North Carolina Courage

North Carolina Courage
FoundedJanuary 9, 2017; 6 years ago (2017-01-09)
StadiumWakeMed Soccer Park
Cary, North Carolina
Capacity10,000
OwnersSteve Malik
Naomi Osaka
ChairmanSteve Malik
Head coachSean Nahas
LeagueNational Women's Soccer League
20233rd of 12
WebsiteClub website
Current season
Active teams of North Carolina FC
USL1 NWSL USL2 Youth

The North Carolina Courage is a professional women's soccer team based in Cary, North Carolina. It was founded on January 9, 2017, after Stephen Malik acquired National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) franchise rights from the Western New York Flash. The Courage is affiliated with the men's team North Carolina FC of the United Soccer League and plays its home games at the WakeMed Soccer Park.

In 2018, the Courage became the first team in NWSL history to win the Shield and the Championship in the same season. In 2019, the team became the first team to win the Championship on its home field.

History

2017

On January 9, 2017, the North Carolina Courage announced their formation as the relocated Western New York Flash, with a new home of Cary, North Carolina. The Courage officially hired Paul Riley, the Flash's coach prior to relocation, on January 30, 2017. The team played their first match, on April 15, 2017, against the Washington Spirit, and won 1–0 with a goal by McCall Zerboni. The Courage went on to win the 2017 NWSL Shield and advanced to the 2017 NWSL Championship after defeating the Chicago Red Stars 1–0 in the semifinals, but fell 1–0 to the Portland Thorns in the finals.

2018

In 2018, the Courage had the best season in NWSL history, losing just one of 26 games played during the season. The Courage also participated in and won the inaugural Women's International Champions Cup. Heather O'Reilly scored the only goal in the victory over Olympique Lyon. After clinching the NWSL Shield, the team defeated the Portland Thorns in the 2018 NWSL Championship 3–0. Jessica McDonald was named the NWSL Championship MVP after scoring two goals in the match.

2019

The Courage returned to the Women's International Champions Cup finals, but were defeated by returning finalists Olympique Lyon. The Courage were crowned NWSL Champions for the second consecutive season after defeating the Chicago Red Stars, 4–0 in the 2019 NWSL Championship held in Cary, North Carolina. Debinha was named the NWSL Championship MVP after scoring the fastest goal in NWSL Championship history. The team clinched the NWSL Shield for the third time in as many years on September 21 after defeating Utah Royals FC. The team had an overall record of 15–5–4.

2020

With the NWSL season cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Courage participated in the inaugural 2020 NWSL Challenge Cup. They were defeated in the semifinals by Portland Thorns FC. The Courage also participated in the 2020 NWSL Fall Series, finishing in fifth place.

2021

On January 28, 2021, the club announced that professional tennis player Naomi Osaka had made an investment in the team. Osaka stated that she was inspired to take part ownership by those who had invested in her during her career, and that she wishes to "continue the legacy of women empowerment."

The Courage failed to qualify for the 2021 NWSL Challenge Cup championship, falling one point short in the East Division to NJ/NY Gotham FC.

NWSL abuse scandal

On September 30, 2021, the club fired head coach Paul Riley after news of prior sexual abuse allegations emerged against him. The Courage replaced Riley with assistant Sean Nahas in the interim.

2022

On December 1, 2021, the Courage named former interim head coach Sean Nahas as head coach for the 2022 season.

The Courage won the East Division of the 2022 NWSL Challenge Cup group stage, then defeated Kansas City Current in the knockout stage and Washington Spirit in the championship to win the tournament for the first time.

The Courage spent the first half of the 2022 season in last place, winning only two of its first 12 matches, losing six, and drawing four. Despite rallying to seven wins, two losses, and one draw in its final 10 matches of the season, the Courage finished the season in 7th place, behind Chicago Red Stars by one point, and missed the playoffs for the first time in its history.

2023

In 2023, the Courage were on top of the league standings in July but finished the season in 3rd place, falling in the first round of the playoffs to eventual champions Gotham. Forward Kerolin scored 10 goals and was named the NWSL MVP. The Courage won the NWSL Challenge Cup for the second year in a row.

Team name, crest, and colors

The team's name is a nod to the original Carolina Courage – who won the 2002 Women's United Soccer Association (WUSA) Founders Cup – as is the stylized lioness image, which matches the head of the lioness on the WUSA team's badge with very minor alterations. The badge features elements from the flag of North Carolina with both the star and the color scheme, the latter keeping in line with the NCFC brand. The lower right point of the star represents the Research Triangle, a geographical region that includes Chapel Hill, Durham, and Raleigh. The Courage's primary colors include "Atlantic blue", "cardinal red," and "Southern gold."

Uniform evolution

Home

2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022–

Away

2017
2018–2019
2020
2021–22
2023–

Sponsorship

Period Kit manufacturer Sponsor
2017 United States Nike BlueCross BlueShield of NC
2018–2022 Continental
2023–present Merz Aesthetics

Stadium

WakeMed Soccer Park

The North Carolina Courage play their home games at WakeMed Soccer Park, a soccer-specific stadium owned by Wake County and operated by the Town of Cary. The team shares the venue with North Carolina FC, a USL League One team also owned by Stephen Malik.

