Portland Timbers

The Portland Timbers are an American professional soccer club based in Portland, Oregon. The Timbers compete in Major League Soccer (MLS) as a member club of the league's Western Conference. The Timbers have played their home games at Providence Park since 2011, when the team began play as an expansion team in the league.

Portland Timbers
Nickname(s)The Timbers
FoundedMarch 20, 2009 (2009-03-20)[nb 1]
StadiumProvidence Park
Portland, Oregon
Capacity25,218
OwnerPeregrine Sports, LLC
CEOMerritt Paulson
Head coachGiovanni Savarese
LeagueMajor League Soccer
2019Western Conference: 6th
Overall: 11th
Playoffs: First round
WebsiteClub website
Primary colors
Secondary colors

The club was founded in 2009, when the city of Portland was awarded an expansion berth to Major League Soccer. The team is owned by Peregrine Sports under the majority ownership of Merritt Paulson, whose companies had acquired the then-USL Pro team in 2007 and later established the Portland Thorns women's team in 2012. The club is a phoenix club, and the fourth soccer franchise based in Portland to carry the legacy of the Timbers name, which originated with the original team, in the North American Soccer League in 1975.

In 2013, the Timbers finished the regular season in first place in the Western Conference, clinching both their first-ever playoff appearance and a CONCACAF Champions League berth. In 2015, the franchise won the Western Conference Finals in the playoffs, and their first major trophy, the MLS Cup, becoming the first team in Cascadia to do so. In 2017, the club again finished the regular season in first place in the Western Conference. In 2018, the Timbers again made the playoffs, advancing in three rounds, defeating archrival Seattle in the semifinals along the way, and made the MLS Cup where they lost 2–0 to Atlanta United FC.

Portland has long-standing rivalries with nearby clubs Seattle Sounders and Vancouver Whitecaps FC, with whom they compete for the Cascadia Cup.

History

Soccer roots in Portland

Soccer in Portland, Oregon can be traced to the soccer team that competed in the NASL as an expansion team until the club's seventh season in 1982. The club's major achievement was in their inaugural season during the league's playoffs, having won the league's division final, and runners-up in Soccer Bowl '75 losing to the Tampa Bay Rowdies in the championship match.[1] In 1985, F.C. Portland had established and was a charter club in the Western Soccer Alliance League and competed until folding in 1990. There would be no soccer club in the city until 2001, when the USL Timbers was founded and competed in Division 2 soccer in USL pro till the club ceased operations in 2010. The USL pro club finished with the best record in the league in both the 2004 and 2009 regular seasons.[2]

The announcement of the Timbers' entry into MLS was the culmination of a nearly two-year-long process for Merritt Paulson, dating back at least to May 2007, when Paulson led a group that bought the Portland Beavers and the USL Timbers. The group included former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, Meritt Paulson's father.[3] The biggest issue for the city of Portland at that time was that due to league concerns about seating configuration, field surface and scheduling, obtaining an MLS club would require a new stadium.[4]

In October 2007, Paulson was told PGE Park could be upgraded for about $20 million, and a new baseball stadium (with 8,000 to 9,000 seats) would cost about $30 million.[5] By November 2008, Paulson told The New York Times he expected Portland taxpayers would spend $85 million to "build a new baseball stadium for his Beavers and renovate PGE Park—just remodeled in 2001 at a cost to taxpayers of $38.5 million—for soccer", and that in exchange, he would spend $40 million for the franchise fee to bring a new Major League Soccer team to Portland.[3] MLS was in support of the proposal, wanting to continue to expand the number of owners in the league (for a while, all of its teams were owned by three men: Philip Anschutz, Lamar Hunt, and Robert Kraft).[3]

Timbers thank their fans after a home victory

Though supporting the acquisition of an MLS franchise raised numerous issues for Mayor Sam Adams and the Portland City Council,[6] the Timbers were announced as Major League Soccer's eighteenth team on March 20, 2009 by Commissioner Don Garber.[7] The announcement occurred during the first and second-round games of the 2009 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament that were held in Portland.[8] The announcement noted that the team would retain the Portland Timbers name.[9]

