Inter Miami coach Martino insists Messi isn’t done for the season

Inter Miami has five MLS games left as it looks to push into playoff position

After Lionel Messi missed the U.S. Open Cup final on Wednesday, Inter Miami head coach Gerardo “Tata” Martino insisted that the Argentina superstar would play again this season.

Messi watched on in street clothes as Miami fell 2-1 to the Houston Dynamo, with the visitors scoring two first-half goals and holding on late after the home side grabbed a goal in second-half stoppage time.

The Open Cup final was the third game out of four that Messi has missed, while he was removed before halftime of the only game he played — last week’s win over Toronto FC.

The nature of Messi’s issue isn’t fully clear. Martino has continued to say that the 36-year-old isn’t actually injured, but instead is dealing with “muscular fatigue” and “old scar tissue.”

But when Messi couldn’t even make the bench for a final, it was clear that he is dealing with an issue slightly more serious then mere fatigue.

After the game, however, Martino said that his star player’s season wasn’t over.

“It was not prudent for him to play, not even to consider him for a few minutes because we would have run risks,” Martino said in a press conference.

“And yes, he will surely play before the end of the season.

“We will go match by match defining the situation to see at what point the medical department tells us that he is fit to play without taking risks.”

Inter Miami is still alive for a playoff spot, but is 14th out of 15 teams in the Eastern Conference. With five games to play, Miami is five points back of NYCFC in the ninth and final playoff position in the East.

Though Miami has two games in hand over NYCFC, it still has to leapfrog five teams to move into playoff position.

The Herons’ next game, coincidentally, is against NYCFC on Saturday.

[lawrence-related id=29433,29389,29352]

James Harden had himself a night at the Open Cup final

The NBA star is known to never miss a party, and Wednesday night certainly qualified

James Harden is known to never miss a big party, and Wednesday night’s U.S. Open Cup final between the Houston Dynamo and Inter Miami certainly qualified.

The NBA star is a co-owner of both the Dynamo and the Houston Dash, and he was at DRV PNK Stadium to watch his MLS side take home its first trophy in five years by defeating a Messi-less Inter 2-1.

Harden was sporting an orange Dynamo jersey with a number one and “UNO” nameplate, a mantra he’s adopted meaning “Under No One.”

The (for now) Sixers guard clearly had an excellent time, celebrating wildly as his side scored two first-half goals and hung on late after Miami pulled a goal back in second-half stoppage time.

Harden was seemingly everywhere, whether it was chatting on the sidelines with his fellow owner David Beckham, or on stage after the game alongside American soccer luminaries.

Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-USA TODAY Sports

Let’s look back at some highlights of Harden’s Big Night Out.

Houston Dynamo stun Inter Miami, sans Messi, in U.S. Open Cup final

Houston bossed a Miami side missing Messi and Alba en route to a trophy

No Lionel Messi? No problem…but only if you’re the Houston Dynamo.

The unfancied club from Texas, who had won just four road matches in all competitions in 2023, claimed a 2-1 victory in the U.S. Open Cup final, knocking off Inter Miami on first half goals from Griffin Dorsey and Amine Bassi.

The most substantial pregame question likely brought more interest to this U.S. Open Cup final than any recent edition: would Messi return for Miami?

Sadly for Miami fans and neutrals, the answer was no. Messi was left out of Gerardo “Tata” Martino’s gameday squad, apparently due to an ongoing battle with a knock relating to what the club has said was a problem with old scar tissue.

Without Messi or Jordi Alba (also out with an injury), Miami looked tepid in the opening exchanges, and paid for it when Houston took a 24th minute lead. Shortly after Drake Callender made a tremendous double save to keep the scores level, Griffin Dorsey overlapped from right back to powerfully finish off yet another superb attacking move from the Dynamo.

Before Miami could get back to its collective feet, the deficit got worse. Nelson Quiñónes, in the midst of an electric first half, was sliced down by DeAndre Yedlin, leaving referee Jon Freemon no choice but to award a penalty.

