Miami Herald (Sunday)

Missing defenders complicate Miami’s task

- BY MICHELLE KAUFMAN mkaufman@miamiheral­d.com Michelle Kaufman: 305-376-3438, @kaufsports

Nothing has come easy for Inter Miami during its inaugural season, and another major hurdle awaits Sunday night with a road game against Toronto FC, one of the top teams in Major League Soccer.

With two games remaining in the regular season, Miami is clinging to postseason dreams, in 11th place in the Eastern Conference with a 6-12-3 record and 21 points. The top 10 advance to the playoffs.

Toronto, meanwhile, is in second place in the conference with 41 points, although the team has been thinned by injuries and is coming off back-toback losses, 1-0 to New York City FC and a 5-0 thumping by first-place Philadelph­ia.

The Reds have been missing U.S. national team star Jozy Altidore, Argentine Pablo Piatti, and 20year-old American Ayo Akinola, one of the top young players in MLS. Akinola may be back for the Miami game.

Toronto has one of the league’s most potent offenses with 30 goals scored, which is bad news for Miami because it will be missing three starting defenders.

Nico Figal injured a muscle in his left leg during Wednesday’s 2-1 loss at FC Dallas and is out for several weeks, according to coach Diego Alonso. Leandro Gonzalez Pirez and Andres Reyes are suspended for yellow card accumulati­on.

They will likely be replaced by Dylan Nealis,

A.J. De La Garz and either Christian Makoun or Mikey Ambrose.

“Losing Nico is significan­t, we knew once it happened that he would not be able to play again in just four days,” Alonso said. “We will be missing key players, but we are confident in the players who will replace them. We had a similar situation to this when we played the New York Red Bulls, and the backup players did very well. We are still in the hunt, fighting for a playoff spot.”

To further complicate matters for Inter Miami, MLS announced on Thursday that it is changing its playoff qualificat­ion format because multiple clubs will finish the season without the full 23 scheduled matches due to COVID-19 game cancellati­ons. As a result, qualificat­ion will be based on points earned per game, rather than just ranking teams by total points.

Under the new system, Miami slipped from 10th to 11th place. Miami, D.C. United and Chicago are tied at 21 points, but Chicago has a game in hand.

Sunday’s game (7:30 p.m., MyTV33) will be played at Rentschler Field in East Hartford, Connecticu­t, which is where Toronto FC has had to play its recent home matches due to COVID-related travel restrictio­ns between Canada and the United States. A total of 5,000 tickets (13 percent of the usual 38,000 capacity) are on sale for the game.

“We are focused on Toronto, and only Toronto,” Miami defender Ben Sweat said. “We have to get a result. Whether that’s a win, or even a tie with one point, we have to get a result. I don’t think we want to leave it to the hands of other teams. If we get a result this game and then we’re at home [against Cincinnati Nov.

8]. We dominate teams at home and I think if it comes down to getting a good result against Toronto, then we’ll win against Cincinnati at home.”

FC Cincinnati is in last place in the East with a 4-13-4 record and has scored only 11 goals all season while allowing 32.

Despite the late-season additions of former Juventus teammates Blaise Matuidi and Gonzalo Higuain, and many scoring chances created, Inter Miami’s offense has struggled to find the back of the net. The team has scored 22 goals over 21 games.

Only four of the 26 teams in the league have scored fewer goals than Miami this season.

Defensivel­y, Miami has had a tendency to give up goals after taking the lead, which happened again against Dallas.

Despite those deficienci­es, Matuidi remains optimistic about the team’s playoff chances. As a veteran player who won the 2018 World Cup with the French national team, Matuidi said he and Higuain have been trying to offer advice to teammates on and off the field during this critical stretch.

“We have to look at the positive,” Matuidi said through an interprete­r. “When I first got here we were going through a difficult moment as a team, but we have shifted and now we are controllin­g our destiny. Sunday is obviously a very important match. It will be a difficult match against a very, very good team. We have players missing but we know we have players who can step up and fill those roles.”

Note: The MLS Disciplina­ry Committee found Inter Miami in violation of the mass confrontat­ion policy during the 57th minute of the loss to Dallas. Inter Miami has violated that rule twice this season, so the club and Alonso were fined an undisclose­d amount.

 ?? SAM NAVARRO Special for the Miami Herald ?? Inter Miami CF midfielder Blaise Matuidi (8) remains optimistic about the team’s playoff chances, but a win or at least a tie is vital against tough Toronto FC on Sunday.
SAM NAVARRO Special for the Miami Herald Inter Miami CF midfielder Blaise Matuidi (8) remains optimistic about the team’s playoff chances, but a win or at least a tie is vital against tough Toronto FC on Sunday.

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