2014 National Women's Soccer League season


The 2014 National Women's Soccer League season was the second season of the National Women's Soccer League, the top division of women's soccer in the United States. Including the NWSL's two professional predecessors, Women's Professional Soccer and the Women's United Soccer Association, this was the eighth overall season of FIFA and USSF-sanctioned top division women's soccer in the United States. The league was operated by the United States Soccer Federation and received major financial backing from that body. Further financial backing was provided by the Canadian Soccer Association and the Mexican Football Federation. All three national federations paid the league salaries of many of their respective national team members in an effort to nurture talent in those nations.
The regular season began the weekend of April 12–13 and ended August 20, with the championship game played on August 30. FC Kansas City defeated the NWSL Shield winners Seattle Reign FC 2–1 to win the NWSL title.
The league had announced it would not expand for the 2014 season and was not expected to contract. However, after a push from the Houston Dynamo, the league approved the expansion of the Houston Dash.

Teams, stadia, and personnel

Stadia and locations

See also List of National Women's Soccer League stadiums
Two teams, the Dash and Reign, do not make their stadia's entire capacity available for home games, instead restricting ticket sales at a lower level. The full capacities of their venues are included in parentheses and italics.
The Boston Breakers,
FC Kansas City,
and Seattle Reign FC
moved to new stadia for 2014, while the Houston Dash was an expansion franchise.
TeamStadiumCapacity
Boston BreakersHarvard Stadium30,323
Chicago Red StarsVillage Sports Complex3,600
Houston DashBBVA Compass Stadium7,000
FC Kansas CityVerizon Field3,200
Portland ThornsProvidence Park20,438
Seattle Reign FCMemorial Stadium6,000
Sky Blue FCYurcak Field5,000
Washington SpiritMaryland SoccerPlex5,126
Western New York FlashSahlen's Stadium13,768

Personnel and sponsorship

Note: All teams use Nike as kit manufacturer.
TeamHead coachCaptainShirt sponsor
Boston Breakers

Player Acquisition

Players were acquired through the 2014 Allocation of national team players announced on January 3, the 2014 NWSL Expansion Draft on January 10, and the 2014 NWSL College Draft on January 17, as well as free agency, trading, and loans.
Notable acquisitions

Competition format

  • Each team will play a total of 24 games, 12 home and 12 away. Each teams will play four opponents twice at home and once away, and will play the other four opponents once at home and twice away.
  • The four teams at the end of the season with the most points will qualify for the playoffs. The two semi-final games will be played on the weekend of August 23–24, and the final will be played on August 30.

Results table

''Scores listed as home-away''

League standings


Tiebreakers

The initial determining factor for a team's position in the standings is most points earned, with three points earned for a win, one point for a draw, and zero points for a loss. If two or more teams tie in point total, when determining rank and playoff qualification and seeding, the NWSL uses the following tiebreaker rules, going down the list until all teams are ranked.
If two teams tie:
  1. Head-to-head win–loss record between the two teams.
  2. Greater goal difference across the entire season.
  3. Greatest total number of goals scored.
  4. Apply #1–3 to games played on the road.
  5. Apply #1–3 to games played at home.
  6. If teams are still equal, ranking will be determined by a coin toss.
If three or more teams tie, the following rules apply until only two teams remain tied, at which point the two-team tiebreakers listed above are used:
  1. Points per game against all other tied teams.
  2. Greater goal difference across the entire season.

Positions by gameweek

Considering each week to end on a Sunday
Team \ Week12345678910111213141516171819
Team \ Week
Seattle Reign FC1211111111111111111
FC Kansas City4893343422222222222
Portland Thorns FC3122434565466433443
Washington Spirit8534666334534344334
Chicago Red Stars6457522243355555555
Sky Blue FC4785777788877877776
Western New York Flash2346255656643666667
Houston Dash7668888877788788889
Boston Breakers9979999999999999998

Positions by games played

Team \ Game123456789101112131415161718192021222324
Team \ Game
Seattle Reign FC111111111111111111111111
FC Kansas City589645566655222222222222
Portland Thorns FC322232233443445544334453
Washington Spirit844467654324553333443334
Chicago Red Stars365553322232334455555545
Sky Blue FC578976777788887787776666
Western New York Flash233324445566666666667777
Houston Dash756788899877778878888889
Boston Breakers997899988999999999999998

NWSL Playoffs

The top four teams from the regular season qualified for the championship playoffs. The highest-seeded semi-final winner then hosted the championship final.

Attendance

Average home attendances

Ranked from highest to lowest average attendance.
TeamAverageTotalNo. of gamesHighLow
Portland Thorns FC13,362160,3411219,1239,672
Houston Dash4,65055,801128,0973,561
Seattle Reign FC3,66643,996125,9571,754
Washington Spirit3,33540,019124,6672,306
Western New York Flash3,17738,125124,3391,786
Chicago Red Stars2,94935,3931 15,7431,039
Chicago Red Stars2,94935,39311 3,0321,039
Boston Breakers2,43729,248124,1911,263
FC Kansas City2,01824,215123,1071,212
Sky Blue FC1,64019,682123,471582

A new NWSL attendance record of 19,123 was set on August 3 in a game between Portland and Houston at Providence Park in Portland, breaking the previous record of 17,619 set in 2013.

Playoff Attendance

Semi-final No. 1, August 23, Portland at Kansas City: 2,997
Semi-final No. 2, August 24, Washington at Seattle: 4,540
Final, August 31, Kansas City at Seattle: 4,252

Statistical leaders

Top scorers

RankPlayerNationClubGoals
1Kim LittleScotland

Top assists

RankPlayerNationClubAssists
1Jessica FishlockWales

Goalkeeping

RankGoalkeeperClubGPMINSSOGSVSGAGAAW-L-TSHO
1

Statistics

Scoring

First goal of the season: Amy Rodriguez for FC Kansas City against Sky Blue FC Earliest goal in a match: 33 seconds

Hat-tricks

PlayerForAgainstResultDate
Jazmine ReevesBoston BreakersPortland Thorns FC4–15/28
Christine SinclairPortland Thorns FCBoston Breakers6–37/20
Nadia NadimSky Blue FCHouston Dash3–18/09

Discipline

First yellow card: Allie Long for Portland Thorns FC against Houston Dash First red card: Lisa de Vanna for Boston Breakers against Sky Blue FCMost yellow cards in a match: 9

Streaks

Longest winning streak: 7 games