Bassi stepped up, firing his 33rd minute spot kick down the middle to stun DRV PNK Stadium.

The Dynamo’s control of proceedings was such that Benja Cremaschi’s 42nd minute shot, sliced well over the bar, was Miami’s first shot attempt of any sort.

Miami needed to make a big change, and Martino came through with a double substitution, moving from a 4-3-3 formation to a diamond 4-4-2. One of those newcomers, Josef Martínez, nearly made the Argentine manager look like a genius, only for his glancing 55th minute header to skip just wide.

The Herons were finally in the game on some level, with Andrew Tarbell finally forced to work with a smart save to deny Cremaschi’s curler on the hour mark.

Houston hung on under pressure though, briefly thinking Quiñónes had broken through with a killer third. The goal was initially given, but Freemon (after a VAR check) reversed the call after replays showed the young Colombian a step offside.

Miami predictably threw the kitchen sink at the Dynamo, but only finally snatched a breakthrough goal in stoppage time. Facundo Farías was given a split-second to size up a pass, and found Martínez to give the Herons a sliver of hope.

Miami made an almighty push in the final seconds, with Callender coming forward and attacking a late corner kick for the home side, but Houston ultimately made a superb first hour count to break a five-year trophy drought.

[lawrence-related id=29352,29256,26581]

U.S. Open Cup final: Messi out for Inter Miami vs. Houston Dynamo

Messi is not in uniform for Miami in the Open Cup final

Lionel Messi is not available for Inter Miami in Wednesday night’s U.S. Open Cup final against the Houston Dynamo.

The Argentine star had been a significant doubt after pulling out of last Wednesday’s rout of Toronto FC. He then did not dress for the Herons’ 1-1 draw with Orlando City this past Sunday.

With a trophy on the line at DRV PNK Stadium, manager Gerardo “Tata” Martino had said on Tuesday that Miami would keep the door open for Messi until “the last minute.” However, the iconic attacker’s fight to get over an old scar tissue problem has come up short.

With Messi set to watch from the stands, Martino made four changes to his starting 11 from the draw with Orlando. Sergio Busquets, Facundo Farías, Diego Gómez, and Kamal Miller stepped into the Miami 11. The Herons, win or lose on Wednesday, will face another critical game on Saturday when New York City FC — who hold the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference at the moment — visit south Florida.

Jordi Alba, meanwhile, will miss out as expected after Martino cast serious doubt on the ex-Barcelona left back’s ability to recover from what the club has called “muscular fatigue.” His spot in the 11 once again went to youngster Noah Allen.

Houston, meanwhile, made seven changes to the side that fell 2-1 at Sporting Kansas City over the weekend, snapping an eight-game unbeaten run in all competitions.

U.S. Open Cup final starting lineups

Inter Miami (4-3-3): Drake Callender; DeAndre Yedlin, Sergii Kryvtsov, Kamal Miller, Noah Allen; Benja Cremaschi, Sergio Busquets, Diego Gómez; Facundo Farías, Leo Campana, Robert Taylor

Houston Dynamo (4-2-3-1): Andrew Tarbell; Griffin Dorsey, Erik Sviatchenko, Micael, Franco Escobar; Artur, Héctor Herrera; Adalberto Carrasquilla, Amine Bassi, Nelson Quiñónes; Corey Baird

[lawrence-related id=29256,29149,28925]

Inter Miami vs. Houston Dynamo: How to watch U.S. Open Cup final

The status of Lionel Messi is the biggest question mark heading into Wednesday’s game

Inter Miami is set for its next opportunity at silverware since the arrival of the team’s vaunted Barcelona trio, headlined by Lionel Messi.

Miami hosts the Houston Dynamo in the U.S. Open Cup final on Wednesday. The Herons are looking to complete a double after taking home the Leagues Cup shortly after Messi, Sergio Busquets, and Jordi Alba arrived at the club.

But in a blow for Miami, Messi is a game-time decision while Alba is likely out. Both left Miami’s 4-0 win over Toronto FC before halftime in an MLS game last week.

