From the MLS Player of the Week presented by Continental Tire to the author of the Olimpico heard āround the South to the teenage duo scoring their first career MLS goals to help Toronto FC earn a road point, it was another weekend of big MLS performances from young players.
Hereās our take on the best among them. As usual, hereās a reminder that you can join in this process ā just find the weekās tweet like this one and share your thoughts on who deserves YPPOTW consideration.
The 21-year-old Ecuadorian strolls leisurely onto this list thanks to his hat trick ā and a perfect hat trick, no less, scored with his left and right feet and his head ā against New England. That 3-2 result marks Miamiās first W of the season ā and a substantial upset even in light of the Revolutionās flatlining form ā and ended the Heronsā four-game losing skid.
There was both poor defending and efficient exploitation of space at work on all three of Campanaās strikes. Weāre dwelling more on the latter, considering the awareness and opportunism he displayed in the Revsā penalty box as well as his decent link-up and defensive work: Campana played two key passes and completed 80% of his passes overall.
Soccer can be a funny old game, as they say. Just a few weeks ago Campana was causing Gonzalo Higuain to grimace after he failed to convert a couple of inviting chances his elder teammate served up for him. On Saturday Higuain, who was an injury scratch for this one, had a different, blanker sort of look on his face as he watched Campana deliver IMCF that long-sought victory.Ā
Does this markĀ a changing of the guard for Miami? Should the Ecuadorianās display keep his more famous teammate on the bench for a while longer? Or can Phil Neville find a way to make good use of both halves of his May/December No. 9 pair at the same time? These are not easy questions for IMCF, though theyāre a welcome dilemma in the wake of the three points.
After bagging a brace in FC Dallasā 3-1 comeback win over Colorado, Ferreira, on five goals and counting, is in a three-way tie with Javier āChicharitoā Hernandez and Brandon Vazquez atop the MLS Golden Boot presented by Audi race. And weāre here to tell you that he eminently deserves to be considered a nose ahead of those two, considering that heās done his scoring in fewer minutes played and fewer starts, and has also chipped in more key passes and more tackles, among other metrics.
The character of his goals against the Rapids underlined Ferreiraās diverse and growing skill set.
His first was a classic 9ās strike, as he quickly sniffed out space in Zone 14 after Marco Farfan picked up a loose ball in midfield, then smoothly received Farfanās pass, turned and fired a pinpoint low finish past William Yarbrough in the blink of an eye. Later he would show us some of his deceptive speed, racing clear on a breakaway before calming rounding Yarbrough and tucking away with his left foot.
The kid is so talented to begin with, and the combination of rhythm and confidence heās gained this year is nudging his trajectory upward as he prospers in Nico Estevezās tactical system, one that suits him snugly.
With 88% passing completion rate, three key passes, 5/8 on crosses and 12 defensive actions in a big home win over his fledgling clubās would-be rivals, Charlotteās Ecuadorian would have a strong case for YPPOTW inclusion regardless of what he did with the six corner kicks he took at Bank of America Stadium on Saturday.Ā
To doĀ THISĀ over and above all that, however?
Thatās just ridiculous stuff to serve up as a game-winner over Atlanta United in front of a national-television audience. And while we respect that other observers may see it differently, the YPPOTW zoning board readily grants Alcivar full credit forĀ intendingĀ to do it.Ā
"Iāve actually been practicing it a lot this week with Mikel AntĆa, one of CLTās assistant coaches\] and [Ben Bender,ā he toldĀ the clubās websiteĀ afterwards. āI practiced it a lot so that I could do it well.ā
Alcivar also posited that āif I just continue my path, Iām only going to get better with every match,ā which is music to our, and Charlotteās, ears.
Itās back-to-back YPPOTW nods for Thompson, who played a significant part in the Redsā win over New York City FC last week, then climbed another notch against Real Salt Lake,Ā one-timing Jacob Shaffelburgās cutback cross forĀ TFCās opening goal ā and his first at this level ā in a hard-fought 2-2 road draw.
Beyond the hard running and responsible defending required from the wide men in the 3-4-2-1 formation Toronto are currently using, Thompson showed admirable instincts, anticipation and finishing nous here ā not to mention the self-belief required to call off his clubāsĀ big-dog playmaker, Alejandro Pozuelo.
āHonestly from the beginning of Shaffās run, I know that he's going to go straight to the byline. He did incredible to get past a couple of guys and I knew that I had to get on my horse and get into the box,āĀ Thompson told reporters postgame. āOnce I saw him take it to the byline, I know it's going to be cut back. Poz is in the same position and I just screamed at him, āLeave it!ā And just make your connection with the ball.ā
We hailed Bob Bradleyās fine work withĀ TFCāsĀ kids in the Week 5 edition, and the story keeps getting better. Thompson and his fellow academy products are helping the Reds bridge the gap to Lorenzo Insigneās summer arrival.
Speaking of fellow academy products, weāve got more business in The Six thanks to Nelson, who came off the bench to conjure up a thunderbolt that allowed TFC to escape Utah with a point.
Working the left flank in relief of Shaffelburg, the 19-year-old went 4-for-4 with his passing in 16 minutes, but it was his quick thinking and daring execution in the 79th minute that got tongues wagging in both Canada and the United States.
Nelson was oh-so-clever to notice that RSL goalkeeper Zac MacMath had ranged way out of his goal to distribute the ball to Damir Kreilach. Once he unceremoniously dispossessed the Croatian, Nelson got his head up and snapped an arrow of a shot above and beyond the scrambling MacMath to stun the home fans at Rio Tinto Stadium, in the process sparking chatter about his bona fides for a Canadian national team call-up.
āWeāve seen him in a more dynamic ways, making more plays on the field in terms of getting away from guys, more moments where his skill, his speed, his quickness catch your eye,ā said Bradley, his coach.Ā
āNow the final part is turning that into greater production, and so when a player like that makes a really big play coming on as a sub and scores a great goal, it's something that everybody ā every player, every coach was so excited for him in the locker room after the game.ā
Honorable mentions
Jaziel Orozco: RSLās injury crisis has quietly pushed a 17-year-old product of their developmental pipeline into the starting XI at center back. While Orozco has suffered at times, heās generally coped rather well in his back-to-back 90-minute outings of the past two weeks, especially given that he only signed his first-team deal in January. File this away, too: The El Paso native is dual-eligible for the United States and Mexico and has already spent time in El Triās youth system.
Jacob Shaffelburg:Ā Yep, itās yet another TFCer, and while Shaffelburg lost points for his giveaway in the moments before Justin Meramās goal for Salt Lake, the 22-year-old wingerās still earned this nod for his assist to Thompson and his hard work on both sides of the ball.Ā
Cesar Araujo: Orlando City's 21-year-old holding midfielder completed 93% of his passes, won most of his duels and drew the foul that led to Brian Gutierrezās early ejection in the Lionsā 1-0 win over Chicago before making way for Junior Urso at halftime.Ā
Joseph Rosales: Minnesota Unitedās trip to Austin wasnāt a particularly fruitful one but weāre liking what weāve seen of their young Honduran defensive mid, whoās been capable on the ball and strong in the challenge, generally making the Loons tougher to play against.
Audi Goals Drive Progress
MLS Academies have been identified as one of the most important resources for building on-field talent in North America. Through the Audi Goals Drive Progress initiative, Audi has committed $1 million per season in an effort to advance academies league-wide, and to drive progress for the sport. For every goal scored in the regular season, Audi will contribute $500 into the Audi Goals Drive Progress fund to directly support each MLS Club Youth Academy.