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IN THIS ISSUE
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CLOSER LOOK Chad Marshall is sent off into retirement, the Sounders celebrate late wins and the United States take home the FIFA Women’s World Cup title
2019 SCHEDULE Check out this year’s full slate
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MEET THE TEAM
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KING GUSTAV
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Sounders players dish on their hidden talents
A look inside the (often hilarious) mind of Gustav Svensson WORDS BY RYAN KRASNOO
WHERE ARE THEY NOW? Catching up with former Sounders midfielder Freddie Ljungberg INTERVIEW BY STEVE ZAKUANI
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STAR-SPANGLED BANNER
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10 QUESTIONS: KELVIN LEERDAM
Get to know Sounders national anthem singer Johnathan Wright WORDS BY RYAN KRASNOO
Kelvin Leerdam opens up on his favorite restaurant, where he likes to vacation and more
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Ryan Krasnoo CREATIVE DIRECTOR
Rachel Johnson CONTRIBUTING DESIGNERS
Claire De Rocco Kristin Sheetz
ASSISTANT EDITORS
Danny Ciaccio Pablo Mendicuti Joseph Mondello
COMMUNICATIONS
Alex Caulfield Kelly Schutz Brian Verdi Matt Winter
COVER PHOTOGRAPHER
Lindsey Wasson
CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS
Mike Fiechtner Jane Gershovich Lindsey Wasson Charis Wilson Reuters USA Today
© 2019 BY MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER, LLC AND SEATTLE SOCCER, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. REPRODUCTION IN WHOLE OR IN PART WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT OF SEATTLE SOCCER, LLC IS PROHIBITED. SEATTLE SOUNDERS FC 159 SOUTH JACKSON, SUITE 200 SEATTLE, WA 98104 887-MLS-GOAL SOUNDERSFC.COM
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CLOSER LOOK
JUNE 29, 2019
The Sounders honor Chad Marshall and his incredible career with a retirement ceremony ahead of Seattle’s home match against the Vancouver Whitecaps.
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JUNE 29, 2019 / JULY 6, 2019
Kelvin Leerdam (left) and Nicolás Lodeiro celebrate their 90’+6’ match-winning goals in back-to-back weeks against the Vancouver Whitecaps and Columbus Crew SC.
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JULY 7, 2019
Reign FC’s Megan Rapinoe (left) and Allie Long (right) celebrate the United States women’s national team’s fourth World Cup title after a 2-0 win over the Netherlands in Lyon, France.
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FROM SCARVES UP TO WHEELS UP. Connecting Sounders FC fans to 60+ destinations from Sea-Tac with our partners. OFFICIAL AIRLINE
AD Based on 2019 destinations from Seattle offered by Delta and its joint venture or codeshare partners. 8
2019 SCHEDULE DATE
OPP ONENT
TIME
WATCH
SATURDAY, MARCH 2
VS FC CINCINNATI
7:00 PM
FS1, YOUTUBE TV
W
4-1
SATURDAY, MARCH 9
VS COLORADO RAPIDS
7:00 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
W
2-0
SATURDAY, MARCH 16
AT CHICAGO FIRE
10:00 AM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
W
4-2
SATURDAY, MARCH 30
AT VANCOUVER WHITECAPS FC
7:00 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
D
0-0
SATURDAY, APRIL 6
VS REAL SALT LAKE
7:00 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
W
1-0
SATURDAY, APRIL 13
VS TORONTO FC
1:00 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
W
3-2
SUNDAY, APRIL 21
AT LAFC
4:00 PM
FS1, YOUTUBE TV
L
1-4
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24
VS SAN JOSE EARTHQUAKES
7:30 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
D
2-2
SUNDAY, APRIL 28
VS LAFC
12:30 PM
ESPN, YOUTUBE TV
D
1-1
SATURDAY, MAY 4
AT MINNESOTA UNITED FC
5:00 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
D
1-1
SATURDAY, MAY 11
VS HOUSTON DYNAMO
7:00 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
W
1-0
WEDNESDAY, MAY 15
VS ORLANDO CITY SC
7:30 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
W
2-1
SATURDAY, MAY 18
AT PHILADELPHIA UNION
4:30 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
D
0-0
SUNDAY, MAY 26
AT SPORTING KC
3:00 PM
FS1, YOUTUBE TV
L
2-3
SATURDAY, JUNE 1
AT FC DALLAS
5:00 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
L
1-2
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5
AT MONTREAL IMPACT
4:30 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
L
1-2
SATURDAY, JUNE 29
VS VANCOUVER WHITECAPS FC
7:00 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
W
1-0
WEDNESDAY, JULY 3
AT NEW YORK CITY FC
4:00 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
L
0-3
SATURDAY, JULY 6
AT COLUMBUS CREW SC
4:30 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
W
2-1
SUNDAY, JULY 14
VS ATLANTA UNITED FC
1:00 PM
ESPN, YOUTUBE TV
W
2-1
WEDNESDAY, JULY 17
VS BORUSSIA DORTMUND
