2025 WUL Season: Week 3 Recap

Written by Noam Gumerman
WUL Lead Writer

Week 3 saw all teams get to two games played. Oregon Soar looked much cleaner than last week in a loss to 2024 champions Colorado Alpenglow, outscoring Colorado in the second half. San Diego continued to lean on their plethora of stars in a thorough dismantling of Utah Wild, and Seattle Tempest gritted out a win on the road against Bay Area Falcons.

Game 1: Colorado Alpenglow 17 - 14 Oregon Soar

For much of the first half, both teams looked set to offer repeat performances from their season opener. Colorado was humming on offense, unlocking the entire field with big throws, content to play multi-possession points they felt confident they’d win. Oregon, on the other hand, continued to struggle to capitalize on the opportunities Colorado gave them. Soar had some trouble moving the disc when facing a zone look, and struggled converting red zone offensive opportunities. However, they did earn those turnovers through high defensive pressure. All of that amounted to a 12-5 dominant first half by Alpenglow, capped by an incredibly composed red zone possession to end the second quarter and finish the half on a score.

The second half was a different story. The lack of Colorado downfield anchors Sarah Levinn and Abby Thorpe became apparent. Alpenglow offense looked out of sync, missing throws and catches, while Soar began to get their legs under them. Oregon began converting break opportunities more efficiently, running their offense with more flow than we’ve seen yet, and unlocked a new electric duo in Noelle Takahashi and Kimber Coles. Takahashi and Coles’ chemistry on the field together was obvious as they threw four scores just to each other throughout the game, including some hockey assists to boot. Soar pulled a 12-5 halftime deficit back to a 15-13 game with 5:20 left in the fourth quarter. However, after a long Oregon hold, Colorado responded with a quick score off an Ari Nelson huck over the entire Soar zone to Allysha Dixon in the endzone for a momentum-turning goal. On the next point, Soar fell victim to the Alpenglow zone, and Colorado found their lethal efficiency once again, punching in the break and putting the game out of reach for Oregon

Dixon, Nelson and Jade McLaughlin were three of the standouts for Colorado. Dixon had three goals, two assists, and 245 yards; Nelson had one goal, four assists, one block, and 343 throwing yards; McLaughlin added three goals and an assist, alongside 381 yards. For Oregon, Takahashi and Coles were electric up and down the whole field, with Takahashi ending the day with one goal, five assists, two blocks, and 417 yards, and Coles with three goals, one assist, and 435 yards. Zoe Luke also had an outstanding game with four goals and three blocks.


Game 2: San Diego Super Bloom 17 - 8 Utah Wild

For most of the first quarter, Utah looked poised to push San Diego to the end and fight for a big early-season upset. Lily Terpstra set the tone with an incredible layout score on the first point of the game to cap a calm, confident, and collected Utah first possession against a San Diego zone. Then Wild jumped out to an early 5-2 lead highlighted by two breaks scored by Eva Hayes, as Super Bloom struggled to find their footing on the road. Ultimately, San Diego stabilized, scored, and began to settle in, breaking back to end the first quarter down just one goal (5-4) after Wild failed to run out the 55 second clock before giving the disc to San Diego.

From there, the rest of the game was all Super Bloom. Utah scored three times in the final three quarters, twice in the second, zero in the third, and only once in the fourth. Kaitlyn Weaver continues to be seamlessly integrated into this San Diego squad, paired with the return of Avery Jones, and the addition of Margot Nissen to the backfield. Nissen’s stabilizing presence and ability to get the disc moving off of stoppages allowed heavy hitters like Kaela Helton and Dena Elimelech to do what they do best: dominate the downfield space. San Diego got all of that flowing after Q1 and never looked back. Utah looked lost on offense at times after their hot start, struggling to throw and catch simple swing passes against a zone, let alone push the disc down the field. Paige Kercher played a lot of D-line on Saturday, and the O-line didn’t look comfortable at all without her.

Despite playing mostly D-points, Kercher still had a big day, scoring once and clocking 365 yards for Utah. Abbie Davis, 2024 Breaking POTY, was another standout, logging three blocks and one goal for the Wild. Dena Elimelech was the downfield engine for San Diego in this game, scoring four times, throwing one assist, and adding two blocks alongside 355 yards. Additionally, Kaitlyn Weaver had five assists for San Diego, alongside Abbi Shilts’ three goals, one assist, two blocks performance.


Game 3: Seattle Tempest 12 - 10 Bay Area Falcons

In a windy, gritty, and tightly contested game, Seattle Tempest managed to cling to a narrow lead throughout the second half to hold off Bay Area Falcons and secure a big road win. This was very easily a game that could have swung the other way, or even been a blowout if one team was able to convert on offense just a little more efficiently than they did. For much of the first half, things went the hosts’ way. Bay Area won a brutally long third point, featuring timeouts from both teams, and used that to take a 6-3 lead early into the second quarter. Cheryl Hsu was the anchor that kept Seattle in the game early with four assists in the first half, before Tempest found their best stretch of play across the entire game. Seattle scored four times on their next five possessions to claim a 7-6 lead, with Bay Area missing a huck that would have tied the game on the last throw of the half.

The second half was even more of a grind than the first. Time after time, both teams would work the disc down the field only to lose possession on a drop or turfed throw (partially thanks to an unpredictable wind). It was a slog of a third quarter that finished tied up at 9-9, Bay Area receiving the pull with the opportunity to retake the lead for the first time all half. They worked into the Seattle red zone not once, not twice, but three times on the over-four-minute point that ended after multiple timeouts and a Seattle break. With this momentum, Seattle broke again to go up 11-9. Bay Area finally scored their first and only point of the fourth quarter, followed by Seattle holding on a 38 second, one possession point to remove any thought of a comeback from the minds of Falcons players and fans. 

Julia Hasbrook was one of the sparkplugs for Seattle this week, with three goals and 293 yards, and only being credited with 0.5 turnovers despite rough conditions. Lauren Page also had an impressive day with one goal, two assists, one block and 283 yards of offense with no turnovers. Cat Chung also played a clean game, scoring three times and contributing 243 yards. Robyn Fennig was the driver for Bay Area’s offense, scoring three times with 464 total yards. Alexi Zalk, a long time Bay veteran, contributed a well-rounded game with one goal, two assists, two blocks, and 212 yards.