MLS is no longer heating up, itās hot. The available playoff spots are beginning to fade away, but there is still plenty to play for in the coming weeks, and the intensity was on full display over the weekend.
Here is what we made of matchday 32Ā Ā
It was looking bleak for the Galaxy when they headed into the dressing room 2-0 down to bitter rivals LAFC, but four second-half goals and a scintillating comeback victory may have been the final boost Greg Vanney’s side needed to push on and wrap up top-spot in the Western Conference.
Question marks have been raised about how the Galaxy will fit their many attacking weapons into a lineup, but with contributions from all ofĀ Dejan JoveljiÄ, Riqui Puig,Ā Marco Reus, and Gabriel Pec against LAFC, the Carson outfit put on full display that they will be an absolute handful for any MLS defense in the playoffs.
The Timbers have shown flashes of being one of the most lethal sides in MLS this season with an attack spearheaded by the prolific trio of Evander, Felipe Mora, and Jonathan RodrĆguez. However, their ability to win games away from home have hamstrung them all season and will likely be their downfall.
Phil Nevilleās side have won just three of 14 away games this season, yet they should have made it four at the weekend when they created more than enough to beat Colorado in Commerce City. With a top-four finish looking unlikely, they will have to play some road playoff games, should they qualify. And if they donāt find the recipe for winning on their travels, it will more than likely be one and done for the Cascadia club.
The Dynamo looked poised to be one of the best teams in the Western Conference this season, but a slow start to the season quashed those expectations relatively quickly. Yet in the weeks since returning from the Leagues Cup break, Houston picked up seven points in games against LAFC (two of them), and Real Salt Lake.
The form of summer signing Ezequiel Ponce has helped turn the Dynamoās fortunes around and now they look more than deserving of their current spot in the top-seven. With only four points separating them and LAFC in second, you shouldnāt be too shocked to see Ben Olsenās side make a run for home playoff games.
Itās no surprise to anybody, but Inter Miami didnāt skip a beat upon Lionel Messi’s return to the side after 105 days out with injury. The Herons had been flying without him, but their ruthlessness increased tenfold when the great man made his return.
With a brace and an assist on Miamiās third in a win against Philadelphia, Messi became the fastest player in MLS history to reach 15 goals and 15 assists, doing so in just 19 games.
Questions were raised about how Messi would fit back into a Miami side that had found a rhythm with their press and tenacity with a youthful infusion into the lineup. But you canāt argue with adding the greatest player of all time into the best team in the league. Itās that simple.
LAFC might be too porous for a deep run in the playoffs, and their second-half collapse in Carson Saturday evening put that weakness on full display. Despite fielding a vastly experienced back-line, Steve Cherundoloās side were filled with more holes than swiss cheese once the Galaxy got a head of steam in the second half. Whether the threats came from out-wide or down the middle, the once sturdy LAFC spine was as weak as weāve seen it in a long time.
How many more times can we chalk it up to a bad week?