logo
Angel City's Riley Tiernan used desire and opportunity to prove she belongs

Angel City's Riley Tiernan used desire and opportunity to prove she belongs

Welcome to the Riley Tiernan Revenge Tour.
Oh, sure, the Angel City forward is far too nice to call it that, but that's what her first NWSL season has become.
'Everybody loves an underdog story,' she said. 'It kind of added fuel to my fire. When people doubt you, it makes you want to prove it that much more.'
Tiernan was definitely being doubted about six months ago when she finished her college career at Rutgers as the school's all-time leader in assists, yet didn't get a call from 12 of the 14 NWSL teams. In the first winter without a league draft, every player was a free agent, available to the highest bidder. Only no one bid on Tiernan.
So she accepted an invitation to training camp with Angel City and now she's showing the others what they missed, with her five goals leading all NWSL rookies and ranking second in the league overall heading into Saturday night's home match with Racing Louisville.
'A fair shot,' said the 22-year-old. 'All I wanted, literally, was just a chance to prove myself. Without the draft it was kind of like you get what you get and you've got to hope for the best.
'Once I got this invitation it was 'let's go big or go home.' I got to show out. And pretty much did.'
Four of her five goals have given her team a lead; two were game-winners. Without her, Angel City (4-3-2) would not be in playoff position a third of the way into the season.
If Tiernan gets credit for passing her preseason test with the team, then technical director Mark Wilson and the rest of Angel City's staff deserve praise for doing their homework. They identified Tiernan as a player worth watching last summer and nothing they saw — even the lack of interest from other clubs — swayed their thinking.
'We decided Riley was a top, top target once we'd kind of curated all of her stuff,' Wilson said. 'You have to trust your process.'
So in November, Wilson had a Zoom call with Tiernan and found that he liked the person even better than he liked the player.
'That was the final piece of the puzzle,' he said. 'We believed she had a big ceiling after watching her and we wanted to at least invite Riley in to spend some time with us.
'We really liked her character after the interview.'
Tiernan said the only other offer she received came from Gotham FC, which trains 35 miles from Rutgers. But after spending her entire life in South Jersey, she felt Southern California offered a different sort of challenge.
'It just felt like it was time for me to spread my wings and step out of my comfort zone,' she said. 'I had nothing to lose. After the first couple of training sessions, I started feeling comfortable and I started feeling like it was a place that I should be, an environment where I belonged.'
She's certainly fit in, starting all nine Angel City matches and ranking second among outfield players in minutes played. Plus her five goals are just two shy of the franchise single-season record with 17 games left.
'She's a big presence, but she turns on a sixpence,' Wilson said. 'She has the ability to send players into the stands with a little check and her balance and mobility for a big presence is deceiving.
'She exhibited all of those qualities and more in all the work we did.'
She's continued to prove she belongs despite playing as an attacker on a team that has seven forwards with World Cup experience.
'Isn't it funny how that worked out?' Wilson said with a wry grin. 'While we had quality attacking players, we want you looking over your shoulder. When you're looking over your shoulder, you're not comfortable. When you're not comfortable, you're pushing yourself. That level of competition for places drives standards and performance.
'Riley exhibited that from Day 1 and it hasn't stopped. I don't see her ever taking her foot off the gas.'
At least not until she's finished proving herself to all those who doubted her. If she was once unwanted she's now in high demand, having earned her first callup to the U-23 national team earlier this week. She'll leave after Saturday's game for Europe and two games against Germany, which constitute another new challenge.
'I think it's good to have a sense of humbleness and be intimidated by such a high level in a new environment,' she said. 'But I also think it's important to turn that intimidation into motivation.'
It wouldn't be the first time Tiernan has used others' opinion of her to fuel her fire.
'I love this game because it does reward talent that works hard,' Wilson said. 'Riley's a talent, she is working hard, and eventually that value will be recognized.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wisconsin football top class of 2026 target unveils finalists, upcoming commitment date
Wisconsin football top class of 2026 target unveils finalists, upcoming commitment date

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

Wisconsin football top class of 2026 target unveils finalists, upcoming commitment date