[afflinkbutton text=”Watch Messi and Inter Miami on Paramount+” link=”https://paramountplus.qflm.net/ZQmvrg”]

Even so, Miami has the might to hang without their stars. The Florida Derby against Orlando City SC saw Inter squeak out a 1-1 draw over the weekend. Miami has also won six of its last seven games at home.

And that’s not to say there isn’t the possibility of Messi coming off the bench. That could be a realistic option against Houston.

The Dynamo, headlined by Mexico international Héctor Herrera in the midfield, did fall over the weekend to Sporting Kansas City, but that ended a streak of seven unbeaten. That’s a good run of form for a club looking for its first trophy since 2018 (U.S. Open Cup).

Here is everything you need to know to catch all the final action:

Inter Miami vs. Houston Dynamo (U.S. Open Cup)

  • When: Wednesday, Sept. 27
  • Where: DRV PNK Stadium (Miami)
  • Time: 8:30 p.m. ET
  • Channel/streaming: CBS Sports Network, Telemundo, Universo, Paramount+, Peacock.

Open Cup Starting Lineups

Inter Miami possible lineup:
Callender; Yedlin, Kryvtsov, Aviles, Allen; Cremaschi, Arroyo, Busquets; Farias, Campana, Taylor

Houston Dynamo possible lineup:
Clark; Escobar, Bartlow, Hadebe, Smith; Caicedo, Herrera; Iturre, Carasquilla, Kowalczyk; Ibrahim

U.S. Open Cup Final Odds and betting lines

MLS odds courtesy of Draft Kings Sportsbook. Odds were last updated Tuesday 5:44 PM ET.

Inter Miami (-120) vs. Houston Dynamo (+260)

Draw: (+290)

[afflinkbutton text=”Watch Messi and Inter Miami on Paramount+” link=”https://paramountplus.qflm.net/ZQmvrg”]

We recommend interesting sports viewing/streaming and betting opportunities. If you sign up for a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.  Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

Messi U.S. Open Cup status ‘not really our issue,’ says Houston Dynamo coach Olsen

The Dynamo think Miami will be tough regardless of whether Messi can play

In a development that will shock precisely no one, the focus on Wednesday’s U.S. Open Cup final has centered on Lionel Messi’s status and what Inter Miami has planned.

If you ask anyone at Miami’s opponent, the Houston Dynamo, they’ll tell you that’s just fine.

“That’s okay,” Dynamo head coach Ben Olsen told reporters on Tuesday, not long after his side stepped off a flight to Florida. “We’re used to that. We kind of live in that space, with the Houston Dynamo, at least for the short time that I’ve been here. We don’t make a lot of headlines.”

Olsen’s opinion was bolstered by the nature of the press conference itself, which opened immediately with a question about Messi.

“Well, there seems to be a lot of talk going on about that,” deadpanned Olsen. “Of course, we know the impact he has on the field. But we also understand this is a very good team with and without him, so we certainly prepared up until this point with him in.

“If the reports are true, we have a little bit of time to also prepare for them without him. So, not really our issue, it’s theirs. We’ll continue just prepping the way we have been.”

Messi’s status is seemingly a complete toss-up. What Miami head coach Gerardo “Tata” Martino referred to as an issue with old scar tissue was enough to push Messi out of last Wednesday’s rout of Toronto FC, and keep him on the sidelines for Saturday’s draw against Orlando City.

Speaking earlier on Tuesday, Martino said that Messi had trained in part, and that a decision wouldn’t be made until “the last minute.”

Olsen — who lifted the Open Cup with a D.C. United side in 2013 that was possibly the biggest underdog the tournament has seen in this century — was quick to point out that he still sees the Messi-free lineup the Herons sent out against Orlando as a massive threat.

“This team without the big three is still a very good MLS team,” said Olsen, referring to Messi, Jordi Alba (who is a major doubt), and Sergio Busquets. “We go through the exercise and [say] ‘Okay, he’s out,’ it’s like, ‘well, he’s in.’ ‘He’s out?’ ‘Wow, this guy’s in.'”