Former forward and Colorado Rapids assistant coach John Spencer was named the first head coach of the Timbers on August 10, 2010. It was also announced that former head coach Gavin Wilkinson of the USL-1/USSF D-2 Timbers, was promoted as the general manager/technical director of the team.[10]

The Timbers signed five players before the MLS Expansion Draft on November 24, 2010. Three were part of the Timbers D-2 Pro League squad in 2010 (Steve Cronin, Bright Dike, and Ryan Pore), one was signed from D-2 Pro League team Austin Aztex (forward Eddie Johnson) and one was acquired via trade with New York Red Bulls (midfielder Jeremy Hall). On November 24, 2010, the Timbers, along with the other 2011 expansion team, Vancouver Whitecaps FC, participated in an MLS Expansion Draft, each selecting 10 players from existing teams.[11] Immediately after the Expansion Draft, the Timbers announced the trade of their first pick (midfielder Dax McCarty), from FC Dallas to D.C. United for defender Rodney Wallace.[12] The Timbers and Whitecaps also participated in the 2011 MLS SuperDraft on January 13, 2011 with the Whitecaps having the first pick, and the Timbers having the second pick. Vancouver surprised some by selecting youngster Omar Salgado and Portland swiftly selected Akron midfielder/forward Darlington Nagbe.[13]

First seasons (2011–2012)

The Timbers played their first MLS game on March 19, 2011, against reigning MLS champions Colorado Rapids, but lost 3–1. The first goal in the Timbers' MLS era was scored by Kenny Cooper.[14] In their first season, Portland Timbers finished in 6th place in the Western Conference and 12th place overall.

On July 9, 2012, John Spencer was fired after a 0–3 loss to Real Salt Lake.[15][16] Gavin Wilkinson took over on an interim basis for the rest of the season.[17] The Timbers finished 2012 with the 3rd worst record in the league and was 8th out of 9th in the Western Conference.[18] They did, however, win the Cascadia Cup in MLS for the first time.

Caleb Porter era (2013–2017)

Portland Timbers in 2015

The 2013 season began with new Head Coach Caleb Porter, who was previously head coach of the United States U-23 team and the University of Akron Zips men's team from 2006 to 2012. Under Porter, the Timbers achieved immediate success in the 2013 MLS regular season. They finished in first place in the Western Conference and third place in MLS overall. An important player has been Diego Valeri, whom the Timbers had acquired from Club Atlético Lanús on loan with an option to purchase (which they exercised later in the season). In the 2013 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup tournament, the club reached the semifinals, where they were eliminated by Real Salt Lake. The Timbers also earned their first MLS playoff appearance in franchise history. They defeated their archrival Seattle Sounders FC in the conference semifinals 5–3 on aggregate. The Timbers were eliminated in the conference finals, again losing to Real Salt Lake in a two–game aggregate series (5–2 aggregate). Due to a change by the United States Soccer Federation of how American-based MLS teams can qualify in the CONCACAF Champions League, the Portland Timbers qualified for the 2014–15 CONCACAF Champions League, which was their first international tournament they would later take part in.[19]

In the 2014 MLS season, the Timbers could not replicate the success they had in the previous season. They struggled defensively in the beginning of the season with a 1–3–6 (W-L-D) record over the first ten games. They were able to mount a comeback late in the season, still having a chance on the final weekend to appear in the MLS playoffs but ultimately failing to qualify.[20] The Timbers finished the season in 6th place in the Western Conference, 11th place overall. For the 2014–15 CONCACAF Champions League, the Timbers were drawn with Club Deportivo Olimpia and Alpha United in the group stage of the tournament. They were eliminated in the group stage on away goals.[21] During the offseason, Portland's main focus was to avoid a slow start as they did in the 2014 season, made more difficult with Diego Valeri and Will Johnson being unavailable for the first several weeks due to injuries suffered in the final games of the 2014 season. New acquisitions included Nat Borchers from Real Salt Lake and Ghanaian/Norwegian keeper Adam Larsen Kwarasey.[22][23]

