For Utah Royals FC, it’s playoffs or bust in 2019

Sandy • The 2018 season for the Utah Royals FC was full of the ups and downs that many an expansion team experience in their first year. But through it all, they finished within reach of a playoff spot.

Heading into this season, with their home opener coming next Saturday due to a bye week, the Royals have their eyes set on definitely making the playoffs.

“Anything less than playoffs is not a success,” Royals coach Laura Harvey said this past week. “There’s no question in my mind of that.”

The Royals ended 2018 with a 9-7-8 record and just two points shy of the fourth and final playoff spot in the nine-team National Women’s Soccer League. The team bookended last year with a sellout home opener and a win to close out the season.

But Utah’s goal will come with a challenge that only comes every four years. It will have to navigate missing seven players for the FIFA Women’s World Cub, which goes for about a month starting in early June.

While every team in the NWSL will have players in the World Cup, URFC has the most. Three of them — Christen Press, Becky Sauerbrunn and Kelley O’Hara — will be available for just the first two games of the season before they leave for France, Harvey said. If the United States Women’s National wins the World Cup, they won’t be back in Utah until July 15.

Which means three of the Royals’ best players could miss as many as 10 games of the 24-game season.

Harvey said the key to this season is managing the “what-ifs,” which include keeping players healthy and hoping those that leave for the World Cup don’t get hurt while overseas.

“There’s a lot of what-ifs in a World Cup year,” Harvey said. “I think the team that has the best answers to those what-ifs — some are in their control, some are out of their control — are the ones that will be successful.”

Harvey went through something similar in the 2015 World Cup year, but she said this is the first time in her coaching career where that many of her players will compete in the international tournament.

While the World Cup will possibly be the biggest story line of the 2019 NWSL season, teams are only getting started this week. Now that they’re only a week away from playing games that count in the standings, the Royals are starting to feel it.

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Royals FC midfielder Erika Tymrak (15) as the Utah Royals host Sky Blue FC at Rio Tinto Stadium in Sandy, Saturday June 30, 2018.

“It’s definitely getting real,” Erika Tymrak said. “It’s getting exciting. I think we’re just really anxious to start.”

Tymkak welcomes the pressure that comes with a playoffs-or-bust mentality.

“There’s a good amount of pressure that’s actually good for you as an athlete,” Tymrak said. “I think it’ll be a good opportunity for people to step up into different roles and get more playing time. I think it’s the right amount of pressure.”

Vero Boquete not only said Utah had designs on at least making the playoffs, but competing for the NWSL title. Just after last season ended, Harvey expressed the same sentiment.

“If our goal is not to be in the playoffs and then fight for the title, then we should just go home,” Boquete said. “Everyone is here every day training and working hard to reach that goal.”

The journey toward that goal starts next Saturday at home against the Washington Spirit.



from The Salt Lake Tribune http://bit.ly/2KznvAA
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Royals FC midfielder Erika Tymrak (15) as the Utah Royals host Sky Blue FC at Rio Tinto Stadium in Sandy, Saturday June 30, 2018. (Trent Nelson/)

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