Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Sunnyside up, bacon crisp, rye toast and a cup of Joe

Players adapt to pre-dawn meals, early morning kickoffs

- By Andrew Keh The New York Times

KISSIMMEE — There are things profession­al soccer players want to eat before games. And there are things they want to eat at 6 a.m. for breakfast.

That these things tend not to overlap represents but one of the many headaches created when Major League Soccer — in yet another of the sports world’s unwieldy concession­s to the coronaviru­s — scheduled kickoffs at 9 a.m. for several of its games this summer.

“Normally prematch, I would have chicken and pasta and salmon,” said Gary

Mackay-Steven, a midfielder for NYCFC. “But the thought of having salmon at 6 in the morning isn’t too appealing.”

These early-morning matches, in a time slot more suitable for a suburban children’s league, materializ­ed because league officials wanted to jam a tournament schedule into a tight time frame at a single site in Orlando, with no simultaneo­us games. Concerns about the scalding Florida sun ruled out much of the middle of the day.

Breakfast, of course, is far from the only issue here (even if it has felt like the one most consistent­ly cited by players). Coaches will have to coax high-level performanc­es from players who may be happier crawling back under the covers. Players who are accustomed to having a full day to prepare mentally and physically for a match may risk sleepwalki­ng onto the field, dew underfoot, with bed head and morning breath.

“None of the guys were really happy about it,” said Matt Real, 20, a defender for the Philadelph­ia Union, who beat NYCFC 1-0 on Thursday morning. “The earliest we ever play is 1:30, and even that’s strange for guys.”

Preparatio­ns for a 9 a.m. kickoff start several days in advance. Ronny Deila, the coach of NYCFC, scheduled practices at 8 a.m. for the past week, hoping to gradually roll back his players’ internal clocks.

On game day, to get his players’ competitiv­e juices flowing at an hour when they might still be rubbing sleep from their eyes, Deila planned to deemphasiz­e the tactical discussion in his pregame speech and focus on stirring their spirits with motivation­al words.

“You think, ‘What is this? Nine in the morning?’ ” he said. “But you just have to go with it. It’s the same for both teams.”

James Sands, a defensive midfielder for NYCFC, noticed a lot of tired eyes at the team’s first few early-morning practices. He compared the flip-flopped schedule to the feeling of jet lag.

Still, hearing the final whistle blow before brunch could have its benefits: Sands said he was typically so full of adrenaline after evening games that it took him well into the middle of the night to fall asleep.

“Maybe by playing at 9 a.m., I’ll actually be able to sleep at night,” he said.

The players will not be the only ones making adjustment­s this summer. Fans who might normally grab a game-time beer may find themselves craving a kickoff cappuccino. The unorthodox timing will be most

Sunday MLS matches

9 a.m.: Toronto FC vs. D.C. United, ESPN2

8 p.m.: Sporting Kansas City vs. Minnesota, ESPN

10:30 p.m.: Real Salt Lake vs. Colorado, ESPN

punishing for fans on the West Coast, where the games air at 6 a.m.

Pearl Derksen-Zhou, 35, a Seattle Sounders fan, requested the day off as soon as she saw that the team’s schedule featured one of the morning games. She promptly made breakfast plans.

“I’m probably going to make Sounders pancakes — green and blue little food-colored pancakes,” she said.

Bleary-eyed viewings of soccer games, Derksen-Zhou noted, were already a rite of passage for American fans: She has often woken up as early as 4 a.m. to catch English and Spanish league games on TV.

Chris Pribbernow, 27, a fan from Sammamish, Washington, joked that the profession­als would finally get a taste of what it was like to get up for a rec league game in the park. He typically felt fine playing at that hour, he said, “just as long as I make reasonable decisions the night before.”

MLS players this summer may have trouble getting into any late-night shenanigan­s. They’re quarantini­ng at the Swan and Dolphin Resort. Where would they go? But bedtimes for these men will neverthele­ss become loaded with significan­ce.

Jim Curtin, the Union coach, pointed out his squad had players from a dozen countries, including some where dinnertime culturally tends to be on the later side.

“A lot of our South and Central American players — and I’m not knocking this at all — they’ll eat dinner at 11, 11:30,” Curtin said, laughing. “I’m not like a curfew guy, but this is going to be one where I want them in bed anywhere between 8 to 10 o’clock at night. It’s going to be strange for some of them. Some of them are literally ordering food at that point.”

Mackay-Steven, 29, said he would get into bed the night before at 9:30, read for half an hour (he’s working through “The Picture of Dorian Gray” by Oscar Wilde) and hit the lights by 10. “Hopefully I’ll get eight hours,” he said. Once the players arise, there will be only so much time to warm up their engines.

“Coffee might be smart,” said Alejandro Bedoya, 33, a veteran midfielder for the Union. “I’ll definitely have two, maybe three, cups, just to get the adrenaline going.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States