a player perspective and a club perspective."
With the awards ceremony in the rearview mirror, the league now turns to the final test of the year — Saturday's star-studded 2025 NWSL Championship.
How to watch the 2025 NWSL Championship
No. 8 Gotham FC will battle the No. 2 Washington Spirit in San Jose for this year's NWSL title on Saturday.
The 2025 NWSL season's grand finale will kick off at 8 PM ET, airing live on CBS.
World No. 4 Brazil lifted the Copa América Femenina trophy for a record-extending ninth time on Saturday, winning the 2025 final by topping No. 18 Colombia in penalties after the Conmebol titans finished extra time in a hard-fought 4-4 draw.
Drama ran through the final from start to finish, as Colombia took aim at a first-ever continental title by snagging the lead three times — forcing Brazil to trail for the first time in a Copa América match since 2014.
The physical, often chippy game saw Colombian defender Jorelyn Carabalí narrowly avoid a red card in first-half stoppage time after head-butting Brazil forward Gio Garbelini in the box — the most egregious of the match's combined 36 fouls and eight yellow cards.
While several players on both teams had star turns, Brazil legend and tournament MVP Marta shone the brightest, keeping hopes alive for the defending champs by using the last kick in regulation to net a long-range equalizer that sent the final into extra time at a 3-3 draw.
The second-half sub then handed Brazil their first lead of the match, masterfully tapping in the squad's fourth goal in the 105th minute — though fellow NWSL star Leicy Santos bent in a stellar 115th-minute free kick to keep Colombia in contention.
An NWSL player also reigned supreme in the ensuing seven-round penalty shootout, as Brazil goalkeeper Lorena blocked Carabalí's sudden-death shot to seal the championship win.
With the 2025 Copa América now in their trophy case, Brazil is eyeing their next major tournament appearance as hosts of the 2027 World Cup, though 39-year-old Marta's future with the team remains uncertain.