Albuquerque Journal

Moreno’s return spices up NMU-El Paso rivalry

United seeks consecutiv­e victories against bitter foe

- BY KEN SICKENGER JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Saturday night figures to be a bit out of the ordinary for New Mexico United and its fans.

First, they’ll welcome an old friend back to Isotopes Park. Then they’ll do everything humanly possible to ruin his evening.

The old friend is Amando Moreno, who spent four seasons making plays and scoring goals for United. He returns as a member of arch-rival El Paso Locomotive FC and will most certainly try to bite the hands that once clapped for him.

New Mexico coach Eric Quill did not try to downplay the intriguing subplot of Moreno’s first appearance at the Lab with an opposing club.

“Amando’s a great player and a really good person,” Quill said. “We’ll shake his hand at the end of the night. But for 90 minutes, it’s war.”

That sentiment tends to describe any and all matchups between United and Locomotive FC, two franchises that came into the USL Championsh­ip together and quickly evolved into bitter rivals. The series has been remarkably close with nearly every match coming down to the final minutes.

Both clubs have new players who have not yet experience­d the rivalry now known as the Derby del Camino Real. NMU defender Chris Gloster smiled when asked about joining the fray.

“Everyone has told me about it,” he said. “I got just a little taste when we played (in El Paso) in the preseason. It’s just constant emotion, constant fighting, going hard after every ball. I’m looking forward to it.”

The same can be said for United defender Arturo Astorga, who is from El Paso and joined NMU’s first team after last season’s two matchups. The teams split the 2023 series, each winning a 1-0 decision on the opponent’s home pitch.

“This match is different for me,” Astorga sadi, “but I’m happy I’ll get a chance to show that El Paso has talent and that a smaller player like me can do the job. I’m excited.”

Astorga is off to a fast start in his first full season with United. He leads the club with six chances created and has been outstandin­g for New Mexico’s back line. He figures to square off against Moreno more than once on Saturday, something Astrorga has done before.

“Arturo trained against him every day last year,” Quill said. “He knows what to expect. But Amando’s only one of 11 — it’s a team sport. We have to focus on what we do, force El Paso to react to us.”

United (2-1-1) is coming off a strong performanc­e against another rival, Phoenix Rising FC. New Mexico rode an early goal by Dayonn Harris to a 1-0 road victory last week. That result largely washed away the bitter taste of a 4-0 loss the previous week, one in which several NMU players were impacted by the flu.

“Playing like we did in Phoenix definitely brings the spirit of the team up,” Gloster said, “especially because we still had some guys sick. Other guys had to step in and they did a great job.”

United can expect a high level of intensity from El Paso (0-3-1), which has stumbled out of the starting gates despite making a number of high-profile off-season signings — including Moreno. Quill does not see the talented Locos staying down for long.

“No, that’s a talented group and they’ll be up for this,” he said. “But we’ve got a chance to be at the top of the (Western Conference) table at the end of the night. This match is important for us. We’ll be up for it, too.”

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