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Angel City acquires top pick in NWSL draft, will sign Alyssa Thompson

PAMPLONA, SPAIN - OCTOBER 11: Alyssa Thompson #13 of the United States dribbles.
Alyssa Thompson controls the ball during a game between the U.S. women's national team and Spain in October. (Brad Smith/ ISI Photos / Getty Images)

Angel City has acquired the top pick in next week’s NWSL draft in a three-team trade involving the Portland Thorns and NY/NJ Gotham FC and will use the selection to sign Harvard-Westlake’s Alyssa Thompson, according to several people with knowledge of the negotiations who are not authorized to speak publicly.

Angel City sent its natural first-round pick, the No. 5 overall selection; its second-round natural pick in 2024; and $200,000 in allocation money to Portland for midfielder Yazmeen Ryan, Angel City announced. The team then sent Ryan and an additional $250,000 in allocation money to Gotham FC for the top pick in the Jan. 12 draft. The trade was made official Thursday.

The deal with Gotham was the second-most expensive in NWSL history in terms of allocation money, trailing only the San Diego’s Wave’s acquisition of Alex Morgan last year for $275,000.

Angel City declined to comment publicly on the trade or who it hopes to take with the top pick but sources close to the league said the team is focused on U.S. national team forward Thompson, an 18-year-old senior at Harvard-Westlake. Thompson, who has yet to register for the draft, has a verbal commitment to play at Stanford next year but turning pro now could help her compete for a spot on the U.S. team in this summer’s World Cup in Australia/New Zealand.

Thompson has until 9 p.m. PST Monday to register for the NWSL draft.

The Gatorade High School player of the year in 2021, Thompson made her senior international debut in September at 17, but she was not called into the U.S. team’s first training camp of the World Cup year.

Thompson is also a top sprinter, recording the second-fastest 100-meter time in California last year at 11.74 seconds.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.