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Sports in Portland, Oregon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Portland, Oregon, United States, is home to three major league sports teams — the Portland Trail Blazers of the National Basketball Association, the Portland Timbers of Major League Soccer, and the Portland Thorns FC of the National Women's Soccer League.[1] The city also hosts a wide variety of other sports and sporting events.

Current notable teams

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Basketball

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The Portland Trail Blazers have played in the National Basketball Association (NBA) since the 1970 season. The Trail Blazers have played in three NBA Finals (1977, 1990, 1992) and have won one NBA Championship (1977). Several of the Trail Blazers' former players are in the Basketball Hall of Fame, including Dražen Petrović, Bill Walton, Lenny Wilkens, Clyde Drexler, and Arvydas Sabonis. Furthermore, the team has retired several numbers including Terry Porter (#30), Maurice Lucas (#20), Larry Steele (#15).

The Portland Chinooks played in the International Basketball League at The Courts in Eastmoreland.

Portland will receive a WNBA team in 2026, which will be Portland's second WNBA team after the Portland Fire folded in 2002.

Canine Sports

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Dog Fanciers of Oregon (DFAO), an AKC kennel club founded in 1939, has held dogs shows in Oregon since 1941 and has held its shows at the Portland Exposition Center since 1948. Dog Fanciers Association of Oregon is Expo's oldest tenant and the biggest dog show event in the Pacific Northwest. In 1988, Tualatin Kennel Club became a partner club, and since then they've held their shows together under the banner of Rose City Classic dog shows. It is always held during the third weekend of January. In addition to breed judging, competition in obedience, Rally, agility, scent work, trick dogs, and Canine Good Citizen Tests, competition is offered to Junior Handlers, ages 9-18.

Hockey

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The Western Hockey League's Portland Winterhawks have played in the city since 1976. They play their home games at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum. They have won three league championships (1982, 1998, 2013).

Soccer

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Providence Park is the home venue of the Portland Timbers (MLS)

The Portland Timbers joined Major League Soccer (MLS) in 2011 after having past incarnations from 1975–1982, 1985–1990 and 2001–2010. They play at Providence Park, where they average over 20,000 fans and routinely sell out matches.[2] As of November 2013, the Portland Timbers had sold out the last 50 consecutive matches, and over 10,000 fans were on the wait list for season tickets.[2] In 2015, they became the first team in the Northwest to win the MLS Cup.

The Portland Timbers 2 have been playing in the USL Championship since 2014. Portland Timbers 2 (often referred to as "T2") is the reserve squad of the (MLS) club Portland Timbers. The Portland Timbers 2 formerly played at Merlo Field but now play at Providence Park.

The Portland Timbers U23s have been playing in USL League Two since 2010 and play in Salem, Oregon at McCulloch Stadium.

In 2012, Portland Thorns FC and the National Women's Soccer League were officially formed, with both the team and the league beginning play in 2013. The Thorns won the championship in the inaugural NWSL season, won their second title in 2017, and they followed up in 2022 by winning the NWSL championship so became the first team have won the most titles in league history. And have led the league in attendance in each of its first seven seasons.

Baseball

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Professional baseball was played nearly continuously in Portland from 1901 until 2010, absent only during the 1994 season. The original Portland Beavers were the longest lived team, playing every season from 1901 to 1972, though occasionally under a different name. Various minor league baseball teams played in Portland thereafter, including revived Beavers teams between 1978 and 1993 and again between 2001 and 2010. Since 2010, there has been no professional baseball played within Portland city limits.

Established in 2015 the Portland Pickles are an active team in the WCL (West Coast League). The Pickles play at Walker Stadium located inside Lents Park in SE Portland. In the summer of 2020, the WCL took a hiatus and the Portland Pickles formed the WWWL (Wild Wild West League), consisting of four teams: The Portland Pickles, The Portland Gherkins, The Gresham Greywolves, and The West Linn Knights. Beginning in 2013, the Hillsboro Hops have played at Ron Tonkin Field in the nearby suburb of Hillsboro, about 15 miles west of Portland. A farm team for the Arizona Diamondbacks, they play in the High-A West.

