Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Point in Cincy leaves Bedoya happy if not satisfied

- By Matthew De George mdegeorge@21st-centurymed­ia.com @sportsdoct­ormd on Twitter

Alejandro Bedoya fills many roles for the Union on the field. Among his most important off it is as the club’s constant reality check.

It applied last Sunday, when the Union ran roughshod over Montreal once they went up a man in the 16th minute. And it applied, in more benevolent terms, Wednesday night after a 0-0 draw in Cincinnati.

“I expect a certain standard, especially­when we’re playing so well, we’ve got to keep it going,” the captain said. “A point is a point away, I understand that after the game, but there’s definitely a little bit of disappoint­ment that maybe we weren’t able to get a win because we think we are a better team. We just didn’t have it in us.”

Bedoya’s clear-eyed perspectiv­e is a vital part of his leadership, especially in the chaos of 2020. Perspectiv­e is key, even as the team continues to rack up points. The Union (7-2-4, 25 points) are 5-1-2 since play restarted from the MLS Is Back tournament and have lost only once in 11 league games since July. They’ve done that with varying degrees of effectiven­ess, all on display in just the last three games.

Ten days ago, they needed a starring turn from Anthony Fontana to dismiss 10-man New England, surrenderi­ng the lead to an undermanne­d squad and waiting deep into stoppage time to reclaim it.

Last Sunday, as Bedoya was only too happy to point out, the Union trailed by a goal and were outplayed by the Montreal Impact at Red Bull Arena when Romell Quioto’s elbow connected with Mark McKenzie’s face and the Impact were forced to play with 10. The 4-1 deluge looked great on the scoreboard, but it failed to delude those in the locker room.

“For me, even last game at Red Bull, we won 4-1 but even after the game, I came into the locker room, and you can’t get complacent,” Bedoya said. “I told the team, ‘Hey guys, if we’re going tobe real with ourselves, thefirst 20minutes against Montreal were not good enough.’

“We got kind of bailed outwith that red card from the lack of discipline on the Montreal side and after that itwas kind of easy, but we were down 1-0 and Montreal was giving us fits. You’ve got to be honest with yourselves, too.”

It’s key to solving the cipher that of the 2020 season. Few teams are playing consistent­ly at their best, with midweek games aplenty and all the challenges of life in a global pandemic. Many are in undated with injuries, with precious little practice or recovery time. As historic routs in the Western Conference have shown in recent weeks, some appear to have capitulate­d altogether.

So the Union aren’t alone in uneven performanc­es. But it says something that the Union are still getting results. The club’s past is littered with games where they played better than the final result indicates. This season, they’re drawing games that they maybe should lose and winning games they should draw. And since the standings don’t count style points, that’s all that matters.

The counterpoi­nt provided by Bedoya andothers is not getting too high on what those standings say and a sense that scraping out results is neither ideal nor sustainabl­e. The Union are still scuffling toget into the upper echelon in the Eastern Conference, and 2020 presents an opportunit­y. All those results are worth being happy about.

It’s especially true on the attacking end. The Union have allowed four goals in eight games and have posted six shutouts in all competitio­ns this year. Andre Blake’s save on Joe Gyau Wednesday, which sealed the point, is evidence of how often the defense has bailed the tea mout whenthe reverse was more often true last year.

But the Union haven’t scored an 11-v-11 goal in three games now, and the attacking mis firing Wednesday resulted in just the seventh game in franchise history without a shot on target.

“We played too many balls that were just floated into the box, toomany balls that were too direct and floated in the air,” Jim Curtin said. “We had talkedabou­t theway to beat them was to play balls on the ground, make them have to deal with two things, make them have to deal with a second run and movement off the ball. We had little instances of that (Wednesday), but for whatever reason, we weren’t sharp enough. Sometimes the pass would be behind the guy. Sometimes itwould be a bouncing ball that took theman extra touch to handle.”

There’s a fine line for the Union to navigate. They’re getting the job done consistent­ly, if not consistent­ly well.

“There is a balance,” Bedoya said. “You are upset, (and) I think that’s part of our competitiv­e nature. … We didn’t win, but at the same time, we didn’t lose, and that’s a solid point on the road.”

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO - PHILADELPH­IA UNION ?? Union captain Alejandro Bedoya, center, tussling with Montreal Impact midfielder VictorWany­ama last Sunday, is happy his team got a 0-0drawat FC Cincinnati Wednesday but isn’t satisfied with their play.
SUBMITTED PHOTO - PHILADELPH­IA UNION Union captain Alejandro Bedoya, center, tussling with Montreal Impact midfielder VictorWany­ama last Sunday, is happy his team got a 0-0drawat FC Cincinnati Wednesday but isn’t satisfied with their play.

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