7:30 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
SUNDAY, JULY 21
VS PORTLAND TIMBERS
6:30 PM
FS1, YOUTUBE TV
SATURDAY, JULY 27
AT HOUSTON DYNAMO
5:00 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
SUNDAY, AUGUST 4
VS SPORTING KC
7:00 PM
FS1, YOUTUBE TV
SATURDAY, AUGUST 10
VS NEW ENGLAND REVOLUTION
1:00 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14
AT REAL SALT LAKE
7:00 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17
AT LA GALAXY
7:00 PM
ESPN2, YOUTUBE TV
FRIDAY, AUGUST 23
AT PORTLAND TIMBERS
7:00 PM
ESPN, YOUTUBE TV
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1
VS LA GALAXY
3:00 PM
FS1, YOUTUBE TV
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7
AT COLORADO RAPIDS
6:00 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 15
VS NEW YORK RED BULLS
12:30 PM
ESPN, YOUTUBE TV
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18
VS FC DALLAS
7:30 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22
AT D.C. UNITED
5:00 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29
AT SAN JOSE EARTHQUAKES
4:30 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6
VS MINNESOTA UNITED FC
1:00 PM
JOETV, YOUTUBE TV
RESULT
Match dates and times subject to change. All times pacific. More info at soundersfc.com/schedule. PRESENTING PARTNER OF THE 2019 SOUNDERS FC SEASON
S TRE A M ALL M ATC HES LIVE ON YOU TU BE T V 9
MEET THE TEAM
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Justin Dhillon Forward
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Jordan Morris Forward
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Brad Smith Defender
“WHAT ARE YOU THE BEST ON THE TEAM AT DOING?”
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Saad Abdul-Salaam Defender
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Xavier Arreaga Defender
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Kim Kee-hee Defender
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Stefan Frei Goalkeeper
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Joevin Jones Defender
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Trey Muse Goalkeeper
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Alfonso Ocampo-Chavez Forward
A: Pickle Ball
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Víctor Rodríguez Midfielder
A: FIFA and Fortnite
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Gustav Svensson Midfielder
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Nouhou Defender
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Román Torres Defender
A: Dancing
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Will Bruin Forward
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Kelvin Leerdam Defender
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Cristian Roldan Midfielder
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Handwalla Bwana Midfielder
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Jonathan Campbell Defender
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Jordy Delem Midfielder
A: Ping Pong
Danny Leyva Midfielder
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Nicolás Lodeiro Midfielder
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Bryan Meredith Goalkeeper
A: Speaking in monotone
Alex Roldan Midfielder
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Raúl Ruidíaz Forward
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Harry Shipp Midfielder
TECHNICAL STAFF Garth Lagerwey
General Manager & President of Soccer
Chris Henderson VP of Soccer & Sporting Director
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Henry Wingo Midfielder
Brian Schmetzer Head Coach
Djimi Traore
Assistant Coach
Gonzalo Pineda Assistant Coach
Preki
Assistant Coach
Chris Little
Tacoma Defiance Head Coach & Academy Director of Coaching
Marc Nicholls
Director of Player Development
Tom Dutra
Club Director of Goalkeeping
Damian Roden
High Performance Director
Ravi Ramineni
Grant Clark
Team Administration Director
Vince Johnson
Team Services Director
Director of Soccer Analytics
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ABOUT THESE PHOTOS
Gustav Svensson celebrates his Swedish heritage at the Nordic Museum in Ballard
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Sounders midfielder Gustav Svensson
is living the Swede life in Seattle
BY RYAN KRASNOO PHOTOGRAPHS BY LINDSEY WASSON
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GUSTAV SVENSSON NEEDS YOU TO KNOW HE’S JOKING. Ahead of the 2018 FIFA World Cup last summer, Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet interviewed Svensson, who made three appearances and one start in the Swedes’ run to the quarterfinals. This is what he told the paper about playing in the United States: “Things are a bit strange sometimes. We have a forward who is sponsored by a pizza chain and every time he scores he runs off the pitch to have a bite from a pizza slice.” Aftonbladet ran the quote.
