The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Five Stripes take their lumps Skilled but still mentally unsure Atlanta United matches moments of brilliance with crucial lapses of concentrat­ion in first third of season.

- By Doug Roberson doug.roberson@ajc.com

Through its 13 games played and 16 points earned, two things are clear about Atlanta United.

First, it will match moments of brilliance with crucial lapses of concentrat­ion — particular­ly when defending set pieces — that are frequently punished by opponents. That is why its record against the better teams in MLS is poor and why it has only one win in six road games. Second, it is a team (4-5-4) that for all of its skill is still mentally fragile. When something goes poorly during games, it has a tendency to struggle for the next few minutes.

The team has had at least 18 players suffer contact or non-contact injuries this season, including season-ending injuries to starting goalkeeper Brad Guzan (Achilles), backup goalkeeper Dylan Castanheir­a (Achilles), starting centerback Miles Robinson (Achilles) and starting defensive midfielder Ozzie Alonso (ACL). Fullback Ronald Hernandez likely will miss the rest of the season after suffering an MCL injury against Columbus, in the team’s last game before it entered this twoweek internatio­nal break. Additional­ly, Josef Martinez, whose production typically directly influences the team’s results, missed seven games because he needed arthroscop­ic surgery on his right knee. The team won one of those games.

It’s hard to be mentally consistent and physically productive on the field when the spine of the formation has been ripped out.

Manager Gonzalo Pineda has done a credible job piecing together a starting 11 each game to cover for the injuries. He has been able to select the same starting 11 in consecutiv­e games just twice.

Here is what is working and what

needs to improve in the team’s remaining 21 games:

What is working

■ The South American midfield. Marcelino Moreno, Thiago Almada and Luiz Araujo have combined to score seven of the team’s 20 goals and nine of its 14 assists. The production has increased the more they have played together in the past five games. A hamstring injury to Araujo in the first half of the first game and the plan to ease Almada into the lineup prevented the trio from starting together in the first eight games.

Each player has shown bits of individual brilliance. They are now learning how to play together within Pineda’s system and tactics with Moreno on the left, Almada as the attacking midfielder and Araujo on the right. They interchang­e positions during games.

■ The central midfield. Pineda likes the pairing of Matheus Rossetto and Franco Ibarra in the middle of the 4-2-3-1 formation. It came from necessity because of

injuries to Santiago Sosa and Emerson Hyndman’s recovery from last year’s ACL surgery. Sosa and Hyndman should be fully healthy for the next game, which will

give Pineda options. Hyndman is very good at quickly moving the ball forward. Rossetto has improved a great deal. He already has 46 progressiv­e passes this season. He had only 47 last season.

■ The wingbacks. Brooks Lennon is third in MLS in key passes (39) and has scored two goals. Andrew Gutman, before he suffered a quad injury against Nashville that will keep him out the next 8-12 weeks, was a dynamo up and down the left side. Caleb Wiley, if healthy, likely will slide into Gutman’s place. Wiley, who is 17 years old, has tremendous potential.

What needs to improve

■ Striker production. Ronaldo Cisneros seemed like he was going to be the answer when Martinez underwent arthroscop­ic surgery in early April. Cisneros’ hat trick against Chicago on May 7 was an example of his potential. He scored just once in the next four games. Dom Dwyer has come off the bench to score in the past two games. Martinez, who has two goals in six appearance­s this season, is also back, going 45 minutes against Columbus. He and Pineda have said they were going to spend the internatio­nal break building up his fitness so that he can start. The team needs someone to consistent­ly produce at the position.

■ Centerback­s. Because of the season-ending injury to Robinson and injuries sustained by George Campbell, Pineda has been forced to use a pairing of Alan Franco and Alex De John as the starters. De John has performed well but isn’t as fast or as athletic as Robinson. As was the case last season, Franco is prone to at least one impactful mistake a game, which undoes the good work he does the rest of the time. Campbell is healthy and training. It is likely that he will be paired with Franco.

Campbell also isn’t Robinson, but is faster and more athletic than either De John or Franco. His inclusion in the 11 should help solidify the defense.

■ Defending set pieces. Of the 20 goals allowed by the team, eight have come directly from set pieces (corner kicks or free kicks) or in the second phase of defending a set piece when the opponent wins a cleared ball. That’s not good. Pineda and the players have said the issue is a consistent lapse in concentrat­ion, such as in the first minute of the game against Columbus when Jonathan Mensah got away from his defender for an easy headed goal.

■ Results against good teams. Atlanta United has played five games against teams above the seven-team playoff lines in the Eastern and Western conference­s. It hasn’t won any of them. It is 0-3-2 against Montreal (two games), Miami, Cincinnati and Nashville. Last season, the team defeated just one team that qualified for the playoffs.

Many players have said one of the team’s goals is to host a playoff game. To do that, it must finish as at least the fourth seed. To accomplish that, it must start producing results against the better teams, and it is going to get a lot of opportunit­ies. Of its 21 remaining games, 13 are against teams currently in the 14-team playoff pool.

 ?? MIGUEL MARTINEZ/MIGUEL.MARTINEZJI­MENEZ@AJC.COM ?? Luiz Araújo, who has been a bright spot in midfield, reacts after a missed shot May 28 in Atlanta. When something goes poorly during games, Atlanta United has a tendency to struggle for the next several minutes.
MIGUEL MARTINEZ/MIGUEL.MARTINEZJI­MENEZ@AJC.COM Luiz Araújo, who has been a bright spot in midfield, reacts after a missed shot May 28 in Atlanta. When something goes poorly during games, Atlanta United has a tendency to struggle for the next several minutes.
 ?? MIGUEL MARTINEZ/MIGUEL.MARTINEZJI­MENEZ@AJC.COM ?? United’s Brooks Lennon (right), third in MLS in key passes with 39, fights for possession against Columbus’ Derrick Etenne Jr. during a May 28 match at Mercedes-benz Stadium.
MIGUEL MARTINEZ/MIGUEL.MARTINEZJI­MENEZ@AJC.COM United’s Brooks Lennon (right), third in MLS in key passes with 39, fights for possession against Columbus’ Derrick Etenne Jr. during a May 28 match at Mercedes-benz Stadium.

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