MLS Cup champions (2015)

The 2015 season marked the franchise's fifth anniversary as an MLS franchise and the fortieth anniversary of the Timbers' legacy that traces back to the original North American Soccer League, which has been recognized by the team.[24]

In 2015, the Timbers began their campaign without Diego Valeri and Will Johnson, who were still recovering from their injuries they obtained in the previous season. They would eventually return later in the season. The 2015 US Open Cup pitted Portland against arch-rival Seattle in the fourth round of the tournament, where they would eliminate the Sounders 3–1 in overtime, Seattle finished the match with only seven men after three players (which including Clint Dempsey) were given red cards, and Obafemi Martins leaving due to a groin injury. Portland would be defeated by Real Salt Lake in the fifth round. In a highly competitive Western Conference, the Timbers once again qualified for the MLS Playoffs, finishing strong in the final matches of the regular season which included a 5–2 win against LA Galaxy. Portland finished the regular season third in the Western Conference, fifth overall.

Portland played against Sporting Kansas City in the MLS playoffs' Knockout round that went to penalties after Sporting's Kevin Ellis scored a late tying goal in the final minutes of regulation ending in 1–1. Maxi Urruti scored late in overtime tying 2–2 after Sporting had the lead from a goal from Kristen Nemeth in the 97th minute. Kwarasey scored the winning goal and made the winning save in the suspenseful penalties.[25] The Timbers advanced to defeat Vancouver Whitecaps FC in the second leg of their two-game series, winning the Conference Semifinals 2–0.[26] Portland defeated FC Dallas in the Conference Final series 5–3 aggregate with a 3–1 win at home and tying 2–2 in the second match in Toyota Park, becoming Western Conference Champions and advancing to their first-ever MLS Cup appearance. The Timbers won the 2015 MLS Cup against Columbus Crew SC 2–1 from the fastest MLS Cup goal from Diego Valeri, followed by a header from Rodney Wallace in the first half. Despite conceding a goal from Columbus striker Kei Kamara, the Portland Timbers held on to win their first MLS Cup and in doing so became the first team in the Cascadia rivalry to win the championship.[27]

Following seasons (2016–17)

Portland's 2016 offseason consisted of transfers of key players including Jorge Villafaña, Will Johnson, Maxi Urruti, and Rodney Wallace. For the Timbers' 2016 campaign as defending champions, the season began with a win in a rematch against Columbus Crew SC. Portland's season in 2016 overall was described by Head Coach Caleb Porter as "A tale of two seasons."[28] Although the team had a strong record at home, that performance was not reflected on the road, and the team dealt with injuries to key players throughout the season. The Timbers did not win a single match away from Providence Park in the season, finishing with a road record of 0–11–6 away from home and 12–14–8 (44 points) overall.[29]

In 2017, the team made it a priority to improve the team's defense, an issue the previous year, along with adding reinforcements in the midfield.[30] Portland acquired Roy Miller and David Guzmán from C.D. Saprissa. Nat Borchers, who was injured in 2016, was not offered a new contract with the Timbers, and ultimately the veteran defender decided to retire. The Timbers also signed Sebastián Blanco, who had been a teammate of Valeri at Lanús, from San Lorenzo. Mid-season the Timbers also acquired center-back Larrys Mabiala from the Turkish club Kayserispor. In the second half of the season, midfielder Valeri scored in nine consecutive games, setting a new MLS record.[31] Portland qualified for the playoffs once more in their second-to-last match of the regular season, a 4–0 rout of D.C. United at Providence Park.[32] The Timbers finished the season in first place in the Western Conference, also winning the Cascadia Cup for the second time as an MLS team. Portland were eliminated by the Houston Dynamo in the Western Conference Semifinal. For the first time a Timbers player received MLS's Landon Donovan MVP award, given to Valeri for scoring 20+ goals and earning 10+ assists, among other accomplishments; it was the most goals ever scored by a midfielder in MLS.[33]