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“I’m very sarcastic,” Svensson said. “Americans don’t really understand that, and it’s become a little bit of a problem sometimes.” Svensson has certainly found a home in Seattle, though, where he’s established himself as one of the most consistent defensive midfielders in Major League Soccer. Even now at 32, he has reignited his international career and has firmly solidified his spot on Swedish manager Janne Andersson’s team. Since signing with Seattle ahead of the
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[SWEDES] HAVE A GOOD REPUTATION HERE. WE ARE HARDWORKING, LOYAL, GOOD, TACTICAL PLAYERS. - GUSTAV SVENSSON
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2017 MLS season, Svensson has started 69 regular season and postseason matches, chipped in five goals and six assists and helped lead the Sounders to the 2017 Western Conference Championship. “I love the diversity [in MLS],” Svensson said. “I love that every game is different from the other. There are so many different players coming in MLS — different teams, different styles. I love Seattle, I love our fans, I love our stadium, I love the franchise. There are a lot of good things here in America and MLS and Seattle.
“I think [Swedes] have a good reputation here,” he added. “We are hardworking, loyal, good, tactical players. We’re good players to build the team around. MLS has risen as a league as well. It has become better, and it has a better reputation in Europe and it keeps getting better and better. There are a lot of players who want to come here.” Svensson’s journey to Seattle is fascinating. After playing at his hometown club of IFK Göteborg in the Allsvenskan, the top flight in Swedish football, he then spent two years in Turkey at Bursaspor and another two years in Ukraine at Tavriya Simferopol. He returned to IFK Göteborg from 2014-15 before heading to Guangzhou R&F in China for the 2016 season. Ask Svensson how many languages he speaks, and he’ll confidently rattle off a dozen: Swedish, English, Norwegian, Danish, Spanish, French, Portuguese, Italian, Turkish, Russian, Mandarin, Japanese. Twelve, really? He shakes his head, smiles. Sarcasm. When he played for Bursaspor, the country of Turkey was safe, but the fans weren’t. Every time he went out to dinner in the club’s home city of Bursa after a win, the restaurants would never let him pay. But if they lost a match to their rivals on the road, the team was not welcomed home. Part of why Svensson enjoys living and playing in the United States is because it affords him a normal life. “People are very friendly here,” Svensson said. “People care about each other.” One thing he can’t stand? The traffic. “I will not miss how Americans drive their cars,” Svensson said. “I’ve never seen so many lanes in my life where everyone drives the same speed in every lane. That makes me go nuts. Every time Chad Marshall and I would commute together, we always had a fight. Because he hated the way I was driving because I always had to pass everyone from one lane to the other. He, on the other hand, just stayed in one lane and didn’t care.”