Wisconsin football top class of 2026 target unveils finalists, upcoming commitment date Wisconsin football made the top four schools for four-star class of 2026 safety Messiah Tilson on Wednesday. The Badgers were included along with Kentucky, Minnesota and Rutgers. In addition to his final schools, Tilson revealed that he will announce his commitment decision on Monday, June 16, at 5:30 ET, 4:30 CT. Tilson is one of Wisconsin's high-priority targets in the class of 2026. He's currently ranked as the No. 434 overall player in the class, the No. 39 safety and the No. 11 recruit from Illinois. The Rockford, Illinois, native was on campus in Madison, Wisconsin, for an official visit in late April, preceding trips to Kentucky (June 3), Rutgers (June 6) and Minnesota (June 13). While the Badgers seemed to be in a strong position in Tilson's recruitment entering June, 247Sports recently unveiled a crystal ball prediction favoring Rutgers. The prediction, which was given with a 'medium' confidence level, directly followed his official visit to Piscataway, New Jersey. Wisconsin's class of 2026 currently ranks No. 38 nationally with 11 players committed. The program has seen several top targets commit elsewhere as of late, headlined by four-star edge rusher McHale Blade choosing Michigan. As of June 12, it appears Tilson is poised to join that list. Contact/Follow @TheBadgersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin Badgers news, notes and opinion

Esther González: ‘Now girls can grow up in Spain knowing we have Ballon d'Or winners'
Esther González: ‘Now girls can grow up in Spain knowing we have Ballon d'Or winners'

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Esther González: ‘Now girls can grow up in Spain knowing we have Ballon d'Or winners'

Esther González is at the top of her game. The 32-year-old striker's list of accolades – World Cup winner, three-time Liga F champion, National Women's Soccer League champion, Copa de la Reina victor and Concacaf W Champions Cup winner – is matched by few in the sport. But as a young girl growing up in southern Spain, her path was uncertain, rife with obstacles. 'As a child, I dreamed of what I wanted to be when I grew up,' she says. 'It was a soccer player. But, let's say, circumstances didn't allow me to see women's soccer or anything close to women's soccer.' As she grew up with three sisters, González's earliest memories of football were playing with her hermanas in their small village in Andalusia. She dreamed of being a footballer, but there wasn't a path before her. The shy young talent with a nose for goals would play with the local boys: they needed a goalscorer and she stepped in. As González grew, her father took her on car journeys of more than four hours each way to get to training. Advertisement Related: Post your questions for Emma Hayes Today González and Spanish women's football are in a much different place: 'The change in mentality that took place in Spain was incredible, because until about five years ago the visibility we had was very low,' she says. 'So we really had to work hard and many times we had to work in the shadows. Girls can now grow up knowing that in Spain there are Ballon d'Or players who can become world champions.' Since the inaugural Ballon d'Or Feminin in 2018, four of six trophies have gone to two Spanish players, twice each to Barcelona's Alexia Putellas and Aitana Bonmatí. On the challenges they all faced, González says: 'I feel lucky because I am part of that transition, because I have lived the part from when, let's say, we had almost no opportunities to live … ' The drive to succeed despite inordinate obstacles is evident in the way González plays, and the unique journey she's taken. The 5ft 3in forward is skilled in the air despite her height, has a remarkable intuition for time and space, astutely adapts her game to the opposition, and contributes defensively. She left Real Madrid in 2023 as their all-time leading scorer, with 39 goals in 77 games, and co-leads the NWSL golden boot race with seven goals in 11 games. Advertisement 'I'm not just a player, but a player who thinks a lot, who works hard on matches even before they start, because I try to determine who I'm facing and who I'm not.' This summer in Switzerland, González will be one of four Spain players from the NWSL at the Euros. Now at Gotham FC, she says the challenge of something new was behind her move to the US. She was attracted to Gotham's ambitions and the league's competitive depth. 'When I left Spain to come here, I came to prove that I was also a much more complete player, better than the one who only knows how to touch the ball, than the one who also knows how to adapt.' González signed for Gotham in the summer of 2023 and quickly made an impact, scoring the winning goal in the NWSL Championship. In May in Mexico, she scored Gotham's winner in a 1-0 victory over Tigres in the Concacaf W Champions Cup, securing her second trophy stateside. Two more goals followed for Spain in the Nations League, but González is not resting on her laurels. 'I hope I'm not in my best moment. I hope to have better moments, that the best is yet to come.' Advertisement Ambitious, focused, invigorated by hard-earned achievements – just like her national team. After winning their first World Cup in 2023 and enduring the fallout from the Rubiales scandal, Spain's confidence in major tournaments has improved on 2022, when La Roja lost 2-1 to England in the quarter-finals (their goal scored by González). 'In order to create things you have to first believe that you can achieve them,' she says. 'As a team, we believe we can achieve everything.' Of the Euros, where Spain share a competitive group with Italy, Belgium and Portugal, she adds: 'It will be difficult, tough, there will be times when we're tired, when there's also a lot of travelling involved, but to achieve things, you have to believe that you can achieve them. And so I believe and work to make that happen.' Get in touch If you have any questions or comments about any of our newsletters please email