In the off-season, Caleb Porter resigned as head coach on Nov. 16, 2017, parting ways with the franchise.[34]

Giovanni Savarese era (2018–present)

On Dec. 18, the Timbers officially announced former New York Cosmos head coach Giovanni Savarese as the team's new head coach, making him the third non-interim head coach for the Timbers since entering MLS.[35] Despite starting their 2018 season without a win in their first five games, Savaraese and the Timbers finished their campaign strong, and would earn their second trip to the MLS Cup on December 8, 2018, where they would be defeated 2–0 by Atlanta United.[36]

Then, Now, Forever (2019)

The 2019 season was overshadowed by the large renovation to Providence Park, which resulted in the addition of 4,000 seats on the east side of the stadium. The extensive construction meant that the Timbers played the first 12 matches of the season away from home.[37] The team emerged from this extensive road trip with a survivable record of 4-6-2. Portland would largely fail to take advantage of their remaining homes games. The Timbers finished the season with 49 points overall, which placed them 6th in the Western Conference. They went on to face Real Salt Lake in the 2019 playoffs in Salt Lake, which resulted in a 2-1 loss.[38]

Colors and badge

The Portland Timbers' MLS logo incorporates elements of the former USL design. The primary reference to the original crest is the circular shape that represents unity, wholeness, and the pursuit of perfection. The axe pays homage to the Pacific Northwest's logging industry, as loggers traditionally used axes to cut down trees. There are three chevrons organized to resemble a pine tree that refer to the Timbers' membership in three separate leagues: the original North American Soccer League, the United Soccer Leagues, and Major League Soccer. The team's colors, ponderosa green and moss green, represent the state of Oregon's forests.[39][40]

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
2011–present Adidas Alaska Airlines

It was announced in September 2010 that the Portland Timbers' jerseys would be sponsored by Alaska Airlines.[41] On December 9, 2010, the jersey was revealed at a runway show at Portland International Airport. The home jersey was a two-tone halved green shirt,[42] while the alternate jersey was red in honor of Portland being known as the Rose City.[43]

Uniform evolution

Home, away, and alternative uniforms.

  • Home
2011–12
2013–14
2015–16
2017–18
2019–
  • Away
2011–12
2013
2014–15
2016–17
2018–2019
2020-
  • Alternate
2012–13
2014–15
2018 Parley

Stadium

Jeld-Wen Field 2013 season opener

The Timbers play at Providence Park, which they share with the Portland State Vikings football team and, since 2013, Portland Thorns FC, a team in the National Women's Soccer League also owned by Peregrine Sports. The stadium's renovation in 2010–11 made it unsuitable for baseball, and former tenant the Portland Beavers moved to Tucson, Arizona, after failing to find a new venue.[44]

Initially, city funding for renovation of the stadium (then known as PGE Park) was tied to simultaneous construction of a new baseball ballpark; Timbers owner Merritt Paulson was the owner of the Beavers at the time. Due to delays caused by public criticism of potential ballpark sites and an impending deadline to begin stadium renovation, the funding for the two projects was separated.[45] The capacity of the renovated stadium was expected to be between 22,000 and 23,000.[46] Operational capacity was limited to 18,627 for the 2011 MLS season and expanded to 20,323 for the 2012 season.

On February 10, 2014, the Timbers signed a long-term stadium naming rights sponsorship with Providence Health & Services, a non-profit health care provider. The stadium will be known as Providence Park until at least 2028.[47]

In December 2017, the Portland City Council approved for a $50 million expansion project to increase seating capacity for Providence Park.[48] The project, whose terms were already approved in June of the same year, would add an additional 4,000 seats to the near 22,000 seats already built, increasing overall capacity by 20%. The expansion is set to be completed during the 2019 MLS season, and will be made available to attendees of both the Timbers and Thorns.