In September 2024, the Portland Diamond Project announced that they had signed a letter of intent to purchase Zidell Yards to build a ballpark in an attempt to attract a Major League Baseball team to Portland.[3]

List of current teams

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Club Sport Current League Championships Venue Founded
Hillsboro Hops Baseball Northwest League 3 (2014, 2015, 2019) Hillsboro Ballpark 2013
PDX FC Soccer USL 2 0 La Salle Catholic High School Stadium 2017
Portland Pickles Baseball WCL 1 (2024) Walker Stadium (baseball) 2018
Portland Thorns FC Soccer NWSL 4 (2013, 2017, 2021 NWSL Challenge Cup, 2022) Providence Park 2012
Portland Timbers Soccer MLS 1 (2015) Providence Park 2009
Portland Timbers 2 Soccer MLS Next Pro 0 Providence Park 2014
Portland Trail Blazers Basketball NBA 1 (1977) Moda Center 1970
Portland Winterhawks Hockey WHL 5 (1981–82, 1983 Memorial Cup, 1997–98, 1998 Memorial Cup, 2012–13) Veterans Memorial Coliseum 1976
Portland Trail Blazers Basketball NBA G League 0 Chiles Center 2023
Portland WNBA team Basketball WNBA 0 Moda Center 2024
Oregon Soar Ultimate (sport) WUL 0 TBA 2024
Oregon Steel Ultimate (sport) UFA 0 Providence Park 2022
Rose City Rollers Roller derby WFTDA 3 (2015, 2016, 2018) The Hangar at Oaks Amusement Park 2004

College sports

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Portland is home to two NCAA Division I programs: the Portland Pilots, of the University of Portland, and the Portland State Vikings, from Portland State University. Portland State offers football, basketball, women's volleyball, golf, soccer, track and field, tennis, softball, and cross country. The Vikings sponsor football in the FCS (formerly Division I-AA) level and play their games at Providence Park. Portland State is a member of the Big Sky Conference. The Portland Pilots are members of the non-football West Coast Conference and sponsor baseball, basketball, cross country, soccer, tennis, and track and field.

Major D1 NCAA college sports teams
Club Sport Division (Conf.) Stadium
Oregon State Beavers Football Division I (Pac-12) Reser Stadium
Providence Park
Oregon State Beavers Basketball Division I (Pac-12) Gill Coliseum
Portland Pilots Basketball Division I (WCC) Chiles Center

Other sports teams

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  • Australian rules football. Portland is home to the Portland Australian Rules Football Club of the USAFL, one of the oldest in the United States, having formed in 1998. The club includes both a men's team (Portland Steelheads) and a women's team (Portland Sockeyes). The Portland Steelheads and Sockeyes are both two time National Champions (winning in 2015 & 2016). The club also runs a small metro footy league.[4] Portland holds the record attendance for an Australian Rules Football match (14,787), when visiting Australian Football League clubs Melbourne and West Coast Eagles competed at Civic Stadium in 1990
  • Roller derby. The Rose City Rollers is an all-female Women's Flat Track Derby Association-affiliated league founded in 2004 with over 400 members. It consists of four home teams: the Heartless Heathers, the Break Neck Betties, the High Rollers, and the Guns N Rollers as well as the All-Star traveling team, the Wheels of Justice and the Axles of Annihilation the Travel B-Team, who represent the league in interleague bouts. Portland Men's Roller Derby is an all-male league established in 2009. The men's league plays by the current WFTDA roller derby ruleset
  • Rugby league. Rose City Rugby League were formed in 2010 and are part of the AMNRL's Western Expansion[5]
  • Rugby union. Portland is home to four senior-level men's rugby union football clubs and two women's clubs that are sanctioned members of USA Rugby. In men's rugby, the Portland Rugby Football Club (est. 1961, Pigs),[6] Oregon Sports Union Rugby Club (Jesters),[7] and the Eastside Tsunami compete in Division II of the Pacific Northwest Rugby Football Union (PNRFU).[8] Additionally, a gay and inclusive team, the Portland Lumberjacks compete in PNRFU men's division III.[9] The ORSU Women's Rugby team[7] competes in Women's Division I while the compete in Women's Division II[10]
  • Underwater hockey, The Portland Rockfish
  • Tennis. Team Portland Tennis[11] is a gay and lesbian tennis group that hosts the GLTA sanctioned The Gay and Lesbian Tennis Alliance Rose City Open every Labor Day weekend and provides various opportunities to meet and compete within the gay community
  • Touch rugby. The Portland Touch Rugby team is a member of the US Federation of International Touch (USFIT)and has won the national championship several times, most recently in 2007 (Portland, Oregon), 2008 (Houston), and 2009 (Portland, Oregon). The team, the Portland Hunters,[12] is home to a number of key members of the US National Touch team who have competed in the Touch Rugby International World Cup several times. There are also two other Touch Rugby teams in the Portland area, the Tigard, Oregon branch of Tumeke Touch and the Reed College Touch Rugby team
  • Paintball. The Portland Naughty Dogs compete in the National Professional Paintball League in a variety of tournaments around the U.S.
  • Mixed martial arts. Portland is also known as a hub for MMA. It's the site of Team Quest, a training camp founded by MMA legends such as Randy Couture, Dan Henderson, and Matt Lindland. Lindland was also founder and coach of the Portland Wolfpack, Portland's team in the now defunct International Fight League. Portland also is host to the semi-annual Sportfight events which frequently showcase the best up and coming fighters in the Pacific Northwest
  • Electric hockey. Developed in northern Europe, electric hockey is a new sport designed specifically for power chair users. Providing opportunity for those experiencing disabilities, electric hockey utilizes a small and fast wooden cart and has game play similar to hockey. Local nonprofit Incight facilitates game play as part of their programming