New Jersey duo hoping to make impact at U.S. Open in neighboring Pennsylvania
New Jersey duo hoping to make impact at U.S. Open in neighboring Pennsylvania

USA Today

time14 hours ago

  • USA Today

New Jersey duo hoping to make impact at U.S. Open in neighboring Pennsylvania

New Jersey duo hoping to make impact at U.S. Open in neighboring Pennsylvania There are 156 golfers in this week's U.S. Open, but only two of them understand the beauty of the Navesink River and the aggravation of Route 35 traffic. A pair of New Jersey lifers. Chris Gotterup hails from Little Silver and attended Christian Brothers Academy. Ryan McCormick was raised in Middletown and went to Mater Dei High School. They aren't the sole New Jerseyans in the field this week at Oakmont Country Club in the Pittsburgh suburbs, but they are the only ones who didn't split at the first opportunity. Gotterup earned All-America honors at Rutgers, while McCormick became the Big East individual champion at St. John's. 'I know he takes great pride in that, and I take great pride in it,' Gotterup said of their local bona fides. 'There are good players who grow up in Jersey and go away to college. We're two of the only guys who have toughed it out and climbed through the ranks in a place where you wouldn't think you could do it.' Gotterup, 25, is making his second appearance at the U.S. Open after also qualifying in 2022. This is the first U.S. Open for McCormick, 33. More: 'It better not be easier when you're done': 5 things I learned from Gil Hanse on Oakmont 'It speaks to how quality the golf is in New Jersey and especially in Monmouth County,' McCormick said. 'It's awesome that we're both out here playing still.' Oakmont is an iconic venue, one of the most demanding in the country. When they tee off Thursday, however, don't expect guys who have played through tough conditions for much of their lives to be intimidated. 'I like to describe myself as someone who is gritty, and I know Ryan would say the same thing,' Gotterup said. 'That's just part of our New Jersey roots.' More: What would an 18 handicap shoot at Oakmont? Pros weigh in, and their answers are hilarious Chris Gotterup: 'Still earning my place' Golf is a funny game. In 2024, Gotterup was in good position to qualify for the U.S. Open, but he three-putted the final hole and missed the cutoff by one stroke. This year, at Canoe Brook Country Club in Summit, he rallied with a six-under final round to punch a ticket. 'It was looking like for a long time that I wasn't going to be here,' he said. 'I turned on the jets at the end, and it ended up being enough.' He'll need those jets at Oakmont, where he's grouped with Joakim Langergren and Mason Howell. They tee off at 8:46 a.m. Thursday and 2:31 p.m. Friday. 'In a perfect world, you'd be out here for two straight weeks trying to learn every little nuance that you could,' Gotterup said after a couple of practice rounds on the course. 'There are some holes where it breaks your brain; if you're in the rough and you hit it 40 yards short of the green, it's going to get there. It's a mental challenge more than anything.' It doesn't hurt that he won a PGA Tour event last year, shooting 22 under par at the Myrtle Beach Classic in South Carolina. 'That honestly feels like a long time ago,' Gotterup said. 'I feel like I'm still earning my place out here.' He's done that since graduating CBA. At Rutgers, he developed from an average college golfer into a star, and as a postgraduate at the University of Oklahoma he won the Fred Haskins Award as the most outstanding Division I golfer in 2022. At a time when the professionalization of college football and basketball is casting a cloud over the future of other intercollegiate sports, Gotterup can attest to the virtues of his time on campus. 'There were so many stepping stones for me that, even if I was good enough at Rutgers to turn pro, I would not be in the same position I am now,' he said. 'I needed those years of getting the crap beat out of me and coach yelling at me and teachers telling me, that I wasn't trying hard enough in school. There are all these pieces that built up to get my feet underneath me to the point where I can finally kick some (butt).' His biggest piece of advice for the current crop of high school golf standouts? 'Go somewhere where you're going to be comfortable and you're going to play -- for me, that was Rutgers,' he said. 