Los Angeles Times

Vela comes up huge for LAFC

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has speed, he still has power. He’s going to be able to continue doing that for more years. There’s no question about that.”

He did it again Sunday despite the fatigue of playing two full games in four days. Despite the pressure that comes with being the reigning league most valuable player and single-season scoring leader. Despite the focus that came with David Beckham’s first game as an owner, the game with Beckham’s expansion team drawing a national television audience, a visit from MLS Commission­er Don Garber and a sold-out crowd of 22,121.

But withstandi­ng that pressure is not the only way in which Vela is an outlier on an LAFC team that gave nearly 42% of its minutes to players under 24 last season, the highest percentage in MLS. General manager John Thorringto­n doubled down on that strategy this winter, allowing three players older than 30 to leave and replacing them with four who aren’t old enough to buy a beer.

That made Sunday something of an old-timers’ day because with Bradley rotating his starting lineup, aging goalkeeper Kenneth Vermeer, 34, and defenders Harvey, 36, and Dejan Jakovic, 34, also played big parts in the win.

“If you embrace what’s going on, if you come in every day and you push yourself in training, then it’s possible you can keep guys moving in the right way,” Bradley said.

Vela’s goal certainly kept LAFC moving in the right way, upping its home record to 23-2-10 in three seasons. And the score, in the 44th minute, was nearly as spectacula­r as it was important.

The sequence started with Vermeer sending a goal kick from the edge of the sixyard box straight down the middle of the field, where it bounced twice before Diego Rossi volleyed it forward to Vela. The LAFC captain chested it down, sliced between two Miami defenders toward the top of the penalty area, fought off a physical challenge from Nicolás Figal, then lofted a left-footed chip off the fingertips of backpedali­ng Miami keeper Luis Robles, who got tangled in the back of the net.

It was a highlight-reel goal. But for Bradley it felt like a rerun of something he sees every day in practice.

“Just an amazing goal,” he said. “When you come to see football and then the game is determined on a play like that — a combinatio­n of determinat­ion, people around him, strength and holding guys off, and to finish it off with that delicate chip, man, that was just incredible.”

Vermeer made it stand up, surviving a head-to-head collision with Miami’s Alvas Powell early in the second half to pitch a shutout in his first MLS start, securing the win with a sprawling stop on Lee Nguyen seven minutes into stoppage time for his seventh save of the game.

Then it was on to the birthday celebratio­n for Vela, who rushed home for a piece of cake with his family.

“Carlos is a very quiet person,” midfielder MarkAnthon­y Kaye said. “So I don’t think we wanted to bring any more attention than he already gets. But yeah, we all definitely wish him happy birthday and we’re glad you got that goal.”

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? EDDIE SEGURA, right, tries to stop Miami’s Robbie Robinson during the first half of LAFC’s shutout.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ ASSOCIATED PRESS EDDIE SEGURA, right, tries to stop Miami’s Robbie Robinson during the first half of LAFC’s shutout.

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