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For as much success as Svensson has had in his 14-year career, in a different world, he isn’t even a soccer player. He grew up playing tennis. When he entered college at 16 — Swedes start college at 17, but Svensson started school a year earlier than his classmates — he played on the school’s tennis team, practicing on the court in the morning and the soccer pitch in the afternoon. He didn’t know which to choose. He didn’t want to give up either, but whenever he had a conflict, he leaned toward soccer. He started at IFK Göteborg when he was 14, and by the time he was in his second year of college, he had improved tremendously and was being recognized more by the club. He made his professional debut for IFK Göteborg in 2005, and he knew that if he stayed healthy, he had a pretty good shot to turn soccer into a career.
Svensson calls himself a black sheep in his family. His older sister is a doctor, his other sister is a lawyer and his brother is an architect. He studied economics in school, but didn’t finish it. “I would probably do something with economics and work my way to be someone on Wall Street probably trying to change the whole system,” Svensson said on what he would be doing if he weren’t a professional soccer player. “I was brought up a different way than a lot of Americans are. I would probably try to change it to pay more tax, get free school for everybody.” Svensson is quintessentially and unapologetically Swedish. It’s what makes him, him — and he wouldn’t change a thing. “That’s who we are,” he said. “We’re hardworking, but we see the irony in everything. We try to have as much joy as possible.”
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NOW - AUGUST 30
SOUNDERSFC.COM/FORTHEGREATERGREEN 23
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WHERE ARE THEY NOW? Catching up with former Sounders midfielder Freddie Ljungberg INTERVIEW BY STEVE ZAKUANI
AS PART OF OUR “10 YEARS IN MLS” CAMPAIGN, FORMER SEAT TLE SOUNDERS WINGER STEVE ZAKUANI SAT DOWN WITH SOME OF THE CLUB’S MOST INFLUENTIAL PLAYERS OF THE PAST DECADE. IN THIS ISSUE, ZAKUANI SPOKE WITH FORMER SOUNDERS MIDFIELDER AND CURRENT ARSENAL ASSISTANT COACH FREDDIE LJUNGBERG.
Use the Sounders FC app to unlock exclusive content using augmented reality. Tap the “AR” button at the bottom of the homepage and scan any image with the AR logo.
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STEVE ZAKUANI: How much are you enjoying this new phase of your life coaching?
FREDDIE LJUNGBERG: I love
doing what I do. I love playing football, but if you take that away, there’s nothing nicer than teaching or helping a player with something that helps make his career better. You can see that in his eyes when it works for him. It’s a really, really nice feeling.
SZ: Walking around this Arsenal training center, there are photos of Freddie Ljungberg everywhere. You’re one of the club’s legends. Do you think it was it was always the case of when you left here in 2007, you would one day end up back here?
FL: It feels like home. I had the
opportunity to leave this club and go to other clubs in Europe in my prime, and I stayed because I love the club, I love the values that we have. I worked as an ambassador for many, many years when I came back, and now I’m back here doing coaching.
SZ: I’ve told you this before, but in 1998
you made your debut against Manchester United and I was in the stands in the north end at Highbury. When you made that debut and scored against Man U, could you have imagined at that point you were going to go on and accomplish what you did for the club?
FL: You never know in any walk of life what the future holds. As a young player, you hope and you think you’re going to have a good career. Of course you couldn’t imagine what would happen, but I came to Arsenal to win things. That was my main goal and why I picked this club. For me, winning is everything. SZ: What was behind your decision to come to Seattle in 2009?
FL: I was in a stage in my life where I
wanted to go somewhere where people may not know me as well and I can do something totally different. I went to Seattle and liked what I saw. I liked the city and had an amazing time.
SZ: Did you feel pressure being the face of this brand new club?
