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Madison Curry has become a top defender by trusting her gut

The defender talks to Ride of the Valkyries about her unique journey to Seattle Reign and how she trusts her gut when making big decisions.

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7 min read
Madison Curry heads toward the Seattle Reign locker room at Lumen Field before a match against the Washington Spirit. Photo by Mike Russell / Sounder at Heart

On the soccer field, Madison Curry's job is to read a situation in a split second and act. No time to deliberate, no room for hesitation. Strip the ball or get beat. Hold the ball and recycle it, or drive forward and attack. It's safe to say she's pretty good at acting on instinct: the Seattle Reign defender finished the 2025 season sixth in the NWSL in tackles, seventh in dribblers tackled, and eighth in interceptions.

Off the field, it turns out, Curry operates exactly the same way. The Southern California kid who went to Princeton on a gut feeling she had at age 15. The player who chose to come to Seattle before visiting. Curry doesn't plan. She feels.

"I go with my gut," she said in a conversation with Ride of the Valkyries after training. "I trust it."

The Reign are poised to benefit greatly from this gut instinct in Curry's second season at the club.

Bringing that little sister energy

Curry's soccer career started, as many things do, with something to prove. The defender grew up with three older brothers — all athletes, none of them soccer players. They were more interested in baseball, basketball, and football. Soccer was too much running. Their little sister heard that and saw an opening.

"I wanted to little-sister-energy prove I could be the best at something," she said.

She was 4 years old when she first stepped onto a soccer field. Her first team, the Tigers, wore bright orange. She loved it immediately and never looked back, carving out her own path.

By age 8, she was playing club soccer with Slammers FC in Costa Mesa, California, alternating between fullback and centerback. Club soccer at that level comes with its own social ecosystem, and Curry was navigating one particular source of doubt: her friends were getting called up to youth national camps. She wasn't.

It was Slammers founders, brothers Ziad and Walid Khoury, who steadied her.

"They were really like, 'You can't pay attention to all that,'" she recalled. "And I think that was really special to have someone at a young age like that."

The Khourys also showed her that soccer is bigger than what happens on the field. It would take her places she couldn't yet imagine.

"They were the first to really believe in me at such a young age," she said. "And they told me that soccer is just so much more than what you do on the field. It's going to help you grow as a person."

Tune out the noise, trust the people who believe in you, and keep working. Curry has been running that playbook ever since.

This is it: the Princeton story

By the time Curry was being recruited by colleges, she knew she wanted out of Southern California. She was close with her parents — best friends with them, she says — and knew she needed to grow on her own terms. When she was 15 and in New Jersey for a soccer tournament, someone suggested they tour Princeton. She walked onto campus, looked at her mom, and said: "This is it. I know this is my place."

The Princeton coaches encouraged her to keep looking. She toured Vanderbilt. The answer was the same. Princeton was it, and she'd known it in about 30 seconds.

What followed was, by her own description, the hardest five years of her life. The academics were humbling in a way that nothing before had been. She was independent for the first time, figuring out who she was without her family nearby. Despite the difficult balance, Curry excelled — earning three consecutive first-team All-Ivy League selections and playing every minute of a Princeton NCAA Tournament run in 2023 that included a near-upset of No. 4 Texas Tech.

She majored in neuroscience — because she's always loved, as she puts it, "odd niches" — and took a gap semester before her senior year to intern at an aerospace engineering company. That detour turned out to be clarifying.

"I said, 'Oh, I love soccer more than I love doing this. And so that's what I want to do until I can't, or it's clear that I shouldn't.'"

Princeton also pushed her to grow as a leader in ways she hadn't anticipated and didn't entirely want. Her coaches named her co-captain her senior year, which at first worried Curry. She wasn't a naturally vocal leader — lead by example was more her style — but the Princeton coaching staff challenged her to be a captain in a fuller sense of the word.

"They really challenged me to trust in my instincts and my ability to lead," she said. "We butted heads a little bit in the best way possible because they just believed in me so much."

The draft call she almost missed

Curry tried to wriggle her way into the professional game through whatever cracks she could find — training with Kansas City Current's reserve team in the summer of 2023 and working every connection she had, as navigating a path from Princeton to the NWSL wasn't exactly well-worn. She was realistic heading into the 2024 NWSL Draft.

