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    After a record-setting season, the 2024 NWSL Playoffs have landed, with the expanded eight-team lineup kicking off the weekend’s do-or-die quarterfinals with a clean slate.

    No. 1 Orlando, whose Shield-winning year ended in a skid, begins the postseason action on Friday, hosting a No. 8 Chicago side that just barely made the postseason cut. The Pride will notably do so without defender Rafaelle, who landed on the season-ending injury list with a partial quad tendon tear on Tuesday.

    Adding another hurdle to Chicago’s gargantuan Orlando task is the fact that the Red Stars will be without some key firepower. Striker Ludmila, the club’s third-most prolific goal scorer on the season, is serving an extended red card suspension that will keep her sidelined through the semifinals, should the Red Stars advance.

    After finishing last season second-to-last on the NWSL table, No. 4 Kansas City earned quarterfinal hosting rights this year. The Current, who scored a league-record 57 goals this season, haven’t lost since September 1st, when they fell to the No. 5 North Carolina Courage — the same team they’ll face on Saturday.

    The biggest question-mark for the Current, however, is the status of 2024 Golden Boot winner Temwa Chawinga, who was sidelined last weekend after a knock to the knee.

    “She’s progressing well,” KC coach Vlatko Andonovski said of Chawinga’s status on Wednesday. “Hopefully, we have more answers closer to the game.”

    That said, Andonovski made it clear that expectations won’t change regardless of Chawinga’s availability. Pointed to KC’s 3-1 win over Chicago last Sunday, he noted that while “the success that this team has enjoyed this season is a team success, and it’s not just the 20 goals that Temwa scored.”

    2023 champs Gotham will host Portland in the NWSL Playoffs’ last quarterfinal on Sunday. (Rich Barnes/Imagn Images)

    Sunday doubleheader will finalize NWSL semis

    This Sunday afternoon is all about the NWSL, beginning when No. 7 Bay FC, the winningest expansion team in league history, head to DC to play a No. 2 Spirit squad still bouncing back from injuries.

    While Washington has star forward Trinity Rodman and defender Casey Krueger back on the pitch, they’ll be without midfielder Andi Sullivan, who suffered a season-ending ACL tear last month. Also missing will be forward Rosemonde Kouassi as she finishes serving her extended red card suspension.

    To cap things off, defending champs No. 3 Gotham FC will host perennial contenders Portland. The Thorns snagged their lowest postseason seeding ever at No. 6 after a shaky season put their now eight-straight playoffs streak at risk.

    Even so, Portland could be poised to surprise a Gotham side that boasts one of the best defenses in the league. The Thorns’ final regular-season match displayed their best attacking performance in NWSL play since May, with prolific scorers Christine Sinclair, Sophia Smith, and Morgan Weaver all finding the back of the net.

    Washington rookie Croix Bethune leaps into the air for a header in an NWSL match.
    Despite missing the last third of the season, Spirit midfielder Croix Bethune is the likely Rookie of the Year. (Soobum Im/Getty Images)

    NWSL MVP, Rookie of the Year awards come into focus

    As the season ends, the NWSL’s individual award frontrunners are emerging — and none more so than KC’s Chawinga. The Kansas City striker is poised to run away with the league’s MVP honors thanks to her speed, technical skill, and record-breaking 20 goals on the season.

    Though Orlando’s Barbra Banda made her MVP case by keeping pace with Chawinga in the season’s first half, she quieted after the Olympics while Chawinga upheld her unbelievable consistency, blasting eight more goals across nine post-break matches.

    Instead, the Pride could likely see Coach of the Year honors after Seb Hines led the Shield-winners​ on a record-breaking 23-match unbeaten streak this season.

    In the Rookie of the Year race, the NWSL’s 2024 class impressed, from Louisville ringer Emma Sears to KC defensive midfielder Claire Hutton to Washington’s absolutely stacked group of six debutants.

    That said, Spirit midfielder Croix Bethune tops the competition with five goals and a record-tying 10 assists, despite playing in just 17 matches before a torn meniscus ended her season.

    How to watch the 2024 NWSL Playoffs this weekend

    Orlando and Chicago kick off at 8 PM ET on Friday, live on Prime, with KC battling NC on Saturday at 12 PM ET on CBS.

    On Sunday, Washington hosts Bay FC at 12:30 PM ET before Portland visits Gotham at 3 PM ET, with live coverage on ABC.



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