The soccer complex consists of a purpose-built main stadium, two lighted practice fields, and four additional fields. The main stadium and the two lighted fields (2 & 3) are all FIFA international regulation size (120 yards x 75 yards). The main stadium seats 10,000 with the expansions of 2012. Field 2 also has 1,000 permanent bleacher seats.

The park is on 150 acres (0.61 km2) that the State of North Carolina has leased to Wake County. Money to build the soccer park came from $14.5 million in county-wide hotel room and prepared food and beverage taxes. The Town of Cary assumed responsibility for operations and maintenance in 2004 from Capital Area Soccer League. On January 26, 2006, the Town of Cary council amended its lease to allow it to sublet the property to Triangle Professional Soccer through the year 2011 for the exclusive promotion of professional soccer and lacrosse events at the complex. This deal was extended for the new ownership group through 2014.

Future stadium proposal

On December 6, 2016, along with a name change, North Carolina FC announced plans for a housing and multi-use stadium development — originally announced as seating 24,000, then scaled down to 20,000 seats — in Raleigh, North Carolina, as part of the men's team's bid for a Major League Soccer (MLS) expansion franchise. Team owner Stephen Malik and real-estate developer John Kane led investment in the proposal, purchasing 88 acres of land in 2019 and estimating the total project cost to be $1.9 billion. The MLS expansion bid was put on hold in 2021 along with the stadium plans as the COVID-19 pandemic consumed municipal funding. The project gained former BioAgylitix CEO Jim Datin as an investor in June 2022.

As of February 2023, developers Kane Realty Corp. projected that construction on the broader Downtown South development was expected to begin in spring of 2023, starting with work on a mixed-use residential project planned for completion in 2025. The project's first phase does not include a stadium.

Year-by-year

Season NWSL Regular Season Position NWSL Playoffs NWSL Challenge Cup Other Top Scorer
P W L D GF GA Pts
2017 24 16 7 1 38 22 49 Shield Runners-up United States Lynn Williams 9
2018 24 17 1 6 53 17 57 Shield Champions ICC Champions United States Lynn Williams 14
2019 24 15 5 4 54 23 49 Shield Champions ICC Runners-up United States Lynn Williams 12
2020 4 1 2 1 8 10 5 5th n/a Quarterfinals Brazil Debinha 7
2021 24 9 6 9 28 23 33 6th First round 2nd, East Division United States Lynn Williams 7
2022 22 9 8 5 46 33 32 7th DNQ Champions Brazil Debinha 12
2023 22 9 7 6 29 22 33 3rd Champions Brazil Kerolin 10

Players

Current squad

As of November 18, 2023.
No. Pos. Player Nation
0 GK Katelyn Rowland  United States
1 GK Casey Murphy  United States
2 DF Sarah Clark  United States
3 DF Kaleigh Kurtz  United States
5 FW Haley Hopkins  United States
6 MF Narumi Miura  Japan
7 DF Malia Berkely  United States
8 MF Brianna Pinto  United States
9 FW Kerolin  Brazil
10 MF Denise O'Sullivan  Republic of Ireland
11 FW Brittany Ratcliffe  United States
12 DF Emily Fox  United States
13 DF Ryan Williams  United States
14 FW Tyler Lussi  United States
15 MF Haleigh Stackpole  United States
17 FW Rikke Madsen  Denmark
18 DF Sydney Collins  Canada
19 MF Frankie Tagliaferri  United States
20 FW Olivia Wingate  United States
21 DF Nikia Smith  United States
22 FW Mille Gejl  Denmark
23 DF Kiki Pickett  United States
24 DF Estelle Johnson  Cameroon
25 MF Meredith Speck  United States
26 MF Clara Robbins  United States
27 MF Rikako Kobayashi  Japan
28 FW Tess Boade  United States
34 MF Manaka Matsukubo (on loan from MyNavi Sendai)  Japan
44 GK Marisa Bova  United States
99 MF Victoria Pickett  Canada

Out on loan

No. Pos. Player Nation
55 GK Hensley Hancuff (at Växjö DFF until December 31, 2024)  United States

Staff

As of April 29, 2023.
Executive
Chairman Stephen Malik
President Francie Gottsegen
Chief soccer officer Curt Johnson
Assistant general manager Bobby Hammond
Coaching
Head coach United States Sean Nahas
Assistant coach England Nathan Thackeray
Assistant coach England Emma Thomson

Head coaching history

Name Nationality From To
Paul Riley  England January 9, 2017 September 30, 2021
Sean Nahas (interim)  United States September 30, 2021 December 1, 2021
Sean Nahas  United States December 1, 2021 present

Honors

Broadcasting

In 2019, the NWSL broadcast partnership with A&E was terminated a year early, all games would be streamed on Yahoo! Sports in the United States and on the NWSL website for international viewers.

In 2018, Courage games continued to be streamed on Go90, the NWSL website and select games were broadcast on Lifetime. After Go90 was shut down by Verizon on July 30, all games were available for streaming on the NWSL website.

In 2017, Courage games were streamed exclusively by Go90 for American audiences and via the NWSL website for international viewers. As part of a three-year agreement with A&E Networks, Lifetime broadcasts one NWSL Game of the Week on Saturday afternoons. In 2017 season, the Courage were featured in national Lifetime NWSL Game of the Week broadcasts on June 3, July 1, August 19, and July 15, 2017.

See also


This page was last updated at 2023-12-24 07:18 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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