And not everyone finds the nonstop singing and chanting all that charming. While less profane now than in their early years, Army members still send F-bombs booming through Jeld-Wen. And it can often feel as if the experience at the stadium belongs foremost to the Army; everyone else is just being allowed to sit in.

The question for the Timbers remains how much clout they leave in the Armyâs hands ifâor whenâother fans trail away after the shine comes off the team.

âThe emotional relationship of the fans with the club is primarily a social phenomenon,â says Sean Hamil, a sports business expert at the Birkbeck Sports Business Centre in London. âThe consumer relationship is all a function of this emotional relationship with the team, and you can manufacture that, and thatâs really what youâre doing [with supporters groups].

âIt makes sense [for clubs] to develop that fan equity because it means youâll build a loyal fan base, but you lose a certain amount of control as well.â

IMAGE: Jacob Garcia

âThatâs been part of the identity the whole time, the whole punk-rock aspect of it,â Goldman-Armstrong says. â[Now] I think thereâs a lot of aspiration to it by some of the newer fans who donât necessarily come from the music scene at allâitâs just part of what they associate with going to a soccer game.â

Heâs originally from a farm outside Yamhill. But a slight Irish accent colors Goldman-Armstrongâs words even 13 years after he studied abroad at University College Cork, where he fell in love with supporters culture by following Cork City F.C. of the League of Ireland. He works salvaging building materials and writes a column for Northwest Brewing News.

Goldman-Armstrong has anchored his spot in the front row of Section 107 since the Timbers joined the United Soccer Leagues 10 years ago. Heâs easily recognized by many Portlanders from being featured in the Timbersâ billboard campaign this year promoting the teamâs move to MLS.

IMAGE: Jacob Garcia

If its antics cut against the grain of Portlandâs famous politeness, the Army reflects a subculture of the cityâs young who could easily be walk-ons in Portlandia. (One Army leader says heâs heard the IFC series that spoofs the city is eyeing an episode about the group.)

Goldman-Armstrong says soccer in America has long suffered from family-friendly marketing campaigns that misjudge the demographic most likely to embrace the sport.

âBasically, your typical American ownership group looked at [soccer] as, âOh, thatâs for soccer moms and suburbanites,ââ he says. âWe didnât fit into what they had in mind.â

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Goldman-Armstrong and seven compatriots were banned from the stadium for a year after protesting the teamâs lousy 2006 season by lighting flares at the final home game. He watched the following season from atop ladders across Southwest 18th Avenue.

Thousands of people who perhaps had never been to a Timbers game before now call themselves members of the Army. Many flock to Section 107 behind the north goal, which Timbers Army veterans refer to as the tourist section.



âThereâs definitely a little bit of, âWho the hell are these people?ââ Goldman-Armstrong says. âAll of these people, they seem to think that they can just show up and come right down in front and save seats.â¦ Itâs like, no, Iâve been standing here for the last 10 years.â

That sums up many Army membersâ views of the fans only now discovering the Timbers: We were here first.

They feel that way about the owners, too.

The original hardcore supporters in 2001 numbered less than a few dozen. They called themselves the Cascade Rangers and gathered in Section 107âlater renaming themselves to dispel association with the Glasgow Rangers of the Scottish Premier League.

Everything about the Army got bigger: its size, volume and renegade attitude. Timbers owners tried to squash it. They failed.

Take the way past owners tried to deal with what the Army calls âYSA.â When opposing keepers strike goal kicks, the Army would yell, âYou suck, asshole!â

IMAGE: Jacob Garcia

The protest emboldened many Army leaders. It taught them they had more power than they realized, and they used it to influence the current owner, Merritt Paulson.

Paulson arrived in 2007 with two things every sports team owner should have: a love for sports and a lot of money. A Harvard MBA, Paulson worked for the National Basketball Association for five years before forming Peregrine Sports LLC with his father.

That would be Henry âHankâ Paulson, former CEO of Goldman Sachs and U.S. Treasury secretary under President George W. Bush. The elder Paulson is best known for trying to fend off the nationâs 2008 financial meltdown. According to a 2010 Forbes article, heâs worth $700 million.

It took a few good bruisings before Merritt Paulson learned his lesson with the Army.

Roger Levesque plays for the rival Seattle Sounders and is widely reviled by the Army. But Paulson saw no problem inviting Levesque to play for one match in a Timbers jersey during a friendly against Toronto FC in October 2007. Army members spray-painted a huge sign that read, âReal Fans Hate Levesque.â Security officials tried to take it down; it just reappeared elsewhere in the North End. After the game, Paulson ran toward the Armyâs sections and yelled, âWhatâs the matter with you guys?â

This failure to understand what the Army considers to be tradition at the games has caused the most problemsâand strengthened the Armyâs muscle.

