Chawinga Out for KC Current’s NWSL Season Opener
By Luigi Arrieta·March 13, 2026
Temwa Chawinga, the reigning two-time NWSL MVP, will not be available for Kansas City Current when the 2026 season kicks off. Head coach Chris Armas made the announcement official on Friday, marking a significant blow to the club’s attacking ambitions. The absence of the league’s most dominant player in recent years will force Current to reshape their opening-match strategy.
The Chawinga Situation
Chawinga’s unavailability for the start of the campaign represents one of the biggest personnel issues facing the NWSL in its current cycle. Her consecutive MVP awards underline her standing as one of North American soccer’s premier talents—a player who has become central to Kansas City’s identity and competitive model. The timing of the injury, as preseason preparations intensify, adds urgency to how Current will address the gap in their squad.
Head coach Armas, tasked with maintaining the team’s championship window, now faces early-season roster decisions that will define how quickly his side can find rhythm. Current invested heavily in building around Chawinga’s talents, and losing her for the opener forces a recalibration that few teams enjoy managing at the start of a new season.
The exact nature and timeline for Chawinga’s return remain subject to the club’s injury assessment protocols. What’s clear is that Current cannot rely on their marquee performer from day one, demanding immediate solutions from the coaching staff and front office.
Competitive Implications
For Kansas City Current, this injury creates both immediate and longer-term questions. The club must determine how to structure its attack without its star player and whether backup options can provide the offensive spark the team developed around Chawinga’s presence. Other NWSL teams will view this as an opportunity to capitalize early in the season, knowing one of their toughest opponents enters with reduced firepower.
Armas has built Current into a playoff contender, but continuity—especially on the attacking end—matters enormously in women’s professional soccer. The loss of Chawinga’s production, creativity, and leadership presence on the pitch cannot simply be replaced by rotating in alternative forwards. Teams that win in the NWSL typically build identity around their best players, and Kansas City’s system is no exception.
The club’s depth chart will be tested immediately. Whether Current has developed complementary attackers capable of stepping into a larger role will determine how significantly this injury impacts their 2026 campaign trajectory. Early results without Chawinga could set the tone for months to come.
Impact on Latin American Football
While Chawinga is not from Latin America, her situation carries lessons for the region’s developing soccer infrastructure and player management practices. The NWSL’s approach to women’s professional soccer—including robust injury protocols, medical oversight, and player welfare—offers a model that Colombian and other Latin American federations continue to study. Chawinga’s status as a two-time MVP demonstrates how elite women’s players attract investment and media attention in North American soccer, a trajectory that scouts and young Latin American athletes monitor closely.
For Colombian and Brazilian prospects eyeing opportunities in North American leagues, Chawinga’s profile underscores both the opportunity and the responsibility that comes with being a franchise centerpiece. Her injury also highlights why developing squad depth is critical—a lesson relevant across Latin American clubs preparing players for international competition. Young attackers from the region studying NWSL trends understand that versatility, fitness management, and availability remain fundamental to sustaining elite-level careers.
What’s Next
Kansas City Current faces a critical opener without its MVP, and how the team responds will shape perceptions heading into the broader season. Armas must inspire confidence in his existing roster while managing expectations around a Chawinga return timeline. The coaching staff’s ability to maintain team morale and competitive edge during her absence could determine whether this injury becomes a minor early-season obstacle or a defining setback.
The NWSL’s 2026 season will unfold with one of its most talented teams operating at less than full strength from the start. For Current supporters, coaching staff, and the broader league, the focus turns to adaptability—how teams adjust when their stars are unavailable, and whether depth and system can compensate for individual brilliance.

Fundador de Smidrat, la plataforma que conecta deportistas jóvenes con scouts y clubes en Latinoamérica. Apasionado por el deporte y la tecnología, trabaja para que el talento no pase desapercibido.
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