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Cascadia Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
North American soccer trophy

Cascadia Cup
The Cascadia Cup logo
The Cascadia Cup logo
LocationPacific Northwest
Teams
First meeting2004
Stadiums
Statistics
Most winsOverall:
Vancouver (8 titles)
MLS era:
Seattle, Vancouver (5 titles each)
USL era:
Vancouver (3 titles)
Longest win streakSeattle (3, 2018–2021)[a]
Current win streakVancouver (1, 2025)

TheCascadia Cup is the name of the trophy created in 2004 by supporters of thePortland Timbers,Seattle Sounders, andVancouver Whitecaps, which is awarded each season to the best soccer team in thePacific Northwest. The cup is named for theCascadia region.[1] The Timbers, Sounders, and Whitecaps have roots dating to the days of the originalNorth American Soccer League.[2] It was first contested in 2004, and was claimed by the Whitecaps. In 2011 the competition continued with the nowMajor League Soccer (MLS) sidesPortland Timbers,Seattle Sounders FC, andVancouver Whitecaps FC.[3]

History

[edit]

In 2004, fan-based organizations supporting the Seattle Sounders, Portland Timbers and Vancouver Whitecaps sponsored the creation of a 2-foot-tall silver cup to be awarded annually to the club that finishes with the best record in the season series between the three rivals.[4] From 2004 to 2006, the Cascadia Cup competition included all scheduled regular seasonA-League and laterUSL-1 matches played between the Sounders, Timbers, and Whitecaps.[5][6][7]

In 2007, theVirginia Beach Mariners folded just before the season started, leaving theUSL 1st Division to scramble to fix the season schedule. The result was an unbalanced schedule, and as such it was decided to adjust the Cascadia Cup format for that season. Fans of all threeCascadian teams agreed to make only the last home and last away matches between constituent clubs count toward the Cup.[8]

In 2008 the clubs reverted to playing each other an equal three times each. The Cascadia Cup competition once again included all scheduled regular season USL-1 matches played between the three rivals.[9]

Seattle lost a chance to clinch the 2011 Cascadia Cup in their match against Vancouver on October 9, 2013, but would go on to win it later in the season.[10]

The Seattle Sounders of the USL-1 were made defunct in 2009 due to the introduction of the MLS expansion franchise of the same name. In 2009, it was announced that expansion teams would be allotted to Vancouver and Portland. Both teams were named after their predecessors, ensuring the continuation of the rivalry.[11] Supporters of the Timbers and Whitecaps decided to continue the Cascadia Cup without the Sounders for two years while playing in the USL. In 2009, supporters of the Timbers and Whitecaps only included regular season USL-1 matches played between the teams and Portland won the cup for the first time.[1] Some Sounders supporters wished to include a preseason victory over Vancouver and a US Open Cup match win at Portland for consideration in the cup standings while others believed that the Cascadia Cup competition should be suspended until 2011.[citation needed] Portland won the Cup for a second consecutive year in 2010.[12]

The2011 MLS season marked the first season since 2008 in which all three teams would be in the same league. Seattle claimed their third title by going undefeated in Cascadia Cup play – coming from behind to win both of their road games in Portland and Vancouver while earning draws at home.[13]

For the2012 MLS season the league changed to an unbalanced schedule. As a result, each team would play the other two Cascadia club three times each. Portland had four games at home while Vancouver and Seattle had three and two, respectively. It was decided by the supporters groups to count all matches equally.[14] Portland won the cup in Vancouver on October 21, 2012, with their only away win of their 2012 season. It was the Timbers' third time hoisting the cup, and the first with the Sounders in the competition.[15]

For seven straight finals between 2015 and 2021, the Western Conference representative in theMLS Cup or theMLS is Back Tournament was from Cascadia. This streak came to an end in 2022 as all three teams failed to qualify for theplayoffs. 2022 also marked the first time since they joined MLS that all three missed the playoffs in the same season.

