Washington State
Legends of Soccer

Curated by the Washington State Legends of Soccer, providing information and history of the Beautiful Game in Washington State. Just as the game evolves, so will this site. We continuously add new content, so be sure to return often.

What are you looking for?
Donate Now!
Explore our history. Click on any of the panels below to learn what happened that year.
Yakima Reds Revived, Will Play-On
November 17, 2008

The Yakima Reds will play-on after a rescue effort from new owner Perry Piercy. Two months earlier, previous owner Irwin Research & Development announced it could no longer fund the PDL club after 12 seasons in light of the ongoing economic crisis. Attendance had hovered between 300-500 and the annual budget reached $200,000 annually.

WUSA Approves Eight Charter Cities
April 10, 2000

The Women's United Soccer Association approves charter teams for eight cities: Atlanta, Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Orlando-Tampa, San Diego, San Francisco and Washington. Listed as alternates were: Chicago, Columbus, Detroit, Los Angeles, Miami, Portland, St. Louis and Raleigh-Durham which later replaces the Florida cities. Seattle was not in the running.

Hawks Prove Best in West
May 26, 1974

Seattle's Lake City Hawks run roughshod at the Pacific Coast International tournament in Vancouver. After routing Oregon's Rockwood Pioneers, 13-0, in the semifinals, the state U11 champions drub Dunbar, 5-2, for the title.

Jimienz Scores in Luisville Open Cup Upset
June 5, 2018

Oscar Jimenez scores Louisville City's first goal as the USL Championship side upsets the New England Revolution, 3-2, in the fourth round of the U.S. Open Cup in Louisville. Jimenez later assists on the first LouCity goal in a 2-1 quarterfinal win over USL Nashville on June 20. Louisville is eliminated by Chicago in the quarterfinals.

NASL Awards Seattle Expansion Franchise
December 11, 1973

After months of whispers that pro soccer is looking westward, the North American Soccer League awards expansion franchises to Seattle and three other West Coast markets. The ownership group is all local business leaders who have been seeking to secure an NFL team, and they are swayed to consider the NASL by Lamar Hunt, a key owner in both leagues. The franchise cost is a reported $25,000, and the incubation period is brief. In just five months a 20-game schedule will commence and play begins at 13,000-seat Memorial Stadium. Los Angeles, San Jose and Vancouver will join Seattle in the new Western Division.

1st Washingtonians Taken in NASL Draft
January 14, 1976

For the first time players from Washington are selected in the annual NASL college draft. Ward Forrest (UW) and Kit Zell (SPU) are picked in the second round by Seattle and Portland, respectively. Chris Whitworth (UW) is chosen by Tampa Bay in third round, and Tim Allen (SU) goes to Sounders in fourth.

Seattle Sounders FC 2 is announced, with USL-PRO play to begin in 2015 and fans to have a stake in ownership.
2014
Former Vancouver and University of Washington forward Tina Frimpong in action vs. Canada at Cary, N.C. (Courtesy J Brett Whitesell/ISI Photo)
2006
(Courtesy NASL Jerseys)
1995
Michelle Akers weaving through traffic vs. China in the 1999 FIFA World Cup final. (Courtesy J Brett Whitesell/ISI Photos)
1999
Seattle's 2026 World Cup bid committee, chaired by Adrian Hanauer, officially welcomes FIFA inspectors. (Courtesy Sounders FC).
2021
1977
David Butler, Sounders forward in the NASL era, raises the Golden Scarf to celebrate the Soccer Bowl '77 run's 40th anniversary. (Courtesy Sounders FC)
2017
Reign standouts Megan Rapinoe (holding trophy) and Allie Long (right) are joined by Alex Morgan in celebrating the United States' successful defense of its World Cup championship in France.(Courtesy John Todd / ISI Photos)
2019
Chuck Sekyra of Seattle Pacific was voted 2008 NSCAA Division II Coach of the Year. (Courtesy Seattle Pacific Athletics)
2008
Mom shows the way at a Seattle Sizzlers practice.
1976