New York Post

Getting old

- Mark. cannizzaro@ nypost. com

HAS THE SHINE come off the newtoy? This is a question followers of New York City FC have to be asking themselves about the MLS expansion club that resides in Yankee Stadium after Sunday night’s 10 loss to the Portland Timbers.

After its encouragin­g 101 start that included a win its firstever home match before more than 43,000 at the Stadium, NYCFC are winless in its past five matches.

After the homeopenin­g win, NYCFC coach Jason Kreis tacitly warned this was a work in progress and that no one should get too crazy with expectatio­ns too lofty. Kreis’ cautioning turned out to be rather prescient.

His team, which is 032 in its past five matches, might not be a team in crisis quite yet, but it is a team in desperate need of some positive reinforcem­ent in the form of a win.

“It would have been easy at that moment for everybody to say, ‘ Wow, what a team. This is going to be a fantastic team,’ ’’ Kreis said, referring to the celebrated homeopener. “For me, it’s the same as if we had a bad performanc­e and everybody is going to say we’re terrible. The truth is always going to be somewhere in between.’’

Kreis gathered his players inside the locker room immediatel­y after Sunday night’s match and delivered a pointed message.

“We cannot let the results turn into really negative stuff around here; that’s the only thing that can really break us right now — if we stop believing in each other and stop being willing and able to work for each other,’’ he said.

It is, of course, still early in the season, but NYCFC, fighting for whatever bits of attention it can win over in the crowded New York sporting landscape, doesn’t want to let its critical first season get away.

NYCFC must fight falling from relevance before their ballyhooed rent-a-star Frank Lampard arrives on July 1 after he’s finished with parent club Manchester City. The last thing NYCFC wants is an anticlimac­tic summer of disinteres­t and apathy. Not in their first season. Not after the modestly successful start.

An expansion team already thin on toptier talent with a roster riddled with injuries — not a recipe for success.

NYCFC’s star, David Villa, did not play after suffering a hamstring injury that knocked him out after only a half of Thursday night’s match against Philadelph­ia. Midfielder Mix Diskerud, the club’s secondbest player, hurt an ankle in practice Saturday and was unavailabl­e to play Sunday night.

Villa’s replacemen­t, Tony Taylor, who entered the match having played only 31 minutes all season, was lost for the night ( and probably a lot longer) in the 32nd minute with what Kreis said looks like significan­t ligament damage to his left knee.

“We had five players that were unavailabl­e due to injury,’’ Kreis said. “That’s a lot. It’s pretty crazy.’’

NYCFC entered the game offensivel­y challenged already, having scored only five goals in their first six matches. Villa has two of those and Diskerud has one.

The Timbers ended up winning the match on a lucky goal befitting of the inartistic game.

Portland midfielder Dairon Asprilla scored on a shot that deflected off NYCFC defender Kwame Watson Siriboe. NYCFC goalkeeper Josh Saunders, who’d committed to his right to make the save, never had a chance as the ball deflected off Watson Siroboe’s foot and went in to the keeper’s left.

Adding insult to it all was the fact the goal came in the 79th minute of a match NYCFC had dominated. It was the fourth match this season, and third in a row, in which NYCFC was doomed by an opponent’s late goal.

In their firstever match, NYCFC yielded an Orlando equalizer in the 91st minute. Last week in Philadelph­ia, they allowed a Union goal in the 92nd minute for the win. And on Thursday, they allowed Philadelph­ia to tie the match in the 86th minute. Can you spell pattern? The talk in the NYCFC locker room afterward was one of determinat­ion not to let this fivegame winless skid drag the club down.

“This is a learning process,’’ Watson Siriboe said. “As long as we continue to do things right, in the end I think we can be MLS Cup champions.’’

That might be a bit aggressive. A victory to end the winless streak will do for the moment.

 ??  ?? HEADS UP: NYCFC’s Jeb Brovsky wins a header against Portland’s Dairon Asprilla on Sunday.
HEADS UP: NYCFC’s Jeb Brovsky wins a header against Portland’s Dairon Asprilla on Sunday.
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