Home US SportsMLS MLS talking points: Inter Miami see red, Crew miss Cucho and more

MLS talking points: Inter Miami see red, Crew miss Cucho and more

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Kalani Kossa-Rienzi may have earned a first-team contract with his performance on Saturday.Photograph: Lindsey Wasson/AP

Sounders fighting the weight of history

It’s time for celebration in Seattle – the Sounders have vanquished their bogey team. After knocking LAFC out of the playoffs with a 2-1 win in November, Saturday’s 5-2 result felt like conformation that LAFC no longer have Seattle’s number after they knocked the Sounders out of the Open Cup and Leagues Cup in 2024. Those results were part of a 10-match unbeaten run against Seattle that dated back to May 2021.

“Yes it feels really good,” admitted Sounders head coach Brian Schmetzer, “but our record against them is still 4-9-4, so we still have some work to do.”

Despite the five goals scored, this was hardly the Sounders at their best, with Schmetzer resting some of his top players ahead of a critical Concacaf Champions Cup contest against Cruz Azul on Tuesday. After being unable to build any advantage in last week’s scoreless draw, the Sounders need to score in Mexico and will probably have to do so without Pedro de la Vega.

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The Argentinian has provided a spark in CCC contests, an encouraging sign after the club’s record signing missed much of 2024 through injury. Unfortunately, that trend continued – de la Vega left the field in the 36th minute Saturday. Luckily, the Sounders got attacking contributions from Paul Rothrock, Jesús Ferreira and Kalani Kossa-Rienzi, a second-team member who may have earned a first-team deal with his performance during an emergency loan spell this month.

Getting past La Maquina in Mexico City will be daunting. The Sounders haven’t won in their last seven matches in Mexico and have been eliminated four times when playing the second leg of a series on the road. They did, however, advance with a draw against León during their historic run to the title in 2022. Have the Sounders vanquished a domestic bogeyman only to be cowed by another? Or will Schmetzer’s streak-breakers do it again? That would be real cause for a party in Seattle that even the manager wouldn’t try to tone down. JA

Missing Cucho

Until Saturday, the Cucho Hernández-less Columbus Crew still looked like the dynamic Columbus Crew we’ve come to know in recent years. Hernández’s replacement, Jacen Russell-Rowe, netted in back-to-back games as Wilfried Nancy’s side started the season with wins over Chicago and New England. Against the Houston Dynamo, though, Cucho’s absence was obvious – this was the sort of game he would have decided in the past.

In fact, he had decided this sort of game in the past. Cucho was crucial in a Champions Cup meeting between these sides almost exactly 12 months ago, scoring to knock out the Dynamo when the Crew otherwise struggled for attacking ideas. With the Colombian now a Real Betis player, though, there was no knockout blow on Saturday in a goalless draw.

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Many of the usual Nancy-ball hallmarks were there in the Crew’s performance. Wingbacks Max Arfsten and Mo Farsi pushed into central areas – and frequently into the opposition box. Russell-Rowe and Diego Rossi drifted between the lines as Columbus dominated the ball. And yet from 64% possession came just 0.65 expected goals (xG) and one “big chance,” per Opta. Russell-Rowe failed to muster a single shot.

A new designated player will surely arrive to boost the attack at some point in 2025. Palmeiras forward José Manuel “Flaco” López has been linked with the club. For the time being, though, Columbus must find a way to recreate Cucho in the aggregate because Saturday’s draw against Houston proved it’s unrealistic to ask Russell-Rowe to step up in every game. GR

Minnesota United: Just chuck it

It’s the second year of a new era for Minnesota United, one marked by new leadership in sporting director Khaled El-Ahmad and head coach Eric Ramsay. With the pair in place, the club have shown impressive commitment to finding every little advantage possible. That’s demonstrated off the field with the recently-announced partnership with stats blog American Soccer Analysis, which will aid the team with player recruitment and opposition analysis.

On the field, Ramsay has shown a clear commitment to maximizing value on set pieces. Both of Minnesota United’s goals in 2025 have come in solid 1-0 wins, and both have come from long set pieces finished off by star striker Kelvin Yeboah.

The first, against CF Montreal, came from an intentional long throw-in routine. It’s not a coincidence that Minnesota are chucking the ball into the box: The Athletic found that throws into the penalty area result in more than twice the amount of xG as short throws in the final quarter of the field in the Premier League. Minnesota United know the value of a free box entry, where they’re one bounce away from a shot on goal:

A similar principle led to Minnesota’s second goal of the year against the San Jose Earthquakes on Saturday, where a long free-kick led to a scramble in the box and a finish from Yeboah:

Minnesota United haven’t been winning flashy this year. But they’ve been winning smart. JL

Struggling Kansas City

At the beginning of the 2010s, Sporting Kansas City were known throughout MLS as an example of the value of strong, decisive change. The MLS original altered their name, built a stadium, drew bigger crowds, and experienced a renaissance on the field led by Peter Vermes, the team’s technical director who added “manager” to his responsibilities in 2009.

Today, SKC may stand as a testament to the dangers of staying the course. With their 2-1 loss at DC United on Saturday, Sporting have lost 10 consecutive competitive matches in all competitions going back to last season. The picture gets worse if you include noncompetitive matches – KC failed to win any of their six preseason games, bringing the grand total winless run to 16 games, with the last victory coming on 18 September 2024.

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Making matters worse: streaks like this are nothing new for SKC. The team suffered a seven-game winless run in 2022, a 10-game winless run to open 2023, and another 10-game winless run earlier in the 2024 season (all in the league). The last of those streaks ended with seven straight losses, and when the team won to end the run, they then lost three more in a row. The Sporting KC team that were once a reliable contender have failed to qualify for the playoffs in two of the last three seasons, and 2025 isn’t looking too promising so far.

Vermes has been in charge for all of this, only recently shedding his front office title to focus on coaching. He has said he wants to lead a rebuild, and unlike virtually any other coach that had overseen the exact same record, there is no indication he is on the hot seat. That rebuild may yet come to fruition, but in the meantime KC are playing the same uninspiring soccer that got them into this mess. Unlike 15 years ago, if change is coming, it won’t come quickly. AA

Seeing red in Miami pink

The record-breaking 2024 MLS Supporters’ Shield winner Inter Miami have not done things the easy way so far in 2025. Javier Mascherano’s team being without Lionel Messi for three of their six games has gotten headlines, but the team have also played 44% of their MLS matches down to 10 men.

Tomás Avilés’ sending-off in the first half of February’s opener against New York City FC was described as “Inter Miami’s first red card of the season,” inadvertently suggesting there were more to come soon; that the tally had merely just begun. Ian Fray was sent off after the final whistle in the subsequent MLS fixture against Houston Dynamo and goalkeeper Oscar Ustari was shown red after felling Wilfried Zaha in the first half against Charlotte FC on Sunday. Of the six sendings-off in all of MLS so far in 2025, half of them have been Inter Miami players.

This has not stopped Mascherano’s mostly Messi-less team from picking up points. They drew that opener against New York City thanks to a late goal from Telasco Segovia, and held on to a 1-0 lead against Charlotte after Tadeo Allende scored less than 20 seconds into the second half.

Messi or no Messi, 11 players or 10, Miami are once again finding a way to get results and stack points in 2025. JN

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