The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Playoffs now seen as just 'first step'

After quick expansion success, losing in first round would be disappoint­ing.

- By Doug Roberson droberson@ajc.com

Gerardo Martino purses his lips and bobs his head backward.

It looks as if someone just asked him why he likes Rosario Central, the rival to his boyhood club Newell’s Old Boys.

This goes on for a few seconds as he starts to shake his head no. He stops. And then starts again.

Finally, he answers the question: Atlanta United’s goal before the season was to make the play- offs. Now that the team is in the playoffs — hosting Columbus tonight at Mercedes-Benz Stadium — will the inaugural season still be considered a success if it loses?

“I would love to say yes, but even I don’t believe that,” the Atlanta United manager said.

That may be how high the bar has been raised for the team owned by Arthur Blank, who set the expectatio­ns when the franchise was announced April 17, 2014, and he pledged to commit whatever resources necessary to make the team successful on the field and the community.

That’s why all the attendance records, all the exciting moments, all the merchandis­e sold, all the hype of it being the most successful launch of any pro sports team, all the words written and spoken by journalist­s, pundits and analysts in so many mediums and so many outlets for so long just won’t mean as much if the team can’t beat the Crew in a winner-moves-on scenario at 7 p.m. today.

“When you think about who labels success or non-success, there are two groups of people: there are the players and coaching staff, and there’s everybody else,” Atlanta United midfielder Jeff Larentowic­z said. “I’m only in one of those groups. For us, doing what we’ve done so far is kind of the first step. The goal is to advance. The goal is to make the playoffs and re-assess. With a home game, where we are and how we feel, we should continue on in the playoffs.”

It’s been a long 21 months since the team announced its first player acquisitio­n, goalkeeper Alex Tambakis, on Jan. 25, 2016.

So much happened in

between that bit of history and when Tambakis, the coaches led by Martino and the rest of the roster, which was still being constructe­d, met in Bradenton, Fla., at IMG Academy for its first training camp in January.

Every addition, from the first designated player, Hector Villalba, to the last, Josef Martinez, added a bit more volume to the hype.

It became obvious that something special may be in store in the inaugural game March 5 against the New York Red Bulls. It wasn’t just that the game was sold out with more than 55,000 people on hand. It was that most of those people were wearing either the red-and-black home jersey, which led to the nickname Five Stripes, or the gray away jersey. They

were emotionall­y and financiall­y invested.

The fans stood. The fans chanted. The fans roared when Yamil Asad scored the first goal.

Atlanta United was beaten 2-1.

They posted more wins than losses since, clinching a playoff spot with a win against Philadelph­ia on Sept. 27.

The team has set and reset attendance records. It scored the second-most goals in the league and had the second-biggest goal difference.

If not for a world-class freekick by Sebastian Giovinco that tied Sunday’s score at 2-2 in the game with Toronto, Atlanta United wouldn’t even be playing today. It would have earned the second seed and would be watching

Wednesday’s and Thursday’s games to see who it would host Monday or Tuesday.

But the season — and the next step in determinin­g success — comes down to hosting Columbus today at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

“The team that we’ve assembled, the way we’ve played, to earn a home game, I just think that we have higher goals now,” team captain Michael Parkhurst said. “I know we don’t have much playoff experience. We want to gain it quickly and we want to advance. If we didn’t, everyone within the team would be extremely disappoint­ed.

“Sure, there might be success off the field and attendance, everything else, but on the field we would all be disappoint­ed.”

 ?? MUNDO HISPANICO ?? Midfielder Yamil Asad gets photos taken recently with Atlanta United fans, whose attendance records have been among the team’s big success stories in its first season. The team’s goal before the season was to make the playoffs, but now the standards...
MUNDO HISPANICO Midfielder Yamil Asad gets photos taken recently with Atlanta United fans, whose attendance records have been among the team’s big success stories in its first season. The team’s goal before the season was to make the playoffs, but now the standards...
 ??  ??
 ?? MUNDO HISPANICO ?? The goal for the first season was to make the playoffs, but manager Gerardo Martino and Atlanta United have raised the standards for success.
MUNDO HISPANICO The goal for the first season was to make the playoffs, but manager Gerardo Martino and Atlanta United have raised the standards for success.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States