Defunct sports teams

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Baseball

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The Portland Beavers were a Triple-A baseball team from the Pacific Coast League affiliated with the San Diego Padres. The most recent franchise, which left after the 2010 season to become the Tucson Padres and is now known as the El Paso Chihuahuas, was founded in 2001, though the Beavers name dates to an early Portland baseball team established in 1903.

Baseball teams called the Beavers existed in Portland from 1903–1917 and again from 1919–1972 and 1978–1993, and finally from 2001–2010. In 1973, after the Beavers moved to Spokane, Washington, the Portland Mavericks came to town in the form of an independent Single-A team within the Northwest League. From 1973 to 1977 they played in what was then known as Civic Stadium. The Mavericks were owned by ex-minor league player and television actor Bing Russell. When Russell sold the team back to the Beavers in 1978 it was for $116,000, at the time a record amount for a minor league franchise. The most recent Beavers franchise also played at Civic Stadium. The original Beavers stadium was Vaughn Street Park located in northwest Portland. The Beavers won the Pacific Coast League Pennant the following years: 1906, 1910, 1911, 1913, 1914, 1932, 1936, 1945 and 1983. When the Beavers relocated to Salt Lake City in 1993, another Northwest League team, the Portland Rockies, moved in for the 1995 season, playing until 2000. When the Beavers returned for the 2001 season, the Rockies relocated to Pasco, Washington to become the Tri-City Dust Devils. The final version of the Beavers also played in Civic Stadium, renamed PGE Park upon their arrival. After the city announced plans to renovate PGE Park to a soccer-specific stadium for the Timbers, and a proposed park for the Beavers failed to materialize, the team moved to Tucson and then to El Paso.

Football

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In 2013, it was announced that the Arena Football League (AFL) was expanding to Portland and the Portland Thunder was originally owned by Terry Emmert.[13] The Thunder's first game occurred on March 17, 2014, against the San Jose SaberCats at Portland's Moda Center.[14] Prior to the 2016 season, the AFL took over operations of the Thunder while looking for new local ownership. The team then changed its name to the Portland Steel for the 2016 AFL season.[15] The team folded after the 2016 season.

Prior to the Portland Thunder/Steel, Portland had the Arena Football League team the Portland Forest Dragons. In years of 1997, 1998, and 1999, the Forest Dragons compiled records of 2–12, 4–10, and 7–7, never making the playoffs while in Portland. During the 1998 season the team featured receiver Oronde Gadsden, who won the league's Rookie of the Year award, and went on to sign with the NFL's Miami Dolphins.

Other defunct teams

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The Portland Pride was established in 1992 as a founding member of the Continental Indoor Soccer League (CISL), which began play in 1993. The team played its home games in Portland's Memorial Coliseum. In 1997, the team and the league played its last season. The CISL folded and the Pride ownership moved the team to the Premier Soccer Alliance, where the team played under the name Portland Pythons.