'And it's important to not get burnt out. Do other stuff, play basketball. You don't need to act like a tour pro at 17.' Ryan McCormick: 'You're in the right spot' It's been a roller-coaster couple of years for McCormick, who lives in Florida now but spends his summers in Jersey. He earned his PGA Tour card in 2023 but took his lumps. 'It was difficult and I learned a lot and I got my butt kicked – and I played well a few weeks out of the year,' he said of the PGA Tour. 'But in our business, there is really no long-term security unless you win.' He ended up on the Korn Ferry Tour this year. 'Every time you advance in anything, but especially in golf, you play against better competition and better courses, you find out about yourself and how good your game is really, and what you need to do to get better,' he said. 'As frustrating as last year was, I learned a lot, and I'm a lot better for it now. I'm probably the best version of myself with my golf game that I've been in my life.' It all came together June 2, when McCormick punched his ticket to Oakmont by winning his U.S. Open qualifier by a whopping five strokes. McCormick is a huge Seton Hall basketball fan – his family has owned season tickets since the 1990s – and he drew an analogy that hardwood aficionados will appreciate. 'It was like Darius Lane or Jeremy Hazell,' he said, referencing former Pirate sharpshooters. 'When they get hot, you just keep feeding them. I hit it really well.' In Oakmont, he's grouped with Trevor Cone and amateur Zachary Pollo. Their tee times are 2:20 Thursday and 8:35 a.m. Friday. 'I've been trying to qualify for the U.S. Open since I was 15,' McCormick said. 'I've always watched every day. It's my favorite golf event.' Part of his typical pre-event preparation is playing a video-game version of the course on PGA Tour 2K. Anything to gain a little extra insight. 'I always try to do my research on the golf course that I'm playing,' McCormick said. 'I've been spending time looking at the past US Opens there, watching the final rounds of the last three of them. You never know what you might pick up on that might help you out there. 'I know they've changed the course, But as far as venues go, this is probably one of the top U.S. Opens you'd want play – you think of Winged Foot, Pebble Beach and Oakmont. So to qualify in a year when it's at such a historic venue is exciting.' If he does something notable this week, you may see replays of a strange clip from April, when he played a round in Georgia with tape over his mouth to control frustrated outbursts. 'It really went all over the world through all different types of news outlets,' McCormick said. 'It was an unbelievable thing that I had no idea was going to get so much attention.' McCormick said the idea was to enhance his focus. 'I've never been afraid to try anything that will help me,' he said. 'It was an exercise that I had in an old book of mine – go play with earplugs in, go play without talking, go hit some shots with a blindfold. Eliminating the senses. I took that to the extreme obviously. The feedback was out of control. But the golfers really understood, and I'm glad for the most part people found it funny.' McCormick's U.S. Open debut marks a full-circle moment for his family. His father Mark McCormick, the longtime head pro at Suburban Golf Club in Union, qualified at age 49 in 2012. It's in the blood, for sure. 'When we moved to Middletown, my dad put this small green in the backyard,' Ryan said. 'My brother (also named Mark) would sometimes practice with me and make up leaderboards for all four majors. I remember us doing the 'U.S. Open' a lot. Now I'll be on the real leaderboard and he won't have to create a fake leaderboard for me to compete on.' Dream big. That's Ryan McCormick's advice anyone growing up in the Garden State who might have a future in golf. 'I always believed in myself, but there were plenty of times as a junior and even in high school when I got my butt kicked, and I just kept working,' he said. 'Just know that between Chris and I and Max Greyserman (a Short Hills native who also qualified), it shows that if your dreams are to play on the PGA Tour, you're in the right spot. Just keep working on it.' Jerry Carino has covered the New Jersey sports scene since 1996. Contact him at jcarino@

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store