Ah, MLS rivalry week, the time of the year in which fans get to bitch about their rivalry not being represented because so many of them are multi-directional. Some interesting events this week, as one would expect.
The 7-0 Thrashing of NYCFC Should Be a Wake Up Call
NYCFC's ownership group had to be feelng pretty confident leading into this week, NYCFC was sitting atop the eastern standings seeming to validate their firing of Jason Kreis and hiring his replacement Vieira. Unfortunately reality has a habit of sending wake up calls at inopportune moments, for NYCFC that moment was a 7-0 thrashing by the NYRB at home that tied the MLS record for worst ever defeat that hasn't been matched for 15 years. If anything should serve as a reminder to NYCFC that it's harder to win in MLS than one might think, this game should be it, a game that single-handedly put them at the bottom of the goal differential rankings in MLS. But this game is just an exposition of a larger problem for Manchester City 2 erm, I mean NYCFC, their home record is the worst in the league with a single win; sure playing in Yankee Stadium is a weird situation, but if anything that weird situation should give the home side a better record. For the Red Bulls, the win took them all the way from 7th to 3rd in the tightly packed eastern conference and serves as a warning shot to the rest of the league that the Red Bulls are still a good team.
Waston Loses His Mind After 4-1 Loss to the Timbers
Kendall Waston had a lousy game in Vancouver's loss to their bitter rivals in Portland, but he made things even worse right after the final whistle; delivery a two-footed studs-up tackle to Dairon Asprilla that earned him a post match red card and almost certainly a ban. Waston claims he never heard the final whistle, but even if he didn't that horror tackle would have been worth a red. I expect to see Waston get a longer than 1 game ban for his antics from the disciplinary committee. The win, while great for Portland, didn't get them above the red line, but did get them above their hated rivals in Seattle and could provide the confidence needed for the reigning champions to make a run for the top of the table.
Colorado Are Top of MLS and I Can't Figure Out How
As surprising as Colorado's run to the top of the MLS standings has been this season, perhaps the most surprising thing is that it's impossible to truly point to a style for the team. They don't really play for possession, they don't really high press, they aren't a swift counter attacking team, the only thing you can truly say they do extremely well is defend. I'm tempted to say Colorado bunkers and defends and tries to get in a lucky shot on set pieces, as they did on Saturday against the Sounders, but at home and in other matches they have had more of the ball and taken more chances, against Sporting KC last week, for example, they had almost as much possession and a slight edge in offensive stats. To a certain extent, I think karma, or luck is helping them out; a more focused attack that keeps things on the ground could give the Rapids all sorts of fits, but so far nobody has employed that against them; I think a lot of teams underestimate them as well since they remember the toothless Colorado of last season. Colorado's lack of a distinct style may actually help them though, without a single style teams have a harder time preparing for them. I do think Colorado will regress back to the mean at some point and fall from their lofty perch, but for the moment they're riding high and they deserve it.
In any case, while we ponder how the Rapids are doing it's pretty obvious how the Sounders aren't doing it; the Sounders offense isn't clicking, without the great work of Martins and Dempsey together opposing teams can pile on Dempsey by putting 2-3 defenders on him while the rest of the team largely seems incapable of doing anything in the final third without him. Morris looks great when he can get service, but without it he's unable to create on his own; meanwhile their other designed striker, Nelson Valdez, has ridden the bench and just been called up to the Paraguay national team. With Dempsey also out for the Copa America tournament it's hard to see the Sounders having anything but another lost June, and unlike last season where they had a nice cushion, losing this June means they may be too far out to make the playoffs for the first time in their MLS history. Dire days lie ahead in the Emerald City and Sigi Schmid's seat is probably the warmest in MLS right now, could he be fired midseason?