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FL: In football there should be pressure, otherwise you shouldn’t play football. I wanted to show the American public that we can do this. SZ: What memories do you have from Seattle? FL: I have a lot of great memories. Great teammates. I had a great time when I was there. The fans in the stadium, we had a full house every time. You couldn’t compare it to anywhere else in America. That was one thing that I really, really liked because it felt like I was in Europe. The warmth of the city, the people, I became friendly with some of the Seahawks. What I try to explain to people here in Europe is how nice people were and friendly. SZ: You weren’t in Seattle long, but do you think that when you look back you feel like you played an important role in launching that team’s success? Without players like yourself in the beginning, maybe what we have now isn’t there. FL: That’s up to other people to judge. I don’t talk about what I’ve done in my life. It’s nice to hear what you said, it makes me happy, but I just tried to help as much as I could. I loved my time there. If people said I made an impact, it makes me happy and proud, so thank you. SZ: If someone told me in 2009 or 2010 what you would be doing after playing, I wouldn’t have said coaching. Was this always in your plans or how did you get an interest in it? FL: It was not in my plans, you’re correct.
Before I retired, I dreamt about doing whatever I want. You’re dreaming about that for like 20 years and then when it happens and you have nothing to do for a year or two, you’re like, ‘What’s the point?’ I can only play so much golf and I can only sit at home for so long. That’s boring. I asked some other coaches and former national team teammates if I should coach or if it was a stupid idea. They said they thought I’d be really good at it and wanted me to do it. So I gave it a shot. I started with Arsenal’s U-15s then U-16s then the U-19s, I was an assistant in the Bundesliga with Wolfsburg and now I’m back here for this. It’s been a journey and you try to get better every day. It’s a bit like football when you play.
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SZ: What’s Freddie Ljungberg the coach
like?
FL: I try to take it from different coaches. I like to win. It’s how I’m built. From Arsenal, I learned how to be honest. If you want to get better, you have to be honest with each other and strive for something. I think I’m sane as a coach. It’s important that I set the standards for players. If you want to make it, these are the standards you need to work on. That I try to do, but at the same time I try to be approachable and I treat my players as human beings. I try to find that balance of being their coach, but if they need me, they should be able to talk to me.
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SZ: Does that fact that you’re Freddie Ljungberg help to get your message across? FL: Maybe a little bit sometimes, there might be a little more weight because I can say, ‘I know that’s what it takes. If you want to train with the Arsenal First Team, this and this and this has to be done.’ But hopefully they see what we’re doing works and gives them belief, and then the fact that I played shouldn’t matter. SZ: What’s your life like now when you’re not coaching? What’s going on off the pitch?
FL: I think you know, but I don’t really care about the limelight. It was something that came unfortunately from football. SZ: That was something that surprised me when I met you. When I met you, I was like, ‘That’s not the person in the paper I read.’ This guy is very different. FL: It’s just who I am. The limelight came as a negative from playing good football, but that’s how it is. So now, you’re one of the few people I’ve done an interview with this year. I try to stay away, and I’m quite happy with that. I don’t talk about my family, but I have two children. For me, it’s football and my two children, to play football with them or play with them in the garden, that’s what’s important to me.
“ I HAVE A LOT OF GRE AT MEMO R I ES. GRE AT TE A MMAT ES. I HAD A GRE AT TI ME WHEN I WAS [IN S E AT T LE]. THE FANS IN THE S TA DI UM, WE HAD A FULL HO US E E VERY TIME. YOU C O ULDN’ T COMPARE IT TO A NY WHER E ELSE IN AMERICA.” - Freddie Ljungberg 29
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SPANGLED BANNER Get to know Sounders national anthem singer Johnathan Wright BY RYAN KRASNOO