The stadium expansion to 25,218 was completed mid-season in 2019.

Club culture

Portland Timbers fans

Supporters

The Timbers have sold out every home game to date, with over 66 consecutive sellouts as of October 2014.[49][50] The Timbers cap season-ticket sales at 15,300, and have a wait list of 10,000 season tickets; this is the largest in MLS, and larger than almost every college football team.[50][51]

Timbers Army smoke bombs

The main supporters group of the Portland Timbers is the Timbers Army. Its members are known for their loud, enthusiastic support and the raucous atmosphere they create at Timbers games.[52][53] The Timbers Army was founded in 2001 as the Cascade Rangers,[54] a reference to the Cascade Range of mountains in the Pacific Northwest region of North America. The group began congregating in section 107 ("The Woodshed") of PGE Park ("The Piggy") to create a European-style rooting section for the club, complete with drumming, flags, scarves, smoke bombs and constant chanting and cheering. By 2002, the group had changed its name to the Timbers Army in order to lose any perception of partiality toward Scottish soccer club Rangers and because the Timbers uniforms at the time resembled those of Rangers rival Celtic.[55] By 2012, the Timbers Army numbered more than 4,000 people in the north-end on game day.

Rivalries

The Timbers Army celebrates with smoke bombs after a Portland goal

The Portland Timbers have continued a long-running rivalry with Seattle Sounders FC dating back to the original North American Soccer League.[56] Reborn after Portland entered MLS as an expansion team, the Seattle-Portland rivalry rose to higher levels when they faced each other in the 2013 MLS playoffs in their two-game series where the Timbers eliminated their arch-rivals in their first-ever MLS postseason matchup.

Vancouver Whitecaps FC, the other Cascadian USSF Division 2 Professional League team, was replaced by an MLS franchise in 2011. It competes along with Portland and Seattle in the Cascadia Cup. The three teams' historic rivalry dates back to the original North American Soccer League.[56]

Mascot

Timber Joey cutting the first Goal Slice of the 2013 season

During the NASL and USL years the team's mascot was a grizzled lumberjack named Timber Jim.[57] On January 24, 2008, Jim announced his retirement. His final farewell was a game played against Puerto Rico Islanders on April 17, 2008, which the Timbers won 1–0.[58]

Timber Joey served as the unofficial mascot from then on, and was inaugurated as the new official mascot at an exhibition game vs Juventus Primavera on June 14, 2008,[59] a game the Timbers won 1–0,[60] and has served in that capacity ever since, leading into their MLS inauguration in 2011. Joey continues Jim's trademark of cutting a round (or "cookie") from a large log with a chainsaw every time the Timbers score a goal. This round is presented to the goal-scoring player after the game. If the team achieves a shutout (clean sheet), the goalkeeper also receives a round. Timber Joey has his own custom jersey with Portland-based outdoor tool manufacturer Leatherman as the shirt sponsor.

Broadcasting

Regular-season games not televised by Major League Soccer's national television partners are broadcast by Root Sports Northwest. Selected games are broadcast in English by Fox affiliate KPTV (channel 12) or its co-owned MyNetworkTV affiliate KPDX (channel 49) and in Spanish by Estrella TV affiliate KGW-DT3 (channel 8.3). Beginning in 2012, the team launched a regional syndication network, the Portland Timbers Broadcast Network, which provides the Timbers' over-the-air game coverage to additional markets. Partners of the network include the second digital subchannel of NBC affiliate KTVZ (channel 21.2) in Bend, Fox affiliate KEVU (channel 23) in Eugene and MyNetworkTV affiliate KFBI-LD (channel 48) in Medford.[61] KPTV also airs a weekly highlight show, Timbers in 30, on Friday evenings.