The Cascadia Cup Council decided that 2020 matches not played in front of supporters, including the MLS is Back Tournament, would not count towards Cascadia Cup standings.[16][17][18]

Trademark dispute

[edit]

In December 2012, MLS filed a trademark claim for rights to the name "Cascadia Cup".[19] This caused an immediate reaction from the three main supporters groups—theTimbers Army,Emerald City Supporters, and theVancouver Southsiders—that had created the original competition. This prompted them to form a legal entity called the Cascadia Cup Council,[20] whose sole purpose was to obtain and retain the legal rights to the name "Cascadia Cup". Releases by MLS indicate that their trademark plan was an altruistic attempt to protect the Cascadia Cup from abuse by third parties,[21] a claim that was disputed by the contest-organizing fan groups. Those same groups later had discussions with MLS leadership in an attempt to resolve the issue, and in July 2013 both MLS and the supporters groups announced an agreement that the council would own the trademark and nomonetization would occur without the agreement of all parties.[22]

Scoring

[edit]

In most years since all three teams have been in MLS (2011–present), all of the games between the Cascadia teams count in Cascadia Cup standings. In some years, however, some of the matchups are uneven, with more games between some pairs of teams than others. In 2018, for instance, the Timbers-Sounders matchup was played three times but the Whitecaps played the other two teams only twice each. To keep the Cup competition balanced in these years, only a subset of games count toward the Cup standings, with the supporters groups agreeing before the season which games to count. In 2018, for instance, the final two games of each matchup were the ones that counted, and the initial Timbers-Sounders game on May 13 was excluded.

The winner each year is decided by these criteria, in order:[23]

  • Greater number of points in all Cascadia Cup matches.
  • Greater number of points earned in matches between teams tied on points.
  • Greater goal difference in matches between teams tied on points.
  • Greater number of goals scored in matches between teams tied on points.
  • Reapply previous three criteria if two or more teams are still tied.
  • Greater goal difference in all Cascadia Cup matches.
  • Greater number of goals scored in all Cascadia Cup matches.
  • Smaller number of disciplinary points in all Cascadia Cup matches (yellow = 1 point, red = 2 points).

Title performance

[edit]

Titles won

[edit]
ClubTitlesUSL eraMLS eraYears won
Vancouver Whitecaps8352004, 2005, 2008, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2023, 2025
Seattle Sounders7252006, 2007, 2011, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2021
Portland Timbers6242009, 2010, 2012, 2017, 2022, 2024

Annual results

[edit]
YearChampionsSecondThird
USL era
2004Vancouver WhitecapsPortland TimbersSeattle Sounders
2005Vancouver WhitecapsPortland TimbersSeattle Sounders
2006Seattle SoundersVancouver WhitecapsPortland Timbers
2007Seattle SoundersVancouver WhitecapsPortland Timbers
2008Vancouver WhitecapsSeattle SoundersPortland Timbers
USL era (Seattle ineligible)
2009Portland TimbersVancouver Whitecaps
2010Portland TimbersVancouver Whitecaps
MLS era
2011Seattle Sounders FCPortland TimbersVancouver Whitecaps FC
2012Portland TimbersSeattle Sounders FCVancouver Whitecaps FC
2013Vancouver Whitecaps FCPortland TimbersSeattle Sounders FC
2014Vancouver Whitecaps FCSeattle Sounders FCPortland Timbers
2015Seattle Sounders FCVancouver Whitecaps FCPortland Timbers
2016Vancouver Whitecaps FCPortland TimbersSeattle Sounders FC
2017Portland TimbersSeattle Sounders FCVancouver Whitecaps FC
2018Seattle Sounders FCVancouver Whitecaps FCPortland Timbers
2019Seattle Sounders FCPortland TimbersVancouver Whitecaps FC
2020Not awarded due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2021Seattle Sounders FCPortland TimbersVancouver Whitecaps FC
2022Portland TimbersVancouver Whitecaps FCSeattle Sounders FC
2023Vancouver Whitecaps FCPortland TimbersSeattle Sounders FC
2024Portland TimbersSeattle Sounders FCVancouver Whitecaps FC
2025Vancouver Whitecaps FCSeattle Sounders FCPortland Timbers

League standings finishes

[edit]

  Sounders  Timbers  Whitecaps

USL First Division
P.2004[b]200520062007200820092010
11*1*1
2*22*2
3*3
4444*4
555
66
7*777
8
9
10
111111
12
MLS Western Conference
P.201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320242025
111*1
2*222*2*22*22*2
33333
44*4444
55*555
66666*6
7*77
8*8*88*888
9999*9
1010
1111
1212
13
14
15

Total: Seattle with 10 highest finishes. Portland with 6, and Vancouver with 5.
• Finishes with an asterisk (*) indicate winning the Cascadia Cup.
• Border indicates playoff line.

