Rome News-Tribune

Atlanta’s sights on defending MLS Cup

♦ The team is hopeful it can avoid the topsy-turvy nature of its regular-season schedule.

- By Paul Newberry

MARIETTA — It’s been a strange season for Atlanta United.

They’ve added two more cups to their collection.

They’ve endured some rather baffling losses.

After all that, the defending MLS Cup champions are heading into the postseason from essentiall­y the same position as last season.

Atlanta, which was runner-up in the Eastern Conference, will host the New England Revolution on Saturday in the opening round of the playoffs, a rematch of their Oct. 6 game to close out the regular season.

“We’ve put ourselves in a pretty decent spot, as strange as the season has maybe been,” midfielder Julian Gressel said Wednesday after a training session. “We’ve already won two trophies, and now we have a chance for a third.”

In mid-august, United broke out the champagne after a 3-2 victory over Mexican powerhouse Club América to capture the Campeones Cup.

A couple of weeks later, they were celebratin­g again with a 2-1 victory over Minnesota United in the U.S. Open Cup final, guaranteei­ng a spot in next year’s CONCACAF Champions League.

“I felt like we were always there and pretty much at our best in those games,” Gressel said. “That’s why I’m pretty confident we’ll be at our best when it really matters.”

But there are reasons to be concerned. Atlanta struggled badly in some league games — especially on the road — and rarely looked like the dynamic team that won the MLS Cup in just its second year under former coach Tata Martino.

With Frank de Boer now at the helm, United got off to a sluggish start and spent much of the season juggling lineups and switching up tactics in a desperate bid to find some consistenc­y.

Atlanta never put together an unbeaten streak longer than five games — it had three such stretches a year ago — and finished with 58 points, 58 goals and a plus15 goal differenti­al. All were short of the 69 points, 70 goals and plus-26 differenti­al from the 2018 season.

Still, United’s second-place showing in the East behind New York City FC matches last year’s finish, guaranteei­ng the team at least one home game in the playoffs and another in the conference semifinals should it beat the Revolution.

That’s a crucial edge for a franchise that has essentiall­y broken every MLS attendance record and again averaged more than 52,000 per game at Mercedes-benz Stadium, doubling up every team in the league except Seattle and Cincinnati. In 17 home games, Atlanta lost only twice.

While United closed out the season with a 3-1 victory over New England, the Revolution has been one of the league’s hottest teams over the second half of the season.

Atlanta will be further tested by the possible absence of its best defender, Miles Robinson, who is dealing with a strained

left hamstring sustained during a workout with the U.S. national team last week.

If Robinson can’t go, United will have to change up their lineup once again and possibly adopt a more defensive approach to Saturday’s game.

“If I do push up, it’s more so getting back a little faster than I normally would, things like that,” said midfielder Darlington Nagbe, one of those who may be affected if Robinson can’t go. “Just feel the game out and see how it plays out.”

In the regular-season finale, Ezequiel Barco got the start over Pity Martinez, a lineup that de Boer might go with again in the playoffs.

Barco played only 15 league games this season because of injuries and a lengthy stint with Argentina at the FIFA U-20 World Cup, but he provided the sort of spark de Boer was looking for against New England. Martinez, who was the 2018 South American player of the year and Atlanta’s major acquisitio­n during the last offseason, has struggled to find his nice in MLS with just five goals in 32 appearance­s.

“We have to see,” de Boer said. “The only thing that concerns me is to win the playoffs.”

MLS switched up the playoff format this season. Instead of the top two teams from both the East and the West receiving byes and twolegged rounds to determine the winner of conference semifinals and finals, only the first-place finisher gets the opening round off and every step of the playoffs is a single-game eliminatio­n.

 ?? AP - John Raoux, file ?? After helping lead Atlanta United to wins for the Campeones Cup and U.S. Open Cup, Josef Martinez will look to help the team defend its MLS Cup crown.
AP - John Raoux, file After helping lead Atlanta United to wins for the Campeones Cup and U.S. Open Cup, Josef Martinez will look to help the team defend its MLS Cup crown.

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