Vancouver Whitecaps FC are on an 80-point pace, the New England Revolution have won four games in a row and the reigning champs just lost without conceding a shot.
Itās exactly like we all predicted!
Let's look back at the latest slate of MLS matches to examine some of the most interesting things weāve learned. And if you want to read up on the rest of Matchday 11 in detail, check out Matt Doyleās column.
Onwards.
The Columbus Crew are handling just about everything thrown at them this season. The biggest object hurled their way, of course, was Cucho HernĆ”ndezās transfer to Spain before the seasonās start. No problem, said the Crew, weāll go the first eight games of the regular season undefeated with a 5W-0L-3D record.
But itās not just the big things Columbus are dealing with expertly. Itās the little things, too, like on Saturday when DĆ”niel Gazdag had to be withdrawn from Wilfried Nancyās starting lineup during warmups. Jacen Russell-Rowe stepped in for Gazdag⦠and proceeded to get on the scoresheet in a 4-2 win over Charlotte FC. With each team missing a playmaker ā Gazdag for the Crew and Pep Biel for Charlotte ā Columbusā impressive home display was their best win of the season.
It was rinse-and-repeat stuff for the Crew, even against a legitimate Eastern Conference threat:
That Columbus can still create the kinds of chances they did on Saturday without Gazdag is a testament to how seamless things have become on the field during Nancyās third season in charge. Now firmly past the soft underbelly of their 2025 schedule, donāt expect the Crew to slow down much. They certainly didnāt against Charlotte.
Raise your hand if you had the Revs going on a four-game winning streak after the way they started the season. No one? Thatās what I thought.
Despite a difficult beginning to 2025 with four losses in their first six games, the Revs have completely turned things around over their last four matches, all wins.
Most recently, New England traveled up to Toronto and topped the Reds, 2-0, via goals from Carles Gil and striker Leo Campana.
The brilliance of Caleb Porterās 3-4-1-2 setup, one thatās featured at the start of every game on this winning streak, is that it fits basically every Revs player into their best position. Campana and Ignatius Ganago are both fluid forwards who can flex from the central vertical channel into the halfspaces, Gil thrives in a free No. 10 role, Alhassan Yusuf has the tools to be one of the best box-to-box No. 8s in MLS, Peyton Miller looks better every game in his left outside back spot, and the list goes on and on.
New Englandās winning streak wonāt last forever, but their ceiling sure looks a heck of a lot higher now than it did a month ago.
No team in MLS has become more synonymous with a single scoreline this year than Orlando City have with a 0-0 draw. Four of their last five games have ended in scoreless ties, including Saturdayās matchup with the Chicago Fire in which the Lions played up a man for an hour following Chris Bradyās red card.
Whatās up in the attack for a team that bagged 15 goals through their first six games of 2025? My strong suspicion is that it has less to do with the attack itself and more to do with the lack of support for that attack.
With Oscar Parejaās first-choice midfield pairing of CĆ©sar AraĆŗjo and Eduard Atuesta not having started together in a single one of those scoreless draws due to injury, Orlando Cityās attacking foursome has been hurting for service more than normal. The Lions have struggled to move the ball close to goal for long stretches, as shown by how four of their five games with the longest average shot distance have come without that AraĆŗjo-Atuesta pairing in the lineup, as per FBref.
As much of the rest of the East rounds into form, Orlando City could do with simply rounding into health. Once the midfield stabilizes, goals will follow.
Allow me, if you will, to quote the excellent Jeremiah Oshan over at Sounder at Heart:
There are a lot of adjectives that can describe the Seattle Sounders during Brian Schmetzerās tenure in charge. Successful, stout, hard-working, industrious, relatable, reliable. They all work. One word Iām not sure many would use is āfun.ā Winning is obviously fun, but thatās not so much about process and something that can only really be appreciated after the fact. āFunā is something that is almost immediate, that can be witnessed in real-time. For the first time in a long time, thatās the word Iād use to describe Saturdayās performance.
The Seattle Sounders havenāt always done a great job breaking down deep defensive blocks under Schmetzer. They certainly didnāt last season. But in their last two home games? The Sounders have been downright clinical against deeper defensive outfits.
There was that 3-0 win over Nashville SC back on Matchday 9, and then came a 4-1 demolition of St. Louis CITY on Saturday, which featured 31 shots and more xG than in any other Seattle game in American Soccer Analysisā database. The chemistry thatās developed between Obed Vargas and Cristian Roldan is off the charts, Ryan Kent looked ready to break into the lineup with his two-assist showing off the bench, and Danny Musovski canāt stop scoring goals.
You sure wouldnāt know the Sounders were missing several starters due to injury. They ran right over St. Louis with a level of attacking precision thatās starting to look more like a trend than a fluke.
Name a pair of wingers youād rather have on your team than Anders Dreyer and Chucky Lozano. Iāll wait. And while I do, I might as well watch those two combine on San Diego FCās second goal from their 5-0 win over FC Dallas:
Dreyer and Lozano were at the heart of Saturday's win, which snapped a three-game losing streak for the new kids on the block ā and itās those two who are at the heart of so much of San Diegoās play in the attacking half.
Lozano, who didnāt score his first MLS goal until last month after suffering a hamstring injury against St. Louis on Matchday 2, is shaping up to be everything SDFC hoped he would be when they signed him as their first Designated Player. Searingly direct, Lozano causes problems for opposing defenders in the open field with his dynamic runs and his one-v-one dribbling. According to FBref, heās in the 96th percentile for successful take-ons per 90 minutes among his positional peers.
Then thereās Dreyer, whoās no stranger to a run in behind the opposing backline, but makes more of his money with savvy movement between the lines and clever distribution. Really, thereās no better clip to summarize how the two attackers complement each other than that goal up above. Theyāre both inside the top 10 in MLS for non-penalty xG plus xAG per 90 minutes, according to FBref, and look poised to continue their production throughout 2025.