Season by season breakdown

[edit]

USL era

[edit]

2004
TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPts
Vancouver Whitecaps843176+113
Portland Timbers84401011−112
Seattle Sounders834199010
Source:"Cascadia Cup". cascadiacup.soccer. January 2004.

2005
TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPts
Vancouver Whitecaps8206105+512
Portland Timbers82331015−59
Seattle Sounders(U)81257708
Source:"Cascadia Cup". cascadiacup.soccer. January 2005.
(U) USL–1 Champions

2006
TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPts
Seattle Sounders84221310+314
Vancouver Whitecaps(U)8323108+212
Portland Timbers8143611−56
Source:"Cascadia Cup". cascadiacup.soccer. January 2006.
(U) USL–1 Champions

2007
TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPtsSEAVANPOR
Seattle Sounders(U)420274+381–02–0
Vancouver Whitecaps401323−132–20–0
Portland Timbers401324−232–20–0
Source:"Cascadia Cup". cascadiacup.soccer. January 2007.
(U) USL–1 Champions

2008
TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPts
Vancouver Whitecaps(U)641196+313
Seattle Sounders62225508
Portland Timbers614147−34
Source:"Cascadia Cup". cascadiacup.soccer. January 2008.
(U) USL–1 Champions

USL/MLS split (Seattle ineligible)

[edit]

2009
TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPts
Portland Timbers321031+26
Vancouver Whitecaps312013−23
Source:"Cascadia Cup". cascadiacup.soccer. January 2009.

2010
TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPts
Portland Timbers420264+28
Vancouver Whitecaps402246−22
Source:"Cascadia Cup". cascadiacup.soccer. January 2010.

Major League Soccer era

[edit]

2011
TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPtsSEAPORVAN
Seattle Sounders FC420296+381–12–2
Portland Timbers421165+172–32–1
Vancouver Whitecaps FC403148−411–30–1
Source:"Cascadia Cup".cascadiacup.soccer. January 2011.

2012
TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPts
Portland Timbers631277011
Seattle Sounders FC621395+49
Vancouver Whitecaps FC603348−43
Source:"Cascadia Cup".cascadiacup.soccer. January 2012.

2013
TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPts
Vancouver Whitecaps FC6213139+49
Portland Timbers61147707
Seattle Sounders FC6231610−47
Source:"Cascadia Cup".cascadiacup.soccer. January 2013.

2014
TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPts
Vancouver Whitecaps FC6321811−310
Seattle Sounders FC62221210+28
Portland Timbers62311514+17
Source:"Cascadia Cup".cascadiacup.soccer. January 2014.

2015
TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPts
Seattle Sounders FC642098+112
Vancouver Whitecaps FC622267−18
Portland Timbers(M)61327705
Source:"Cascadia Cup".cascadiacup.soccer. January 2015.
(M) MLS Cup Champions

2016
TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPts
Vancouver Whitecaps FC63301110+19
Portland Timbers6330141409
Seattle Sounders FC(M)63301011−19
Source:"Cascadia Cup".cascadiacup.soccer. January 2016.
(M) MLS Cup Champions

2017
TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPts
Portland Timbers631286+211
Seattle Sounders FC621385+39
Vancouver Whitecaps FC6141611−54
Source:"Cascadia Cup".cascadiacup.soccer. January 2017.

2018
TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPtsSEAVANPOR
Seattle Sounders FC431074+392–02–3
Vancouver Whitecaps FC422056−161–22–1
Portland Timbers413057−230–11–2
Source:"Cascadia Cup".cascadiacup.soccer. January 2018.

2019
PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsSEAVANPOR
1Seattle Sounders FC(M)421143+171–0[24]1–2[25]
2Vancouver Whitecaps FC412124−250–0[26]1–0[27]
3Portland Timbers411265+141–2[28]2–2[29]
Source:[30][31][32][33][34][35]
(M) MLS Cup Champions

2020
PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
1Seattle Sounders FC7412135+813
2Portland Timbers641165+113
3Vancouver Whitecaps FC5005110−90
Source:[citation needed]

No 2020 winner awarded due to COVID-19 pandemic

2021
PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsSEAPORVAN
1Seattle Sounders FC4211116+570–24–1
2Portland Timbers420279−262–62–3
3Vancouver Whitecaps FC411258−341–10–1
Source:"Cascadia Cup".cascadiacup.soccer. January 2021.

