āOne more step,ā Orlando City manager Oscar Pareja said of his team advancing to the Eastern Conference Final.
Orlando, the New York Red Bulls, the LA Galaxy, and the Seattle Sounders all took that step this weekend, prevailing in their respective conference semifinals to put themselves just two wins away from lifting the Philip F. Anschutz Trophy. How can these teams make their way to MLS Cup presented by Audi on Dec. 7? Today, Iām digging into what needs to happen on the field for each squad to find success this weekend.
Onwards.
LA Galaxy win if⦠Gabriel Pec has plenty of touches in the final third
Trying to defend the Galaxy is a lot like trying to plug holes in a leaky boat.
As soon as you manage to stop one leak, another pops wide open. Oh, and in this analogy, thereās an unplugable hole right in the bottom of the boat called Riqui Puig ā no matter how you try to defend him, heāll find a way to punish you. Man-marking, persistent use of cover shadows, quick on-ball pressure, you name it, Puig has beaten it. If Iām game-planning for the Galaxy, Iām not trying to make Puigās life easy, but Iām also going to accept that the Spaniard will have a certain amount of undeniable influence on every one of their possessions.
My attention, then, turns to Gabriel Pec. The Brazilian has emerged as the secondary playmaker for Greg Vanneyās team this year and has been an absolute menace in the Audi MLS Cup Playoffs. He messed with Lalas Abubakar so badly in Game 2 against the Rapids that Chris Armas had to move his center back to the other side of the field. He destroyed Jefferson DĆaz on Sunday, skinning him multiple times, drawing two cards and a penalty, and snagging a brace before the final whistle.
Again, if Iām planning to slow the Galaxy, Iām thinking about how to allocate as many defensive resources to Pec as I can (without, uh, leaving huge gaps around Dejan JoveljiÄ and Joseph Paintsil. Remember the whole leaky boat thing?).
If Pec is getting on the ball a bunch in good spots, that bodes well for the Galaxyās chances of success. As per FBref, he registered 11 touches in the final third against the Rapids in Game 2 ā good for his joint third-highest total of the year ā and 10 against Minnesota ā good for his joint sixth-highest total of the year. The Sounders will keep things tighter at the back than either of the Galaxyās two prior playoff foes, but will they stop Pec?
Seattle Sounders win if⦠They stay compact and committed defensively
Itās the 88th minute of the Seattle Sounders clash with LAFC at BMO Stadium. Brian Schmetzerās team is taking an 11th bite of the ābeat the Black & Goldā apple, hoping to finally steal a victory against the Southern Californian thorn in their side. They would do exactly that, thanks to a Jordan Morris strike in extra time. But to get the game to extra time in the first place, they had to give everything defensively.
So, as the Sounders lose the ball in the 88th minute, they sprint back to recover in time to take away any advantage for LAFC. Thanks to the effort from the Roldan brothers ā and a preexisting plus-one in the back against Mateusz Bogusz ā they turned an LAFC attack into nothing but wasted time for their hosts.
āThe mantra of the Sounders, the mentality of the group, is we never quit. We never give up,ā Brian Schmetzer said after the win. āGuys that want to even think about giving up, they're no longer with us. It's just the overall spirit [and] mentality of the group. They understand that coming in.ā
Without that mentality in its purest form (and, crucially, the corresponding execution) against the LA Galaxy, Seattle will struggle. Just ask Minnesota United or the Colorado Rapids what happens when you take one play off against the guys from Carson. If the Sounders stay compact in their mid-block, avoid pushing too many numbers into the attack when they have the ball, and stay sharp as a tack in defensive transition, theyāll be in this game.
Whether itās Jon Bell or Nouhou, the primary left-sided defender for this Sounders team will need to have an elite match, too. I touched on this above, but Pec has ripped his opposites to shreds in the playoffs. If youāre looking for an individual matchup to watch on Saturday to take the gameās temperature, thatās the one.
Orlando City win if⦠They control second balls
This Orlando City squad is going to present the New York Red Bulls with a very different challenge than either of the ones theyāve faced so far in this yearās playoffs. While Oscar Parejaās team is perfectly willing to keep the ball, theyāre far less inclined to play the kinds of short passes out of the back that the Columbus Crew play. And while they like to play through Facundo Torres and MartĆn Ojeda in their spine, theyāre less likely to be as dedicated to central progression as New York City FC.
Put another way, I expect Orlando City to hit more vertical passes out of the back than short, clean passes in a must-win playoff game against the Red Bullsā waves of high pressure. Vertical passes are harder to complete, which means the ball ends up taking bounces and ricochets, looking for a new home higher up the field. If the first ball doesnāt find its target, then the focus quickly shifts to controlling the second ball.
You donāt have to look much further than NYCFCās first concession on Saturday to see just how crucial it is to be ready to outmuscle the Red Bulls. If you let the ball bounce without putting a strong frame around it, bad things can happen. Youāre probably not going to concede a goal like this one, but you could concede a shot or a box entry.
But itās not just about owning those second balls after RBNY blast their way upfield. No, itās about owning them in every phase. If CĆ©sar AraĆŗjo and Wilder Cartagena play to their strengths as one of the most physically-imposing double pivots in MLS, Orlando can go toe-to-toe with their Eastern Conference foes. If those two are sluggish ā or if the players around them donāt hit a high-intensity level ā Orlando City will leave themselves without the ball, without their defensive shape, and without much success.
New York Red Bulls win if⦠Emil Forsberg is active
Letās play a game called āHow Many Games Has It Been Since The Red Bulls Had At Least 40 Percent Possession?ā Okay, fine, the title isnāt very catchy so Iāll just tell you: the New York Red Bulls havenāt had at least 40 percent possession in any of their last five games. Theyāve ranged from 23 to 39.5 percent, but no higher across their final two games of the regular season and their first three playoff matchups.
Interestingly enough, the Red Bulls hit 38.2 and 42.7 percent possession in their two regular-season meetings with Orlando City earlier this year.
Under Sandro Schwarz, theyāve been perfectly content to play against the ball, dropping their line of confrontation at times before picking just the right moment to swarm the ball. I suspect the possession scales will be much more balanced in this game on Saturday (at their core, Orlando donāt want to be a possession-dominant team). Still, one thing is clear: the Red Bulls must maximize their touches whenever and wherever they can find them.
Emil Forsberg was the man brought in over the offseason to help RBNY do just that.
In his role floating underneath Lewis Morgan and Dante Vanzeir, the Swede is Schwarzās primary playmaker. According to FBref, Forsberg averaged more through balls per 90 (0.60) than any of his teammates and finished second behind Morgan in expected assisted goals per 90 (0.23) among regular starters. Forsbergās vision and passing technique give Morgan and the rest of the Red Bullsā off-ball runners confidence that the ball will, in fact, find them.
If Forsberg is firing, the New York Red Bulls will be poised to cause Orlandoās steady defense some real problems.



