
We’re a month into the new season, and some teams have risen to the top of the pack while others are still struggling to get their footing.
Here are the three biggest takeaways from Week 4:
Lexington and DC are totally different teams from last season
Lexington SC and DC Power FC finished at the bottom of the table in the 24/25 campaign and combined for just nine wins. And although they are both only currently 1-0-2 through their first three fixtures, they both sit above the playoff line and look like two of the most competitive teams in the league.
The new additions look exceptionally strong on both sides. Lexington, which finished last season with just two clean sheets, has already matched that mark with defenders like Allison Pantuso and Alyssa Bourgeois now on the backline. DC kept its core, but players like Alexis Theoret and Jaydah Bedoya have created more cohesion within the midfield. They are no longer squads that other teams can expect to earn points against, making things very exciting early in the season.
Fort Lauderdale is picking up steam
Fort Lauderdale United FC looked a little shaky at first; it had to fight back for a late equalizer in its opener after allowing Lexington to score three unanswered goals, and an unfortunate own goal robbed the team of a win against Carolina. However, its last two wins are reminiscent of the group we saw go to the Final last season, putting it only one point off first in the standings.
The 4-1 win against Dallas on Saturday was FTL’s largest margin of victory in club history, and to do it against a previously perfect Dallas side was impressive. Kiara Locklear continues to be one of the best strikers in the league, and now with the help of Kelli Van Treeck and Stella Nyamekye, Fort Lauderdale’s attack is putting up strong underlying numbers. It could take a serious plan to slow United down.
Tampa Bay and Carolina need to figure things out
Nobody expected last season’s champions and Players’ Shield winners to be the last two teams on the table through four weeks of play. Through seven matches, they’ve combined for four points, 15 goals allowed and no wins.
The Sun currently looks like 11 individuals on the field instead of one cohesive unit, which makes sense that it ranks last in passing accuracy and second to last in possession. Against Spokane, Tampa Bay actually had more shots and shots on target and were fairly equal among other categories despite playing nearly the entire second half down a player, yet it was still shut out. Getting a win against Dallas this weekend is imperative to not fall even further into this hole.
For Carolina, the team has recorded three consecutive 2-2 draws in which it had to rally to earn a point. The grit and ability to wear down defenses late into matches is a positive, but last season’s Ascent rarely found itself in a position where it had to climb out of a deficit. Carolina is just lacking consistency through the full 90 minutes, and other teams are capitalizing in their moments of disorganization.