On the radio, all Timbers games are broadcast in English on KXL (750 AM, "The Game") and are simulcast in Spanish on both KWBY (940 AM, "La Pantera") and KSND (95.1 FM, "Recuerdo 95.1"). KXL also airs Talk Timbers, a weekly radio show dedicated to the team and soccer.[62]

Roster and staff

For details on former players, see All-time Portland Timbers roster.

Current roster

As of June 23, 2020[63]
No. Position Player Nation
1 Goalkeeper Jeff Attinella  United States
4 Defender Jorge Villafaña  United States
7 Forward Andy Polo  Peru
8 Midfielder Diego Valeri  Argentina
9 Forward Felipe Mora (on loan from UNAM)  Chile
10 Midfielder Sebastián Blanco (DP)  Argentina
11 Forward Jarosław Niezgoda (DP)  Poland
12 Goalkeeper Steve Clark  United States
13 Defender Dario Župarić  Croatia
14 Midfielder Andrés Flores  El Salvador
15 Defender Chris Duvall  United States
17 Forward Jeremy Ebobisse (GA)  United States
18 Defender Julio Cascante  Costa Rica
19 Midfielder Tomás Conechny  Argentina
21 Midfielder Diego Chará  Colombia
22 Midfielder Cristhian Paredes  Paraguay
23 Forward Yimmi Chará (DP)  Colombia
25 Defender Bill Tuiloma  New Zealand
27 Forward Dairon Asprilla  Colombia
28 Defender Pablo Bonilla  Venezuela
30 Midfielder Eryk Williamson (HG)  United States
31 Goalkeeper Aljaz Ivacic  Slovenia
32 Defender Marco Farfan (HG)  United States
33 Defender Larrys Mabiala  DR Congo
40 Midfielder Renzo Zambrano  Venezuela
44 Midfielder Marvin Loría  Costa Rica
98 Midfielder Blake Bodily (HG)  United States
Defender Zac McGraw  United States

Retired numbers

No. Player Position Nation Tenure
3Clive Charles[64]Defender United States1978–1981

Coaching staff

Title Name
Head coach Giovanni Savarese
Assistant coach Carlos Llamosa
Goalkeeping coach Guillermo Valencia
Head athletic trainer Jon MacGregor
Assistant athletic trainer Alex Margarito
Assistant athletic trainer Taichi Kitagawa
Director of sports science Nick Milonas

Last updated: August 2, 2018
Source: Portland Timbers

Executive staff

Title Name
Majority owner and president Merritt Paulson
Chief operating officer Mike Golub
General manager Gavin Wilkinson
Technical director Ned Grabavoy

Last updated: February 26, 2015
Source: Portland Timbers

Head coach history

Name Nat Tenure
John Spencer  Scotland December 1, 2010 – July 9, 2012
Gavin Wilkinson  New Zealand July 9, 2012 – October 28, 2012 (interim)
Caleb Porter  United States January 8, 2013 – November 17, 2017
Giovanni Savarese  Venezuela December 18, 2017 – present

General manager history

Name Nat Tenure
Gavin Wilkinson  New Zealand 2009–present

Club captain history

Name Nat Tenure
Jack Jewsbury  United States 2011–2013
Will Johnson  Canada 2013–2015
Liam Ridgewell  England 2015–2018
Diego Valeri  Argentina 2018–present

Ring of Honor

The Ring of Honor as it appeared in 2018

Given to those involved with the Portland Timbers deserving of special honors. Currently there are only five members of this exclusive group:

InducteeDate of induction
Clive CharlesAugust 29, 2003
Timber JimApril 17, 2008
John BainMarch 19, 2011
Jimmy Conway
Mick HobanMarch 8, 2014

Those inducted have their names displayed in the upper northeast corner of what is now Providence Park.[65] Clive Charles' number was retired in a halftime ceremony on August 29, 2003, just three days after his death.[66] Timber Jim's number was retired in a halftime ceremony on April 17, 2008.[67] Timber Jim is currently the only non-player to be inducted to the Ring of Honor.[68] Both John Bain and Jimmy Conway were unveiled as new members at halftime of the club's first ever MLS home game on March 19, 2011.[65] Mick Hoban was inducted on during a halftime ceremony on March 8, 2014. [69][70]

