Uncorked a couple of 3000-word columns this week as MLS preseason began – simple overviews of each team’s roster moves thus far, and their biggest need in the current transfer window.
You know the drill with these: just team-by-team with a few paragraphs on what I think is most important. At this point in the year (nobody’s even kicking a ball; we’re just getting beep test results) we’re not going to get much more of a breakdown than that.
There are, however, two things I wanted to address that didn’t make it into the columns, or made it in and were wrong:
- The Neymar/Chicago Fire links, as first reported overseas but eventually confirmed first by Jeff Carlisle and then by Tommy Scoops, are true. Which, honestly, I find to be shocking, as my bullshit detector was absolutely BLARING as soon as I saw these reports.
My initial take, which I first put on BlueSky (see, microblogging can still be useful!), is that this is bit of savvy fake-negotiations-as-marketing for the Fire. As in, the Fire are smart to sit down at a table with Neymar and his reps (his dad) and act serious about negotiations, because doing so 1) sends a message to fans that the team is serious about adding legit talent this offseason, and 2) sends a message to agents around the world that the next time a Luis Suarez or an Antoine Griezmann – i.e., world class players who actually play – comes available, the Fire are are a side worth calling.
With that done, the Fire can then turn around and put that money towards buying a 26-year-old who’ll be healthy for more than one game every nine months. Sorry, man. I loved prime Neymar as much as the next guy, but the last time he played more than 2000 minutes in a league season was 2016/17 with Barcelona! He’s played fewer than 500 total minutes over the past two years.
His current team, Al-Hillal, basically have 10(ish) DP-level players, so they can afford one of their guys – even their best guy – to be permanently crocked. The Fire still only get three. Can’t take such a big risk on one who, at best, would only be available 50% of the time (though, ok, that did kind of work out for Miami with Messi last year. I’m calling that the exception that proves the rule).
So the short version is I think it was smart to get involved in the discussions for the good pub, but long-term, the Jonathan Bamba links are much more exciting to me, and just a smarter way to build a team.
- The Myrto Uzuni-to-Austin deal is done. Uzuni is more of a forward who can play some on the wing than a pure winger, so I’d assumed that adding him to a roster that already included Brandon Vazquez – whose best year, remember, came in a front two rather than a front three – meant that Austin’s going to be in something that looks most like a 3-4-1-2 (or even a 3-4-2-1) rather than a 4-3-3 or 4-2-3-1.
According to my own sources in Austin as well as what I’ve heard second hand, that assumption was wrong. Uzuni’s penciled in for left wing in Nico Estevez’s 4-3-3, with Osman Bukari on the other side and the midfield still under construction.
They spent $12m on Uzuni, which is a lot for someone who’s on the verge of 30 and is currently in Spain’s second tier. Of course, he’s currently ripping it up there – as, it should be noted, a second forward in a front two.
So even if the intention is to start in a 4-3-3 (or even a 4-2-3-1), I’m putting Austin on 3-5-2 watch already.
On Austin's formation, I'd expect a base 4-3-3 (it's Estevez, after all), but I'd imagine the formation to be somewhat fluid, with Biro cheating up the left flank from his LB position (as he is wont to do) and Uzuni cheating inside. From highlights I saw, Uzuni really likes to bang in shots from the 18, so I can see him doing a lot of that and either scoring or Vazquez/Bukari cleaning up rebounds for tap-in goals.
The biggest thing facing Verde now is getting a playmaker. Right now, I see a platoon of Owen Wolff, Dani Pereira, and Diego Rubio in that role, and not super confident about any of those. Stuver and the back line are solid, getting Dubersarsky as an understudy to Ilie puts the 6 in better shape than it was last year, and Driussi leaving actually gives Austin latitude to go after a 10, though it's now going to be at best a U22 or TAM-level playmaker. Evander or Acosta on this team instead of Uzuni would have been fun, but this has the potential to be fun as well.
i would think every team would try and go for the same blueprint as the Galaxy with their DPs... three excellent guys in their early-mid twenties. they're not superstars in their previous leagues, but they're solid $10-$20 mil players.
i suppose that is a lot for some clubs, but sure brought good dividends for LA.