Other venues, events, and activities

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A view of downtown with Mount Hood in the background.
  • Golf. The Portland Classic is a women's professional golf tournament in Portland, Oregon on the LPGA Tour. Founded 52 years ago in 1972, the annual event in the Portland area is the oldest continuous event on the LPGA Tour. The event is held at Columbia Edgewater Country Club and winners include 12 members of the World Golf Hall of Fame including: Nancy Lopez, Juli Inkster and Annika Sörenstam.
  • Auto racing. Portland currently has the NTT Indycar Series, hosting the Grand Prix of Portland race at Portland International Raceway. PIR also hosts the Oregon Traill Rally of the American Rally Association and a variety of SCCA, historic, and annual races such as the Rose Cup during the city's Rose Festival. Washougal, Washington, directly across the Columbia River from Portland also hosts the Washougal MX, part of the Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship.
  • Skiing and snowboarding are particularly popular with Portlanders.[citation needed] The area is served by a number of resorts located on nearby Mount Hood, including Timberline, which allows skiing year round. The only other resort in North America with summer skiing is Whistler in British Columbia.[citation needed]
  • Rock climbing is growing in popularity as an outdoor pastime. At numerous small crags around town, one may glimpse mountaineers-in-training with their ropes, alpenstocks, and hard-soled boots practicing their technical moves on the rock in preparation for difficult alpine ascents.
  • Running is a major important sport in the metropolitan area, the home of Nike and of Adidas' American operations. The Portland Marathon has been held annually in the city since 1971. The Hood to Coast Relay is the world's largest running relay race,[citation needed] with approximately 17,000 racers per year running from Timberline Lodge on Mount Hood to the Pacific Ocean at Seaside.
  • Horse Racing. Horses ran at Portland Meadows until 2019.
  • Velodrome. Amateur cycling has occurred weekly at the Alpenrose Velodrome since 1962.
  • Cricket. Portland has its own cricket league called Oregon Cricket League (OCL)[16] established 2005 that provides 2 formats of the game of cricket year around; T20, the 20 overs cricket league played in colored clothing, and the longer format of 30 overs league played in whites. Beaverton United Cricket Club [17] is the reigning champion of the T20 league, winning it 3 times in a row from 2011. Northwest Cricket Club is the current champion of the 30-30 cricket league.
  • Delta Dome, a proposed stadium in 1964

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Portland Thorns FC".
  2. ^ a b Arnold, Geoffrey C. (November 6, 2013). "For the Portland Timbers, home field is a real advantage". oregonlive. Retrieved December 9, 2023.
  3. ^ Oregonian/OregonLive, Shane Dixon Kavanaugh | The; Oregonian/OregonLive, Jonathan Bach | The (September 24, 2024). "Portland Diamond Project says it has agreement for baseball stadium at South Waterfront site". oregonlive. Retrieved September 25, 2024.
  4. ^ "Portland Australian Football Club". Portlandfooty.
  5. ^ "AmericanRugbyNews.com RL Hopes to Move West". Archived from the original on October 1, 2010. Retrieved March 12, 2011.
  6. ^ "Portland Rugby Club".
  7. ^ a b "ORSU - Portland's Premier Rugby Team".
  8. ^ "Pacific Northwest Rugby Football Union".
  9. ^ "Lumberjacks Rugby".
  10. ^ "Portland Lady Pigs".
  11. ^ "Team Portland Tennis". Archived from the original on October 14, 2007. Retrieved July 22, 2022.
  12. ^ "usurped title". Archived from the original on March 9, 2010. {{cite web}}: Cite uses generic title (help)CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  13. ^ Harbarger, Holly (March 5, 2014). "Terry Emmert's arena football aspiration examined: Clackamas County in the news". Portland, Oregon. Retrieved April 24, 2014.
  14. ^ Odem, Joel (January 31, 2014). "Portland Thunder to begin training camp Feb. 25". OregonLive.com. Portland, Oregon: The Oregonian. Retrieved February 18, 2014.
  15. ^ "Portland AFL Organization Rebrands to Steel". OurSportsCentral. February 24, 2016.
  16. ^ "Oregon Cricket League (OCL)". Archived from the original on July 25, 2009.
  17. ^ "Beaverton United Cricket Club". Facebook.[self-published source?]