2022
PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsPORVANSEA
1Portland Timbers431094+5101–12–1
2Vancouver Whitecaps FC411259−442–32–1
3Seattle Sounders FC410367−130–34–0
Source:"Schedule".mlssoccer.com.

2023
PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
1Vancouver Whitecaps FC631298+110
2Portland Timbers6222118+38
3Seattle Sounders FC6132610−46
Source:"Schedule".mlssoccer.com.
Rules for classification:Scoring

2024
PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
1Portland Timbers622287+18
2Seattle Sounders FC622276+18
3Vancouver Whitecaps FC622279−28
Source:"Schedule".mlssoccer.com.
Rules for classification:Scoring

2025 season

[edit]
See also:2025 Portland Timbers season,2025 Seattle Sounders FC season, and2025 Vancouver Whitecaps FC season

2025
PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsVANSEAPOR
1Vancouver Whitecaps FC(C)4220104+683–01–1
2Seattle Sounders FC412146−252–21–0
3Portland Timbers402237−421–41–1
Updated to match(es) played on September 27, 2025. Source:"Schedule". mlssoccer.com.
Rules for classification:Scoring
(C) Champions

  Sounders win  Timbers win  Whitecaps win  Draw  Upcoming fixture

Timbers v Whitecaps
February 23 Timbers1–4 WhitecapsPortland, Oregon
1:00 PMAntony 73'Report
Stadium:Providence Park
Attendance: 20,079
Referee: Victor Rivas
Timbers v Sounders
May 17 Timbers1–1 SoundersPortland, Oregon
7:30 PMMoreno 36'ReportRusnák 30'Stadium:Providence Park
Attendance: 25,218
Referee: Rosendo Mendoza
Whitecaps v Sounders
June 8 Whitecaps3–0 SoundersVancouver, British Columbia
6:00 PM
ReportStadium:BC Place
Attendance: 24,276
Referee: Ricardo Fierro
Whitecaps v Timbers
September 24 Whitecaps1–1 TimbersVancouver, British Columbia
7:30 PMMiller 39'ReportWhite 88'Stadium:BC Place
Attendance: 20,212
Referee: Jon Freemon
Sounders v Whitecaps
September 27 Sounders2–2 WhitecapsSeattle, Washington
7:30 PM
Report
Stadium:Lumen Field
Attendance: 32,750
Referee: Malik Badawi
Sounders v Timbers
October 4 Sounders1–0 TimbersSeattle, Washington
7:30 PMDe La Vega 16'ReportStadium:Lumen Field
Attendance: 32,913
Referee: Rubiel Vazquez

