Post by account_disabled on Apr 29, 2024 11:23:36 GMT
It remains strange, this business of MLS matches in empty stadiums.
The stadiums were, after all, specifically designed for atmosphere, to avoid the painful early days of 10,000 fans swallowed up by a 60,000-seat football stadium.
It turns out, of course, that zero fans in 20,000 seats is much worse. No matter how many sharp innovations the Philadelphia Union have deployed — digitally superimposed snakes on one end, a tifo welcoming visitors to Jurassic Subaru Park on the other — they remain, ironically, nothing more than a mask of the fans’ absence.
And it’s a shame, really, because the Union kicked off their home slate this season — however many games that will be — with two solid wins, a 4-1 blowout of D.C. United following a tighter, hard-fought 1-0 victory over New York Red Bulls.
What’s clicking?
Three things have stood out to me as sources of the Union’s success in recent games:
First, Kacper Przybylko looks like himself again. Striker Muffin looked more like Striker Hardtack in an MLS is Back Tournament run that saw him frustrated, tired, and not affecting games in the knockout stages. He’s looked livelier, though, in the two games at Subaru Park, knocking in three goals and adding an assist en route to MLS Player of the Week Denmark Email List honors. All three goals showcased Przybylko’s knack for finding the empty space in the defense — and making no mistake with the finish if the ball comes to him. (The second goal against D.C. was one of the classier finishes we’ve seen from a Union striker.) When Sergio Santos and Brendan Aaronson are buzzing around as well, defenses have their hands full with the Union attack.
At the other end of the pitch, team defense has been exceptional. Jim Curtin said before the D.C. match that the Union’s team defense has been as good as it’s been in his tenure, and it’s tough to disagree. How’s this for a stat: in the nine games since the restart (Orlando knockout rounds included), the Union have allowed just six goals, and more than one goal in any game just once (the semifinal loss to Portland). Credit for that starts with a trio of central defenders that rarely put a foot wrong in Mark McKenzie, Jakob Glesnes, and Jack Elliott, and goes up and down the roster from there. Curtin specifically pointed to the hard work done in the defensive third by the entire team, and it’s striking how quickly the Union recover when someone in the back line makes a mistake or an opponent works the ball into dangerous territory. Plus, it helps to have Andre Blake in form.
The stadiums were, after all, specifically designed for atmosphere, to avoid the painful early days of 10,000 fans swallowed up by a 60,000-seat football stadium.
It turns out, of course, that zero fans in 20,000 seats is much worse. No matter how many sharp innovations the Philadelphia Union have deployed — digitally superimposed snakes on one end, a tifo welcoming visitors to Jurassic Subaru Park on the other — they remain, ironically, nothing more than a mask of the fans’ absence.
And it’s a shame, really, because the Union kicked off their home slate this season — however many games that will be — with two solid wins, a 4-1 blowout of D.C. United following a tighter, hard-fought 1-0 victory over New York Red Bulls.
What’s clicking?
Three things have stood out to me as sources of the Union’s success in recent games:
First, Kacper Przybylko looks like himself again. Striker Muffin looked more like Striker Hardtack in an MLS is Back Tournament run that saw him frustrated, tired, and not affecting games in the knockout stages. He’s looked livelier, though, in the two games at Subaru Park, knocking in three goals and adding an assist en route to MLS Player of the Week Denmark Email List honors. All three goals showcased Przybylko’s knack for finding the empty space in the defense — and making no mistake with the finish if the ball comes to him. (The second goal against D.C. was one of the classier finishes we’ve seen from a Union striker.) When Sergio Santos and Brendan Aaronson are buzzing around as well, defenses have their hands full with the Union attack.
At the other end of the pitch, team defense has been exceptional. Jim Curtin said before the D.C. match that the Union’s team defense has been as good as it’s been in his tenure, and it’s tough to disagree. How’s this for a stat: in the nine games since the restart (Orlando knockout rounds included), the Union have allowed just six goals, and more than one goal in any game just once (the semifinal loss to Portland). Credit for that starts with a trio of central defenders that rarely put a foot wrong in Mark McKenzie, Jakob Glesnes, and Jack Elliott, and goes up and down the roster from there. Curtin specifically pointed to the hard work done in the defensive third by the entire team, and it’s striking how quickly the Union recover when someone in the back line makes a mistake or an opponent works the ball into dangerous territory. Plus, it helps to have Andre Blake in form.