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When Sam Kerr last played for the National Women’s Soccer League’s Big Apple-adjacent club, it was called Sky Blue, and the playing conditions were comparatively abysmal. The Australian striker spent three years (from 2015-17) accruing accolades for a team infamously bereft of locker rooms or running water at its training facility. This July, she returned to a vastly evolved franchise that has won two NWSL Championships in three seasons while implementing a comprehensive overhaul of its players, personnel and prioritization of player conditions.

Kerr’s return, called “a landmark moment for our club” by the president of soccer operations, Yael Averbuch West – whose role was intrinsic to Gotham’s progress – feels like an exciting moment of nostos for one of the greatest to ever play women’s professional soccer in the United States, and a sign of continued ambition for a program that has worked hard to overhaul its operations.

With a hoped-for debut at the 15 July “Queens Classic” between Gotham and Washington Spirit (a rematch of last year’s Championship final set to make women’s sporting attendance history at Citi Field), Kerr reintroduces herself to an American audience with an impressive array of awards acquired across the Atlantic, to add to the sizable stash she already had stateside. Over the course of six and a half years with Chelsea, Kerr scored 116 goals across all competitions, becoming the storied London club’s all-time joint top scorer alongside Fran Kirby, while also collecting the Women’s Super League Golden Boot (twice), five WSL titles, three FA Cups, three League Cups and a Champions League final appearance.

As a sign of Gotham’s faith in her abilities, the 32-year-old Perth native signed on a free transfer with a contract that runs to 2030. A lot has changed, on and off the field, since Kerr last found the net while wearing an NWSL jersey. But one thing remains constant – her record as the league’s top scorer. While participating in the league’s debut season as a 19-year-old and competing for three different NWSL teams (Western New York Flash, Sky Blue FC and Chicago Red Stars), Kerr raced up the goal charts as a young talent whose nascent star power could not be stymied by the league’s troubled early years. She was the first player to win two NWSL MVPs, won three back-to-back Golden Boots, and helped cultivate a growing fanbase while scoring 77 regular season goals, still the most in NWSL history, despite not competing here since 2019.

Why now, and why Gotham? As ever, the reasons for Kerr’s departure after a six-year stint with the Blues are varied. After returning from a 22-month absence after tearing her ACL in 2024, Kerr reacquainted herself with a side in near-constant transition. She struggled to secure playing time despite scoring seven goals in 18 WSL appearances. She also found the net in six Champions League games. With the 2027 World Cup looming the gamechanging goalscorer craved a challenge. She indicated a return to her NWSL roots was always in mind, and Gotham won her over.

With the NWSL calling, Kerr had numerous reference points available to vet Gotham, the reigning league champions. That includes the club’s burgeoning cadre of former Chelsea players, now including Kerr alongside the Norwegian winger Guro Reiten, the German goalkeeper Ann-Katrin Berger and English defender Jess Carter. Kerr’s wife, Kristie Mewis, a USWNT Olympian and fellow footballer, played for Gotham during their 2023 trophy-winning season, and helped inform Kerr’s decision based on her own recent experience with the revolutionized franchise.

In her introductory press conference, Kerr emphasized the winning culture of Gotham reflecting the one she left at Chelsea. She reiterated the importance of training and competing alongside elite players on a recent podcast episode of The Women’s Game. Kerr name-checked the USWNT players Rose Lavelle and Emily Sonnett as part of the gravitational pull of Gotham, noting: “I wanted to play with the best players in the world, like everyone does, and they are that.”

Kerr and Mewis are also recent mothers to their son Jagger, and the appeal of NWSL’s relatively new child-friendly policies (protocols negotiated in the league’s latest collective bargaining agreement, which include provisions for childcare) were factored in.

What it means for Gotham: While competing for trophies, Gotham have hoped to harness the star power of New York City to help spur their success. The appeal of the nation’s largest metropolis helps sign players – which Kerr also noted – while providing a boost of pre-existing branding alongside an enormous fanbase to recruit from. Some big news dropped this Tuesday that could accelerate those ambitions.

In a joint event with the New York City Mayor, Zohran Mamdani, the New York Governor, Kathy Hochul, as well as Gotham owners and staff, the team announced a permanent move inside New York’s city limits. Starting with the 2028 season, Gotham will leave their longtime home in New Jersey and call Queens home instead, playing their games at the under construction soccer-specific stadium Etihad Park – also to be the eventual home of the MLS side NYCFC.

The move puts them in better proximity to millions of potential fans, as Mamdani highlighted in the announcement. Notably, this was not the first time they had collaborated with the mayor to expand their reach. Earlier this season Mamdani – a vocal fan of the game and Arsenal supporter – helped spotlight an affordability initiative, in this case for sporting events, offering five-dollar tickets for 1,000 fans. It sold out within an hour.

Re-acquiring Kerr, a five-time Ballon d’Or nominee and darling of NWSL’s early days, in the same week as their move to Queens was announced is, if nothing else, incredible PR for a program still looking to grow its reach. It could also help settle a temperamental season. Gotham have won three league trophies in three years, including the 2026 Challenge Cup this June, but they’ve had mixed results in the regular season and are seventh. And though their defensive record is stout this season, they could use some more firepower in attack. That’s a mandate Sam Kerr was made for.

Together, the aim is another NWSL Championship, one of the few US-honors Kerr has yet to conquer.

Quote of the week

I felt like they lost the game before they even stepped out on the pitch. And I’m not sure why, and I don’t know the reasons. But just from the beginning: chasing. Tentative. Scared” – the two-time World Cup champion Carli Lloyd on the USMNT’s defeat in the last 16 against Belgium.

Talking points

Smashing ceilings: With more than 38,000 tickets sold, next week’s regular-season meeting between Gotham and Washington Spirit (a re-match of last season’s NWSL Championship match) will set a few new records in New York City: largest attendance for a women’s sporting event, first women’s sporting event at Citi Field, and first NWSL match within the New York City limits.

On the market: NWSL’s free agency period has been open since 1 July. Thanks to the league’s latest collective bargaining agreement signed in 2024, any of the league’s players whose contracts expire this year are able to negotiate their own contracts for 2027. Free agents include some high-profile players such as Sophia Wilson and Rose Lavelle.

Payout time: The USWNT will receive $6m for the USMNT’s Round of 16 exit at this summer’s men’s World Cup, as per the terms of US Soccer’s collective bargaining agreement with its men and women’s teams. US Soccer is expected to keep 20% of a $16m award from Fifa, doling out a $6m check to both national teams.

Reuteler checks in: Arsenal have signed the Switzerland midfielder Géraldine Reuteler from Eintracht Frankfurt, with the 27-year-old telling the WSL club’s website: “Arsenal is one of the best clubs in the world and I’m so proud that I can be here.” Reuteler, a key member of the Swiss national side at their home Euros last summer, scored 54 goals and produced 44 assists in appearances for Frankfurt. She is the third player Arsenal have signed from a Bundesliga club this summer following Selina Cerci and Georgia Stanway.

Recommended viewing

In San Diego’s win against Gotham, 18-year-old Melanie Barcenas paid homage to club legend Alex Morgan (who watched on from the stands) by hitting a stunning strike and then re-enacting her infamous tea-sipping celebration from the 2019 World Cup.

Still want more?

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