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Trophy not awarded in 2020 due to COVID-19 pandemic.
  2. ^Western Conference results.
  1. ^abWalker, Ian (September 30, 2009)."Vancouver Whitecaps underdog against Portland".Vancouver Sun. Archived fromthe original on October 6, 2009.
  2. ^Dreier, Fred (March 14, 2011)."North by Northwest".Sports Business. Sports Business Daily. Archived fromthe original on June 10, 2015. RetrievedApril 19, 2013.
  3. ^Wahl, Grant (May 23, 2011)."A Pacific Passion Play: Big-time clubs left Portland, Seattle and Vancouver 30 years ago, but their fans never did. Now the teams are back in MLS, and their reborn rivalries are turning the region into a hotbed of the sport".SI.com. Sports Illustrated. RetrievedJune 11, 2011.
  4. ^"Soccer fans creating Cascadia Cup".Seattle Post-Intelligencer. March 31, 2004. RetrievedJanuary 7, 2010.
  5. ^"2004 Cascadia Cup Results". Archived fromthe original on November 10, 2012. RetrievedAugust 13, 2013.
  6. ^"2005 Cascadia Cup Soccer". Home.comcast.net. Archived fromthe original on July 6, 2009. RetrievedJuly 26, 2010.
  7. ^"2006 Cascadia Cup Champions". Home.comcast.net. Archived fromthe original on July 6, 2009. RetrievedJuly 26, 2010.
  8. ^"2007Cascadiacup". Home.comcast.net. Archived fromthe original on August 13, 2009. RetrievedJuly 26, 2010.
  9. ^"2008 Cascadia Cup Champions". Home.comcast.net. Archived fromthe original on July 6, 2009. RetrievedJuly 26, 2010.
  10. ^"Whitecaps 4, Sounders 1: Vancouver ruins Seattle's chance to clinch Cascadia Cup".The Oregonian. Associated Press. October 10, 2013.
  11. ^"MLSsoccer.com". MLSsoccer.com. RetrievedSeptember 25, 2011.
  12. ^Kesgard, Kip (July 24, 2010)."Portland Timbers – 2010 Cascadia Cup Champions". OregonLive.com. RetrievedJune 11, 2011.
  13. ^Winner, Andrew (September 25, 2011)."Special night in Vancouver as Seattle win Cascadia Cup". Major League Soccer. RetrievedSeptember 26, 2011.
  14. ^Oshan, Jeremiah (January 24, 2012)."2012 Cascadia Cup Format: All Games Will Count Equally". Sounder at Heart. RetrievedMarch 1, 2012.
  15. ^Arnold, Geoffrey C. (October 21, 2012)."Portland Timbers defeat Whitecaps to win Cascadia Cup".The Oregonian. RetrievedOctober 21, 2012.
  16. ^"CASCADIA CUP UPDATE". Vancouver Southsiders. June 22, 2020. RetrievedJune 22, 2020.
  17. ^"Message from the Cascadia Cup Council". 107 Independent Supporters Trust. June 22, 2020. RetrievedJune 22, 2020.
  18. ^"2020 Cascadia Cup". Emerald City Supporters. June 22, 2020. RetrievedJune 22, 2020.
  19. ^"Canadian trade-mark data: 1607055 – Canadian trade-marks database – Intellectual property and copyright – Canadian Intellectual Property Office – Industry Canada". Cipo.ic.gc.ca. RetrievedAugust 13, 2013.
  20. ^"Supporters Groups Issue Statement on Trademarking of Cascadia Cup". ProstAmerika. January 10, 2013. Archived fromthe original on September 18, 2018. RetrievedJanuary 21, 2013.
  21. ^Nick Firchau (January 17, 2013)."MLS has work to do on Cascadia trademark tussle".
  22. ^"MLS and Cascadia Supporters Reach Resolution Cup Trademark Issue". MLSsoccer.com. July 5, 2013. RetrievedApril 2, 2017.
  23. ^"Cascadia Cup". RetrievedSeptember 17, 2012.
  24. ^"Seattle Sounders 1, Vancouver Whitecaps 0 - 2019 MLS Match Recap". RetrievedJanuary 10, 2020.
  25. ^"Seattle Sounders 1, Portland Timbers 2 - 2019 MLS Match Recap". RetrievedJanuary 10, 2020.
  26. ^"Vancouver Whitecaps FC 0, Seattle Sounders FC 0 - 2019 MLS Match Recap". RetrievedJanuary 10, 2020.
  27. ^"Vancouver Whitecaps FC 1, Portland Timbers 0 - 2019 MLS Match Recap". RetrievedJanuary 10, 2020.
  28. ^"Portland Timbers 1, Seattle Sounders 2 - 2019 MLS Match Recap". RetrievedJanuary 10, 2020.
  29. ^"Portland Timbers 3, Vancouver Whitecaps FC 1 - 2019 MLS Match Recap". RetrievedJanuary 10, 2020.
  30. ^"Seattle Sounders 1, Portland Timbers 2 - 2019 MLS Match Recap". RetrievedJanuary 10, 2020.
  31. ^"Seattle Sounders 1, Vancouver Whitecaps 0 - 2019 MLS Match Recap". RetrievedJanuary 10, 2020.
  32. ^"Portland Timbers 1, Seattle Sounders 2 - 2019 MLS Match Recap". RetrievedJanuary 10, 2020.
  33. ^"Portland Timbers 3, Vancouver Whitecaps FC 1 - 2019 MLS Match Recap". RetrievedJanuary 10, 2020.
  34. ^"Vancouver Whitecaps FC 1, Portland Timbers 0 - 2019 MLS Match Recap". RetrievedJanuary 10, 2020.
  35. ^"Vancouver Whitecaps FC 0, Seattle Sounders FC 0 - 2019 MLS Match Recap". RetrievedJanuary 10, 2020.

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