Olsen went on to name-check several Miami players, including attacking midfielder Facundo Farías, winger Robert Taylor, and strikers Leo Campana and Josef Martínez.

“So, their ability to create this team in a short amount of time, with this amount of depth? It’s pretty remarkable,” concluded Olsen. “Whoever is going to be out there, it’s going to be a very tough test for us.”

Olsen: ‘We’re the underdog’

Houston, despite having just one loss in the club’s last eight competitive matches, has decided to embrace the fact that the spotlight is almost entirely on the more glamorous home side.

“I’m not sure, this year, if we’re really sitting around and being honest with each other, [that] we thought we’d be in a final,” conceded Olsen. “But you know, things have clicked a little quicker in some areas than we thought.”

“There’s been some good stories and a little hype on us lately, but we haven’t done anything,” added Olsen. “We’ve gotten some points, but we’re not in the playoffs yet, and we haven’t won anything.”

“We’re the underdog. I don’t think a lot of people are picking us. And that’s I think, again, a space where we’ve lived, and rallied behind in some ways this year. Hopefully we can lean on that tomorrow, play free, play brave, and compete for a championship.”

[lawrence-related id=29149,29122,26601]

Martino: Messi game-time decision for Open Cup final, Alba likely out

Messi and Alba have both been dealing with muscle fatigue in recent weeks

Inter Miami head coach Tata Martino has said Lionel Messi will be a game-time decision for Wednesday night’s U.S. Open Cup final against the Houston Dynamo.

Martino added that left back Jordi Alba would likely not be able to play.

Messi and Alba have both been dealing with muscle fatigue in recent weeks. Alba didn’t train on Tuesday, while Messi was a partial participant.

At a press conference on Tuesday, Martino said on Messi: “We’ll wait until the last minute to see what decision we make.”

On Alba, the coach added: “Jordi, it’s going to be difficult.”

After winning the Leagues Cup in August, Inter Miami is chasing a trophy double when it hosts the Dynamo on Wednesday at DRV PNK Stadium.

[afflinkbutton text=”Watch U.S. Open Cup final” link=”https://paramountplus.qflm.net/ZQmvrg”]

After a flying start to life with Inter Miami, fitness issues have slowed Messi in recent weeks.

The superstar missed out on Argentina’s second match of a two-game window earlier this month against Bolivia. Upon his return to the United States, Messi would then sit out Miami’s 5-2 defeat at Atlanta United.

Messi returned for last week’s win over Toronto FC, but he and Alba both left the game in the first half. Martino said Messi was dealing with “old scar tissue” while Alba had “muscular fatigue.”

The pair, along with Sergio Busquets, sat out Sunday’s 1-1 draw at Orlando City as they looked to get as fit as possible for Wednesday’s final.

Busquets looks likely to play, as he spoke with the media alongside Martino. The midfielder said his longtime Barcelona teammate would do all he could to be ready for the final.

“I think Leo has the desire to help the team and to win another championship. But like we said earlier, he’s going to know how much he can contribute,” Busquets said. “Every day that passes is a point in favor of how much he can contribute. But like we saw the other day, even after resting during Argentina’s game and our game at Atlanta, and seeming perfectly fine, [he wasn’t fit for the Toronto game].”

[afflinkbutton text=”Watch U.S. Open Cup final” link=”https://paramountplus.qflm.net/ZQmvrg”]

[lawrence-related id=29122,28925,28801]

We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Pro Soccer Wire operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

Houston Dynamo get a shot at Messi, Inter Miami in 2023 U.S. Open Cup final

Amine Bassi one-upped Messi’s two assists with three of his own

If Lionel Messi wants another trophy with Inter Miami, he’s going to have to mess with Texas.

Messi and Inter Miami will take on the Houston Dynamo in the U.S. Open Cup final, which will take place on September 27 at DRV PNK Stadium.

The Dynamo emerged with a 3-1 extra-time victory after largely dominating a scrappy, tense U.S. Open Cup semifinal with 10-man Real Salt Lake.