Honors

[71]

Domestic

Minor honors

Portland Timbers 2 (T2)

Portland Timbers 2 (T2) is the farm club of the Portland Timbers. In October 2014, Merritt Paulson announced the creation of their USL Pro team, Portland Timbers 2 (T2). T2 began play in the 2015 USL pro season, having Merlo Field as their stadium to play for their home games. The purpose of T2 is to bridge a gap between the academies and the first level team, while having a better way to observe the players' progress and development as well.[72]

Records

Interactive chart

See or edit raw graph data.

Year-by-year

Season MLS regular season Position MLS Cup
Playoffs
U.S.
Open Cup
Champions
League
GP W L D GF GA Pts Conf. Overall
2011 3411149404842 6th 12th Did not qualify Q Did not qualify
2012 3481610345634 8th 17th Did not qualify R3
2013 3414515543357 1st 3rd Conference Finals SF
2014 3412913615249 6th 11th Did not qualify QF Group stage
2015 3415118413953 3rd 5th Champions R5 Did not qualify
2016 3412148485344 7th 12th Did not qualify Round of 16 Group stage
2017 34 15 11 8 60 50 53 1st 6th Conference Semi-finals R4 Did not qualify
2018 34 15 10 9 54 48 54 5th 8th Runners-up QF
2019 34 14 13 7 52 49 49 6th 11th First round SF

Attendance by season

All regular-season home games since the Timbers' entry into MLS in 2011 have sold out, with the 100th such sell-out on September 10, 2016.[73]

MLS Season Reg. season MLS playoffs
2011 18,827 DNQ
2012 20,438 DNQ
2013 20,674 20,674
2014 20,744 DNQ
2015 21,144 21,144
2016 21,144 DNQ
2017 21,144 21,144
2018 21,144 21,144
2019 25,218 N/A

DNQ = Did not qualify

Top Scorer
Season Player Nation Goals
2011 Kenny Cooper
Jack Jewsbury
 United States 8
2012 Kris Boyd  Scotland 7
2013 Diego Valeri  Argentina 12
2014 Diego Valeri  Argentina 11
2015 Fanendo Adi  Nigeria 18
2016 Fanendo Adi  Nigeria 18
2017 Diego Valeri  Argentina 21
2018 Diego Valeri
Sebastian Blanco
 Argentina 10
2019 Jeremy Ebobisse
Brian Fernandez
 United States
 Argentina
11

CONCACAF Champions League

Portland has qualified for the CONCACAF Champions League twice, the first in the 2014–2015 edition of the tournament.[74]

Scores and results list Portland's goal tally first.
Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2014–15 CONCACAF Champions League Group stage Alpha United
6–0[75]
4–1[76]
10–1
C.D. Olimpia
4–2[77]
1–3[78]
5–5
2016–17 CONCACAF Champions League Group stage C.D. Dragón
2–1[79]
2–1[80]
4–2
Saprissa
1–1[81]
2–4[82]
3–5

Table

Year Round Position GP W D L GF GA
2014–15 CONCACAF Champions LeagueGroup stage9 of 244301156
2016–17 CONCACAF Champions LeagueGroup stage10 of 24421177
Totals85122213

Player statistics

Matches

# Pos. Name Nation Career MLS USOC Playoffs CCL Total
1 Midfielder Diego Chara  COL 2011– 262 9 16 4 291
2 Midfielder Diego Valeri  ARG 2013– 211 10 18 4 243
3 Midfielder Darlington Nagbe  USA 2011–2017 214 8 12 5 239
4 Midfielder Jack Jewsbury  USA 2011–2016 157 8 10 3 178
5 Forward Fanendo Adi  NGR 2014–2018 126 6 6 7 145
6 Forward Rodney Wallace  CRC 2011–2015 120 6 9 4 139
7 Defender Alvas Powell  JAM 2013–2018 112 4 8 4 128
8 Defender Liam Ridgewell  ENG 2014–2018 97 1 13 3 114
9 Forward Dairon Asprilla  COL 2015– 92 5 14 111
10 Midfielder Sebastián Blanco  ARG 2017– 94 6 8 108
As of December 22, 2019

