AP Man of the Match: None of the above, which means the game-winning goal scorer gets the honor. Carlos Valdes took advantage of some poor Montreal defending on a late throw-in to record his first goal of the year, giving Philadelphia three points that continue the club’s climb into playoff contention.
In truth, there were no stand out performers. Fireworks at the end were sparked by errors more than talent, giving an exciting finish to a mostly forgettable match.
Packaged for takeaway:
- This is the second game in a row where Montreal has come out flat, though there may be an unlikely cause. Maybe this is the new, Marco Di Vaio-dependent Montreal? One that’s going to rely on their new star to the exclusion of any other form of attack.
- It certainly seemed that way throughout most of this one. Jesse Marsch played a very conservative 4-4-1-1 that relied on Felipe to connect with Di Vaio.
- That wasn’t nearly enough, and against a Philadelphia team that could get very little going without Michael Farfan (out with a groin injury), the approach was far too conservative. I don’t know if Marsch came in with special reverence for the Union’s post-Nowak revival, but there was no reason right midfielder Davy Arnaud needed to be playing on the same level as Patrice Bernier and Collen Warner.
- So with Philly lacking their creator and Montreal playing on their heals, the first half might as well not have existed. The teams combined for two shots on goal, a number that exaggerated their ambition.
- The second half was different from its kickoff. Montreal did a good job of playing directly to Di Vaio (who had two early half-chances), while Philadelphia exploited the left side of the Impact defense as a consistent route into attack:
- Montreal’s plan nearly bore fruit midway through the second when a nice 15-yard chip from Felipe saw Di Vaio beat Amobi Okugo (who, by in large, had yet another strong game). Bringing down the ball onto his left foot, Di Vaio appeared to have beaten Zac MacMath low only to see the Philly `keeper get his right hand to the shot, deflecting the ball just wide of the right post.
- On the other end, Donovan Ricketts had to pull off similar heroics when a Sheanon Williams cross met a leaping Jack McIneney, the young attacker’s header pushed wide after some quick reflexes from Ricketts.
- Philly controlled the early part of the second while Montreal got a grip on the match in the middle. By the final 15 minutes, the teams looked on course for a scoreless draw before Hackworth’s three subs combined for a moment of magic.
- Or perhaps it was serendipity, because Philly needed a little fortune to score the opener. Antoine Hoppenot made it happen, beating three defenders (thanks to a wall pass to Gabriel Gómez) before chipping a ball into the six as he ran out of room at the line. Montreal seemed pause and to stare at a ball – as if it were going in slow motion – before Lionard Pajoy poked it past Ricketts, opening the scoring in the 82nd minute.
- Things seemed pretty hopeless for Montreal, who had failed to consistently threaten MacMath. As it turned out, they wouldn’t need to threaten before equalize, with a misplayed corner kick going into net, evening the score in the 89th minute.
- Patrice Bernier swung a ball in near-post. When Zac MacMath didn’t claim it, the ball went off of Keon Daniel (colliding with MacMath and a teammate) and went in for the equalizer.
- Montreal must have felt guilty, because they returned the favor two minutes later. A long throw from Williams was floated to Valdes at the edge of the six, even with the right post. A poor first touch toward the line saw Montreal fail to react, allowing Valdes to put the winner past Ricketts.
- The game could have just as easily finished 0-0 (and been a fair result), but Philadelphia won the match’s ten final, chaotic minutes, giving the home team full points.
- It wasn’t, however, a performance Philly could take much from. What they learned: They are a vastly less potent team without Michael Farfan, one that can’t take advantage of a visiting team having a bad night. Ultimately, yes, they did win, but they needed a strange goal to pull it out.
- For Montreal, there’s a bigger problem: The team has turned it off since acquiring Di Vaio. Jesse Marsch sent out a team that was overly reliant on their new star. At one point, Di Vaio dropped back, played to Felipe, who turned and gave the ball away while trying to hit a streaking Arnaud, who had too far to got to get into the play. That failed movement sums up Marsch’s post-Di Vaio approach.
- Instead of getting out of his way, the Impact need to start augmenting Di Vaio. Now scoreless in 351 minutes (for a team that hasn’t scored in open play for 221 minutes), Di Vaio needs help.
-
Getty Images
Our weekly re-ordering of Major League Soccer teams, following 16 rounds of play:
-
About that brilliant atmosphere last week in Seattle: Rio Tinto Stadium in Utah will rock, too
Jun 18, 2013, 12:30 PM EDT
Unsaid in this narrative is this: most U.S. sites are bright and alive these days.
-
Scottish football takes another hit as Hearts prepare for administration
Jun 18, 2013, 7:56 AM EDT
Hearts have put the entire squad up for sale to raise the reported £500,000 needed to get the club to the start of the season.
-
Huge cost of World Cups: Did we need a protest like Brazil’s to point out the obvious?
Jun 18, 2013, 12:10 AM EDT
Reuters
Brazil has infrastructure concerns. They’ve also spent $3.3 billion on soccer stadia. No surprise, people aren’t happy.
-
Christian Eriksen’s potential for Borussia Dortmund a particularly cloudy picture
Jun 17, 2013, 10:43 PM EDT
Getty Images
The mythology of Ajax, Dutch soccer and one stars’ struggles outside the Dutch league make this potential transfer difficult to evaluate.
-
Ancelotti may be impatient, but Real Madrid wait should prove inconsequential
Jun 17, 2013, 8:23 PM EDT
It’s only a matter of time before Ancelotti’s holding pattern’s resolved.
-
Early returns from England’s offseason tell a tale of two Manchesters
Jun 17, 2013, 7:39 PM EDT
Getty Images
It’s early days, but while City close the gap, Manchester United have yet to act.
-
This André Villas-Boas to Paris Saint-Germain link makes more sense by the day
Jun 17, 2013, 6:51 PM EDT
Getty Images
With a buy-out in his contract, Villas-Boas likely will be given a choice between Paris and London.
-
Honduran international Maynor Figueroa completes move to Hull City
Jun 17, 2013, 5:59 PM EDT
Reuters
Steve Bruce reunites with a player he brought to Wigan Athletic.
-
It’s time FIFA reconsiders the Confederations Cup bid to the Oceania region
Jun 17, 2013, 5:19 PM EDT
Getty Images
Tahiti are a great story, but nobody wins when small countries get slaughtered by the world’s top teams.
-
Monday’s Transfer Rumor Roundup: Bale to PSG and Koscileny wanted by Bayern and Barcelona
Jun 17, 2013, 3:38 PM EDT
Getty Images
So just how serious are PSG? Word has it they’re ready to break the Premier League transfer record.