Houston will probably want to send a thank-you note to Miami. As the Herons already claimed a CONCACAF Champions Cup place by winning the Leagues Cup, the Dynamo will now follow suit. Miami’s wild penalty kick win over FC Cincinnati means that the Dynamo qualified for continental competition simply by making the final.

The Dynamo certainly seemed to be cruising towards a date with Messi and Miami, capping a dominant first half off with Héctor Herrera’s easy finish after a disastrous giveaway from RSL’s Andrew Brody fell to Amine Bassi (remember that name).

Corey Baird seemed to score an even scrappier goal with what would have been the final kick of the first half, but referee Lukasz Szpala (after a VAR review) found that Baird had been offside earlier in the sequence.

RSL was struggling to offer much of anything, yet stunningly equalized when Anderson Julio leaped up to power a 64th minute header home.

Despite the goal, Houston was all over the visitors, only to find a late winner elusive. That meant extra time on a typically infernal August night in Houston, but the Dynamo’s control of the match meant the hosts had more gas left in the tank.

All Houston needed was someone to put it all together, and Adalberto Carrasquilla seized the moment. The Panama winger took a dish from Bassi before driving into the area to score the eventual winner.

Houston continued to pour it on, eventually finishing the match with 30 shot attempts. RSL, meanwhile, melted down. Center back Brayan Vera was given a second yellow card (later converted to a straight red by VAR) for swiping out at Luís Caicedo, and then appeared to strike Bassi on his way off the field to boot.

Once that minor melee finished up, Bassi had the last laugh, getting his third assist of the night as Caicedo put an exclamation point on Houston’s win.

[lawrence-related id=26581,26379,26198]

 

Messi, Inter Miami return from the dead to down FC Cincinnati in US Open Cup semifinal

Messi might actually be unstoppable

The best team in MLS, who enter the game unbeaten at home, take a 2-0 lead. For anyone else, that’s a lost cause. Wrap it up, go home, save your legs for another day.

For Lionel Messi and Inter Miami? It’s all just stage dressing for a stunning drama.

Messi produced two surgically precise assists, one of which came eight minutes into second-half stoppage time, to spark a wild comeback that saw the Herons advance to the U.S. Open Cup final on penalties following a 3-3 draw with FC Cincinnati.

Miami will host the Houston Dynamo, 3-1 winners over Real Salt Lake in the night’s other semifinal, in September 27’s final.

If anyone ever manages to actually beat this post-Messi Miami side, luck will have to be on their side. It was certainly in Cincinnati’s favor as they took an 18th minute lead on an absolutely bizarre sequence.

A misplaced Luciano Acosta pass pinballed off of multiple Miami players, looping up for Aaron Boupendza to flick it on. Cincinnati’s Argentine No. 10, with some help from an yet another extremely generous bounce off of Kamal Miller, saw his shot kiss the post and trickle just over the line.

Boupendza thought he’d doubled the lead just two minutes later after chasing down Ian Murphy’s long ball and lobbing Drake Callender, but the goal was chalked off as the Gabon striker was two strides offside.

For Miami, it was the team’s first deficit with Messi as a starter, and Gerardo “Tata” Martino’s halftime changes were undone by a second goal seven minutes into the second half. This time, it was clinical counter-attacking work, with Brandon Vazquez finishing off a raid forward with a powerful low strike.

Messi was getting very little in terms of options or time, but as he has shown the entire world for nearly two decades, all it takes is one touch.

Miami won a set piece out on the left, and despite Cincinnati having a marked size advantage inside the box, the Argentina legend’s driven delivery couldn’t have been more perfect for Leo Campana.

Cincinnati seemed to have an ideal response, but as substitute Yuya Kubo wheeled away celebrating a point-blank finish following a set piece, the bad news arrived: Kubo had handled the ball before finishing, and Miami stayed afloat.