USOC = U.S. Open Cup; CCL = CONCACAF Champions League
Bolded players are currently on the Portland Timbers roster.

Goals

# Pos. Name Nation Career MLS USOC Playoffs CCL Total
1 Midfielder Diego Valeri  ARG 2013– 76 3 6 2 87
2 Forward Fanendo Adi  NGR 2014–2018 54 2 4 60
3 Midfielder Darlington Nagbe  USA 2011–2017 27 2 1 1 31
4 Midfielder Sebastián Blanco  ARG 2017– 24 2 3 29
5 Forward Maximiliano Urruti  ARG 2013–2015 15 1 1 3 20
6 Midfielder Will Johnson  CAN 2013–2015 16 1 2 19
Forward Rodney Wallace  CRC 2011–2015 16 1 2 19
8 Forward Jeremy Ebobisse  USA 2017– 14 2 1 17
9 Midfielder Jack Jewsbury  USA 2011–2016 14 1 1 16
10 Forward Gaston Fernandez  ARG 2014–2015 9 4 1 14
As of December 22, 2019

USOC = U.S. Open Cup; CCL = CONCACAF Champions League
Bolded players are currently on the Portland Timbers roster.

Assists

# Pos. Name Nation Career MLS USOC Playoffs CCL Total
1 Midfielder Diego Valeri  ARG 2013– 81 7 1 89
2 Midfielder Darlington Nagbe  USA 2011–2017 30 1 2 33
3 Midfielder Sebastián Blanco  ARG 2017– 30 1 1 32
4 Forward Rodney Wallace  CRC 2011–2015 17 1 3 1 22
Midfielder Diego Chara  COL 2011– 19 1 2 22
5 Midfielder Jack Jewsbury  USA 2011–2016 16 2 18
6 Forward Fanendo Adi  NGA 2014–2018 14 1 1 1 17
7 Midfielder Kalif Alhassan  GHA 2011–2014 12 1 1 2 16
8 Defender Jorge Villafaña  USA 2015– 13 1 0 0 14
9 Midfielder Will Johnson  CAN 2013–2015 7 3 1 2 13
10 Forward Dairon Asprilla  COL 2015– 7 1 4 12
As of December 22, 2019

USOC = U.S. Open Cup; CCL = CONCACAF Champions League
Bolded players are currently on the Portland Timbers roster.

Footnotes

  1. Major League Soccer (MLS) franchise formed in 2009 but did not begin MLS play until 2011. Three previous incarnations of the club competed in the North American Soccer League (1975–1982), the Western Soccer League (1985–1990) and the USL First Division (2001–2010).

References

  1. "Portland Timbers NASL Archives • Fun While It Lasted". Retrieved April 26, 2017.
  2. "Timbers Soccer History". February 22, 2012. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  3. Jaquiss, Nigel (November 26, 2008). "Paulson's Pitch". Willamette Week. Archived from the original on March 27, 2009. Retrieved March 21, 2009.
  4. Larabee, Mark (May 29, 2009). "Beavers must move out of PGE Park, league says". The Oregonian. Retrieved September 13, 2009.
  5. Gerald, Paul (October 31, 2007). "PDX's Ball Bearings". Willamette Week. Archived from the original on March 27, 2009. Retrieved March 21, 2009.
  6. Jaquiss, Nigel (March 11, 2009). "Soccertown Or Suckertown". Willamette Week. Archived from the original on March 16, 2009. Retrieved March 21, 2009.
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