"I had to go into the draft thinking I wasn't going to get drafted. There's always this twinge of hope, but I had to go in with a really humbling mindset. I did go to a smaller school, I'm a defender, so by nature I don't have all the big-name statistics."

By the time the later rounds rolled around, she was playing card games at home. Angel City FC called. It came up as spam, so she didn't answer. Her Princeton coach called shortly after and told her why she had to pick up that phone. She immediately called Angel City back, saying, "I'm so sorry, please still draft me," and just like that, she was drafted by her hometown club.

Curry arrived at Angel City's preseason camp without a contract, spending the first two months in a hotel room without a kitchen, just trying to make the roster. She made it, and immediately recalibrated her expectations downward.

"I made it, and I was like, okay, I'm not going to play a minute, and I'm okay with that," she said.

Then injuries changed everything. When M.A. Vignola went down, and with Merritt Mathias navigating a new diabetes diagnosis, the rookie stepped into the starting lineup. She found out she was starting her first professional game 20 minutes before kickoff. Against the Kansas City Current. In their new raucous, loud, sold-out stadium. She scored in that game.

Curry went on to lead Angel City in duels won, tackles won, and interceptions. She was named to the NWSL Best XI of the Month in July. Seattle was paying attention.

This is it: the Seattle story

Toward the end of the 2024 season, Curry arrived at free agency having proven herself as one of the better young defenders in the league. Curry knew she wanted to stay on the West Coast, but veteran players like Mathias, who had fought hard for the free-agency rights Curry's generation now enjoys, encouraged her to explore broadly regardless.

She talked to head coach Laura Harvey and the Reign staff, and there it was again. That feeling.

"As soon as I talked to Laura and the staff, it just felt like what happened at Princeton," Curry said. "I just felt like, oh, this is where I'm supposed to be. There's no real way to quantify it. It was just a feeling and a trust that I immediately had in them and for their vision with me."

Because Angel City had only signed her to a one-year contract, the Reign could bring her in without a trade or transfer fee, a fact that was not lost on Harvey. "I think it was a very shrewd move to get Madi Curry for free," the Reign head coach told Ride of the Valkyries.

Curry signed before she'd ever been to Seattle. When she arrived, she knew her instinct was right again. The players welcomed her instantly.

"Coming in, I had heard that it's such a great environment, but I just didn't know what that really looked like on a day-to-day level. Coming here, the amount of support and care there is ... that's really special."

Curry felt that same connection with the coaching staff. Harvey has made a point of getting to know her players as people. She asked Curry about her favorite TV shows, building the kind of relationship where Curry can now walk up to her coach and say, "I don't feel good about this, I need help."

"Where I feel like some head coaches feel inaccessible, she really wants to help. She has so much knowledge, and she really wants us to be sponges."

Harvey called Curry "one of the most consistent performers for this team" in her first Reign season and sees a player with significant runway still ahead. "One of the best attributes is her 1v1 defending — it's very, very good. She's got a lot of tools that could really elevate her game long term, and it's about how we can keep that consistency while pushing her on a little bit more this year."

Now heading into her third NWSL season, Curry is excited to be part of a Reign team with a sharper identity and a clear sense of what it wants to become: less reactive, more aggressive, and more dangerous going forward.

"We want to shift our identity from being a sitting back kind of team to putting pressure on teams, forcing turnovers, and scoring a lot more goals," she said. "We love defending, so making sure we don't push that to the side, but we want to win every possible game and show the league that we are who we think we are."

The gut is undefeated

Curry, a neuroscience major, understands the brain better than most. She spent years studying it. And still, when you ask her how she's ended up at Princeton and Angel City and Seattle — all the right places at all the right times — the answer is not about what's going through her brain at all.

"I go with my gut. I trust it. Whenever I go against my gut, that stuff turns out not the way I hope."

On the field, she makes her living in those split seconds. The perfectly timed tackle, the anticipation to know where the ball is going before her opponent gets there. Off it, she's been doing the same thing her whole life.

"I'm a go-with-the-flow kind of gal. I'm not a planner."

So far, the gut is undefeated.

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