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.

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Explore our history. Click on any of the panels below to learn what happened that year.
Stars Begin to Fracture
October 29, 1987

Six days before the season opener Alan Hinton conducts a 30-minute team meeting in an effort to calm a volatile atmosphere a day after stars Preki and Steve Zungul storm out of practice. Both players were incensed that fellow Yugoslav Cico had been released. Preki, who initially demanded a trade, relents and says he will make a decision in the coming weeks. Zungul shares that the squad is rife with "misunderstandings and disagreements." Cico's release, claims Hinton, is salary cap related.

Lutes Finally Score, Reach Final
November 17, 1989

Karin Gilmer converts the decisive shootout penalty kick, propelling Pacific Lutheran into the NAIA championship game to defend its title in Due West, S.C. The Lutes, who dominate Lindenwood in shots (23-6), prevail after 120 minutes of regulation and overtime, 0-0 (4-3).

World Cup Coming to America
July 4, 1988

At 4:21 a.m. Pacific Time, FIFA executive vice president Harry Cavan announces from Zurich that the 1994 World Cup will be coming to the U.S. Morocco and Brazil finish second and third in the balloting. A gathering of soccer community leaders and players gather with local media at Seattle Pacific University, where coach Cliff McCrath predicts soccer will take “center stage” in the nation by 2000. Husky Stadium is among 18 stadia in 16 cities under consideration to host matches.

Road Sweep Propels WSU toTop 20
October 26, 2014

Getting a goal and assist from both Kourtney Guetlein and Kaitlyn Johnson, Washington State scores four first-half goals and completes a road sweep of Colorado and Utah with a 4-2 win over the Utes. Johnson also had the winner in the 2-1 verdict over Colorado. WSU earns the program's first national ranking, No. 19, the following week.

McAlister Earns First Cap
September 15, 1977

Jimmy McAlister becomes the first Washington native to earn a cap for the U.S. National Team. Fresh from being named NASL Rookie of the Year, McAlister, 20, comes on as a substitute in 2-1 win over El Salvador in San Salvador. He starts twice at Guatemala, Sept. 18 and 25.

Late Levesque Goal Sends Seattle Onward
September 25, 2005

Roger Levesque's 90th-minute goal in the second leg sends the Sounders to the USL 1 final with a 2-1 road win over the defending champion and top-seeded Montreal Impact. After a 2-2 draw in the first leg, Seattle wins the series 4-3 on aggregate. Despite missing starters Zach Scott, Leighton O'Brien and Maykel Galindo, the Sounders strike first on Brent Whitfield's rebound follow at 59'. Charles Gbeke ties at 72', his third goal of the series. With overtime looming, Levesque's shot from 20 yards deflects off a defender's foot and dips behind Montreal keeper Greg Sutton for the game-winner at 89:48.

Seattle Pacific forward Vasco Rubio (left), defender Pat Patterson and coach Cliff McCrath. (Courtesy Seattle Pacific archives)
1990
Peter Hattrup of the Sounders. (Frank MacDonald Collection)
1995
Sounders defender Brandon Prideaux started 27 times as a rookie out of Washington.
1998
Helga (l) and Karl Grosch attend the dedication of Federal Way's Karl Grosch Field in 2003. (Courtesy Washington Youth Soccer)
2003
Marcus Hahnemann posts 13 shutouts for Seattle Pacific, earning All-America honors as a sophomore.
1991
Michelle Akers performs the ceremonial first kick for the WUSA inaugural match as referee Sandra Hunt looks on. (Courtesy WUSA)
2001
A record crowd for a Concacaf Champions League final goes scarves-up at Lumen Field prior to the Sounders-Pumas second leg of the final. (Courtesy Jane Gershovich/Sounders FC)
2022
A ticket to the U.S. Challenge Cup tie at Pop Keeney Field. (Courtesy George Craggs family)
1970
Signed at age 17, Seattle Reign defender Jordyn Bugg was named a finalist for 2024 U.S. Soccer Young Player of the Year. (Seattle Reign/Jane Gershovich)
2024
(Courtesy Seattle Times)
1982