The Timbers won promotion to MLS in 2009 and unveiled their official logo at a team-sponsored celebration in June 2010 at Director Park; the stylized ax sent Army members into paroxysms. The design looked too cartoonish and fancified, and violated the sense of history and humility of the simple, dignified logos of the past. The event was a fiasco: Scores of Timbers Army members drowned out everyone else by chanting, âYou fucked up! You fucked up!â

Paulson at first responded defensively and defiantly. But he quickly gave in and settled on a plainer logo.

The Army went corporate in 2009. It might seem a contradiction in terms for an anarchistic group that for years rejected the idea of having a hierarchy. âSome people wanted to mold the fan culture [in the early days], but we let the group grow organically,â says Steven Lenhart, a founding member. âAfter the MLS announcement, people knew it was time to have something directing the path, making sure [the Army] stayed true to its roots.â

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The nonprofit corporation, 107ist, is run by an 11-member board (like the 11 players a team fields on the pitch). The Armyâs corporation finds itself in an unusual spot: In the past, the Army rarely had more than $1,000 in a checking account and had to pay for its inventory of scarves and merchandise by charging membersâ credit cards.

No longer. Officials of 107ist say their ticket deal with the team, membership dues and other smaller revenue streams brought in more than $100,000 between March and December 2010. This season the Army got a 2.75 percent commission on $360 season tickets sold for its North End sections. Army officials say the 107ist has seen its revenues top $200,000 this year.

The 107ist also earns modest revenue from its merchandise van, which is set up across the street from the stadium on game days. This includes items like âNo Pityâ scarves, which are considered a rite of passage for new members and are sold at cost.

Paulson says any merchandise bearing the Timbersâ name could be claimed by the club under the teamâs trademark. But his comments show the Army has made its impression on him. âIâm not getting into any unnecessary legal pissing matches,â Paulson says. âIt seems petty. Those scarves have a lot of history behind them.â

The 107ist has donated $11,000 for soccer equipment at Jefferson, Madison and Franklin high schools. The 107ist also started Operation Pitch Invasion, which is restoring and building soccer fields throughout the Portland area.

Despite its growing influence, the Army has found its relationship with the players has grown more complicated. As recently as five years ago, players routinely gathered and drank with Army members at the Bullpen, a half block from the stadium on Southwest Taylor Street. (The Bitter End Pub, at the corner of West Burnside Street and Northwest 20th Avenue, is now the preferred game-day Army bar.)

The onetime closeness between the Army and players sometimes spelled trouble. The night in August 2004 when the Timbers clinched their first United Soccer Leagues A-League Western Conference championship, goalkeeper Josh Saunders was treated to free rounds at the Bullpen by Army members. According to news reports, he was arrested hours later for reckless driving and driving under the influence when Beaverton police clocked him at 102 mph on U.S. Highway 26.

Team rules now prohibit players from interacting with fans in such a manner, and the collective bargaining agreement of Major League Soccer further restricts how and when players can make appearances. The team sponsored a barbecue at Jeld-Wen earlier this month for 107ist members and players. But even the 107ist would have to jump through several hoops to get a player to appear at an event.

âTo be honest, even if we did that we wouldnât get Darlington Nagbe,â says Army spokesman Garrett Dittfurth, referring to the star midfielder from Liberia. âThey would send someone like Rodrigo Lopez.â

IMAGE: Jacob Garcia

Ryan Pore spent two full seasons playing for the Timbers, plus much of this season, before being loaned to the Montreal Impact. Pore was the unofficial liaison between the players and the Army.

Pore says he has nothing but praise for the Army, but some of his former Timbers teammatesâespecially those new to Portlandâdidnât understand the Armyâs traditions and the expectations of the players to follow them. When Paulson pulled Jewsbury and Perlaza back onto the pitch to acknowledge the Army, it rankled some players.

âI think some guys still werenât happy with the fact that after the game they donât have the right to do whatever they want,â Pore says.

The team roster saw lots of turnover this year and added players who didnât grasp the Portland soccer traditions, let alone the Timbers Army rituals. Pore says there was some discussion in the Timbersâ locker room about the extent to which the Army influences the team and Paulson.

âI can tell you that itâs come up in conversations among players,â Pore says. âSome people think maybe the Timbers Army has too much power and the fans almost think itâs more about them than the players.â

Timbers Army regulars say the step up to MLS has created some distance between them and the playersâa reality when paychecks, and egos, get bigger as the stakes increase.

âNo one had support in the USL like Portland did,â Pore says. âThings have changed. Once players become bigger household names, itâs going to be tougher to get them to appreciate the fans and raise the log slices.â