Martino was at this point throwing the kitchen sink at Cincinnati. Josef Martínez and U-22 Initiative playmaker Facundo Farías came in alongside Messi, and Messi’s new bestie Robert Taylor was deployed as an unorthodox right back.

On this night, though, it just wasn’t happening. In fact, Cincinnati goalkeeper Alec Kann didn’t even have much work outside of headers from Messi set piece deliveries.

And yet, even if you scrolled immediately to this line of the article, you already know what’s coming.

With just seconds left in the eight minutes of stoppage time given by referee Joe Dickerson, Messi found himself left of center. For any other player, it’s a prayer of a ball to the back post. For Messi, it was as easy as handing the ball to Campana from a foot away, and the No. 9 once again just had to guide the ball past Kann.

TQL Stadium was stunned, and Cincinnati was in trouble. Head coach Pat Noonan had pulled Acosta, Vazquez, and Boupendza while protecting what seemed like a secure lead.

Meanwhile Miami still had Messi, but didn’t even need him to complete a stunning takeover of the game. Homegrown midfielder Benjamin Cremaschi delivered the goods instead, playing a pass Messi would be proud of to set Martínez up for an ice-cold finish.

Santiago Arias cracked a shot off the bar for Cincinnati, but the luck the home side had early on had by now vanished.

The script said it was all over for Cincinnati without their star attackers, but Yuya Kubo — a former Designated Player attacker who has become over the last two seasons a Swiss Army Knife off the bench — somehow squeezed an equalizer home in the 114th minute.

Both sides exchanged four flawless rounds of penalty kicks, including a casual take from Messi. However, in round five Cincinnati blinked, with Nick Hagglund’s poor spot kick saved by Callender.

Cremaschi did the honors once again, driving his effort home to put Miami in a second final since the club went out and signed the best player to ever kick a ball.

[lawrence-related id=26379,26198,26143]

How to watch Inter Miami vs. FC Cincinnati: Messi starts hunt for second title

Just a month after his arrival, Messi is already close to a second trophy in North America

Just days after winning his first trophy with Inter Miami, Lionel Messi is already just two wins away from a second.

Messi, who helped Inter Miami win the Leagues Cup via a penalty shootout victory over Nashville SC in Saturday’s final, now moves onto another cup competition. FC Cincinnati awaits Inter Miami on Wednesday in the U.S. Open Cup semifinal.

Messi, along with ex-Barcelona teammates Jordi Alba and Sergio Busquets, will jump into Open Cup play after Inter Miami reached the last four prior to the trio’s arrival.

In FC Cincinnati, Inter Miami will face a strong, but wounded opponent.

[afflinkbutton text=”Watch FC Cincinnati vs. Inter Miami on Paramount+” link=”https://paramountplus.qflm.net/nLoJER”]

FC Cincinnati has the best record in MLS, but their return to league play over the weekend did not go to plan.

The Columbus Crew are no slouch, but thrashing their “Hell Is Real” derby rivals 3-0 was not expected on Sunday. Not to mention, the Orange and Blue were knocked out by Nashville SC in the Leagues Cup round of 32 prior to that.

A betting man would guess FC Cincinnati regroups and brings a better game against Inter Miami. But enough to hand Messi & Co. their first defeat? That may be a hard wager to place.

Here is everything you need to know to catch all the action:

Inter Miami vs. FC Cincinnati (U.S. Open Cup)

  • When: Wednesday, August 23
  • Where: TQL Stadium (Cincinnati)
  • Time: 7:00 p.m. ET
  • Channel/streaming: Paramount+

Leagues Cup Starting Lineups

Inter Miami possible lineup:
Callender, Yedlin, Miller, Kryvtsov, Alba, Arroyo, Busquets, Cremaschi, Messi, Martinez, Taylor

FC Cincinnati possible lineup:
Celentano, Gaddis, Miazga, Hagglund, Arias, Moreno, Nwobodo, Powell, Acosta, Vazquez, Boupendza

[afflinkbutton text=”Watch Messi and Inter Miami on Paramount+” link=”https://paramountplus.qflm.net/nLoJER”]