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BEFORE EVERY SEATTLE SOUNDERS HOME MATCH, BEFORE THE PLAYERS LINE UP TO KICK OFF, BEFORE THE REFEREE WHISTLES FOR THE GAME TO START, ALL EYES ARE ON JOHNATHAN WRIGHT. The 32-year-old Seattle native has been singing the national anthem at CenturyLink Field since 2017 and has become as synonymous with Sounders matchday as the game itself. Longtime national anthem singer Dr. Stephen Newby retired in 2017, and the Sounders were in need of someone to replace him. Wright received his MBA from Seattle University in 2016 and now sings at commencement every year. One of the Sounders game presentation staffers, Sarah Tani, received her Master’s from SU and heard Wright sing at graduation. She got in touch with him over LinkedIn, and a few coffee meetings later, Wright signed on. “I got to the occasional game, but I wouldn’t say I was a fan,” Wright said of his connection to soccer before he started singing at Sounders matches. “But after I started singing and actually watching the
games and understood what was going, I became a fan. It’s a really exciting sport.” The first time Wright sang for the Sounders, he was incredibly nervous. He had never been inside CenturyLink Field before. The last stadium he had been in was the Kingdome. He had butterflies during sound check and was uncertain how he would sound outdoors with no roof. But when he focused on his technique and breathing, he eventually relaxed. “When I saw all of those people in the stands, it was like a jolt of electricity going through me,” Wright recalled. “I was scared that all of these people would boo me. But I took that emotion and re-purposed it and re-focused it into the emotion of the song.” Singing in front of thousands of people is a far cry from Wright’s day job as a Senior Administrative Assistant
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“ WHEN I SAW ALL OF THOSE PEOPLE IN THE S TANDS, IT WAS LIKE A JOLT OF ELECTRICIT Y GOING THROUGH ME.” - Johnathan Wright
to the Director of Supported Housing at Providence, an organization that offers safe and affordable housing to senior citizens on fixed incomes. He was recently promoted and now works for directors who serve all 16 Providence houses in Washington, Oregon and California. Despite not singing full time, Wright has been singing his entire life. He was born in Los Angeles but grew up in Seattle’s Central District before attending Ballard High School, where he graduated in 2005. He would sing along to the radio with his sister, who he said was a big inspiration in trying to learn. His mother sang in church choir and his father was a singer, pianist, percussionist and song writer. In high school, Wright had a French teacher who gave his class an assignment to sing the French national anthem. Wright sang it so well that he was asked to sing it over the loudspeaker to the entire school during their international week festivities. Two years after he graduated, Italian opera singer Luciano Pavarotti passed away. Wright watched a PBS special on his
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life and it inspired Wright to try and sing in Pavarotti’s genre. He had been singing pop, hip-hop and R&B, but he started watching Pavarotti sing on YouTube and wanted to try his hand. “I can sing things other than the national anthem,” he said with a laugh. “I have a list of songs up my sleeve that I learned while singing at SU, and I can also sing in other genres beside operatic. I had to cycle through many different genres to get to something that people actually turned and looked at me and paid attention. I would just want to tell them that when I step out on stage, I want them to come along with me for the ride.” Wright still gets a little nervous every time he steps out on stage at CenturyLink Field, but he reminds himself that the fans aren’t there to watch him and it calms him down. “I’m the cherry on top,” he added. “I’m there to do justice to this anthem as a way to show reverence to the country. It’s very nerve-wracking in the moment but before and after the surge of adrenaline, it’s really fun.”
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DON’T MISS THE RAVE GREEN RUN FINISH LINE FESTIVAL! PRESENTED BY
IN PARTNERSHIP WITH
“WHEN I STEP OUT ON STAGE, I WANT THEM TO COME ALONG WITH ME FOR THE RIDE.” - Johnathan Wright
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10 QUESTIONS with Kelvin Leerdam
01 WHO IS THE BEST-DRESSED ON THE TEAM?
02 IF YOU WERE NOT A PROFESSIONAL SO CCER PL AYER, WHAT WOULD YOU BE?
03 WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE SP ORT TO PL AY OR WATCH OTHER THAN SO CCER?
04 WHO WAS YOUR FAVORITE SO CCER PL AYER GROWING UP?
05 WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE RESTAURANT IN SEAT TLE?
06 WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE SO CCER MEMORY?
07 WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE WINTER VACATION SP OT ?
08 WHO IS YOUR FAVORITE BAND OR MUSICIAN?
09 IF YOU COULD HAVE ONE SUPERP OWER, WHAT WOULD IT BE?
10 WHAT COUNTRY THAT YOU HAVEN’T BEEN TO D O YOU WANT TO VISIT THE MOST ?
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