Christian Benteke leaves Crystal Palace for MLS in club record deal for D.C. United

Crystal Palace striker Christian Benteke has joined Wayne Rooney at D.C. United after the clubs reached a deadline day deal.

Christian Benteke is heading to D.C. United, as the MLS club announced a deadline day move to acquire the Belgium striker from Crystal Palace.

Benteke, 31, will be available to play for Wayne Rooney’s side once his International Transfer Certificate and U.S. work visa are approved. His contract runs through the 2024 season, with a club option for 2025.

“Christian is a top player who has played at the highest level for a long time,” said Rooney in a club statement announcing the move. “His experience and ability to score goals and help the team will be invaluable. It’s exciting for the team and myself to get him in and playing. He will make a huge difference.”

With 45 caps for Belgium and 280 Premier League appearances, Benteke will be expected to be one of the most dangerous strikers in MLS once United can put him on the field. Still, the move comes after a rough patch with Palace, where Benteke began the 2021-22 season as the club’s first-choice striker only to fade into a substitute role due to poor finishing form. His last Premier League goal came in November of 2021, and he only appeared in four of Palace’s final 16 games of the season.

That said, in the 2020-21 season, Benteke scored 10 goals for Palace, a rate that points to having the quality to help an MLS team in need. United sits at the bottom of the Eastern Conference, and are 27th out of 28 teams. 19 teams have scored more goals than the Black-and-Red this season, though the presence of Taxi Fountas (11 goals) and Ola Kamara (8) has left them less in need of a goalscorer than better play at the back.

“We are getting an elite striker in Christian and completing this signing on transfer deadline day is a huge accomplishment for the club,” said United GM Lucy Rushton in a team statement. “Christian is a dynamic forward who has scored goals at the highest levels. His strength and power will make him a focal point of our team and his ability to link-up play will be a valuable asset to us. We are excited to get Christian integrated with the team so he can make an immediate impact on the field in the final stretch of the season.”

How will Benteke fit in with D.C. United?

Rooney’s plans for Benteke surely include a partnership with the electric Fountas, but how that will look remains to be seen. Since Rooney officially signed on as the team’s new head coach, they have played out of a 4-2-3-1 formation, then a very fluid 4-4-2, and on Wednesday night used a 4-3-3 that Rooney hinted was tailored for Charlotte FC.

For most of 2022, United has been a high-pressing team, but under Rooney, they have dropped their lines off and seem more ready to find a big center forward’s feet (having traded to acquire another target man, Miguel Berry, earlier in the transfer window) than the previous, more vertical approach.

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Crazy things happen when Wayne Rooney faces Orlando City

Late drama just seems to happen whenever Rooney faces the Lions at Audi Field

Wayne Rooney’s first MLS game as a coach came against Orlando City, the team he victimized for his most memorable moment as an MLS player.

And on Sunday night, just like he did four years ago, Rooney helped D.C. United beat Orlando at the death with a dramatic late winner.

This time though, it was Rooney’s in-game adjustments and motivation from the sidelines, rather than his heroic work on the field, that earned DCU a famous comeback win.

Every D.C. United fan remembers Rooney’s heroics against Orlando City in 2018. His remarkable goal-saving run and tackle was followed by an inch-perfect cross from long range for Luciano Acosta’s winner.

That moment was in the heat of a playoff race, while Sunday’s win still saw DCU end the night in last place. But it still provided a real moment of optimism that Rooney the MLS coach could be as successful as Rooney the MLS player.

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Trailing 1-0 entering stoppage time, DCU got a goal from Chris Durkin to tie the game and then Taxi Foutas won it with a volley after a tremendous first-time volleyed cross from Kimarni Smith.

After the game, Rooney gave credit to his predecessor Chad Ashton – who served as interim coach before moving back to his role as assistant – for his suggestion to move Smith to left back.

“It was a little bit of a gamble, a risk, which we felt we could take. Fair play to Chad. He suggested it. Give him a lot of credit for that,” Rooney said.

The road to the postseason is still a steep one for United, which sits eight points below the playoff line. But the team has at least taken a first step in the right direction under Rooney, who could be the right man at the right time in D.C. – yet again.

“The season has to start now,” said Rooney.

Watch DCU’s two late goals vs. Orlando City

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Nagelsmann, Davies looking forward to ‘new Bayern Munich’ after Lewandowski’s departure

Without Lewandowski, Nagelsmann has plans to play two up top

Bayern Munich took the field on a sweltering day in Washington, DC, training and signing autographs at Audi Field Tuesday evening ahead of a Wednesday friendly against D.C. United.

New addition Sadio Mané was well-received, and fans serenaded Thomas Müller, but the major topic of the day was someone nowhere near the District. In the stands, Robert Lewandowski jerseys were arguably the most popular kit choice, and in a press conference just before the session, head coach Julian Nagelsmann and Canada star Alphonso Davies were both asked about the towering striker, who only just departed for Barcelona.

Nagelsmann brought Lewandowski up himself in discussing one of Bayern’s new recruits, defender Matthijs de Ligt (who, despite having just flown in to join the team, could possibly play Wednesday).

“We have to compensate that we miss probably 40 goals next season,” Nagelsmann told a packed media room. “We have a lot of players who can score goals, but we also need defending players who can score goals and Matthijs also has the capability to do to this.”

“It’s devastating, him leaving the club. He was a big, big part of this team,” added Davies. “It’s tough to see him go, but we understand his decision and we have to address it and play without him now. So I’m sure we have quality on the pitch, we’re able to do it as well.”

Nagelsmann openly indicated that a leading possibility for Bayern’s adjustment without Lewandowski is to play with two forwards rather than a three-man front line with a lone center forward.

“One of the solutions to compensate the 40 goals, we have the idea sometimes to play with two strikers,” said Nagelsmann, who expressed a desire to have more of a set formation after admitting he changed the team from that angle too often in 2021-22. “This season, probably will be solution to play with two forwards.”

Nagelsmann, who said he was particularly pleased with how Bayern played out of a 3-5-2 formation last season, and Davies both highlighted the fact that it’s not just about formation, but what kind of service Bayern’s forwards get.

“I think we have a lot of players who could play forward and think it’s not that easy to defend it. They can move quickly behind, between the defense lines of the opponents, between the midfield and defense lines,” explained the second-year Bayern boss. “It’s not that easy to get man-on-man coverage against our forwards. So I think our movement will be very dangerous for the opponent’s goal.”

“Whoever plays up there, whether it’s Sadio or whoever it is, we try to feed them the ball,” said Davies. “Sadio, he’s not as big as Lewandowski, but he has the strength to hold up the ball, make plays. He’s definitely quicker than Lewy, so balls in behind, I think that’s a little bit new for for the wingers.”

Nagelsmann had a positive spin on losing Lewandowski, which centered on the fact that teams knew where Bayern was going to go in the attacking third, and that his team can be a bit less predictable this year.

“When play against Bayern Munich, you know that you try to solve the situation with Lewy, and when you get a good man-on-man coverage against Lewy, it was a bit easier to play against Bayern Munich. Now, it’s not that easy to find the best solution—when I talk about the opponents—to defend us,” said Nagelsmann.

“We’ll have a good solution for the future… I look forward to see the new Bayern Munich, after Lewy.”

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Wayne Rooney finds D.C. United at a crossroads once again

Can Rooney spark the clarity of purpose D.C. United has lacked for so long?

D.C. United announced that England, Manchester United, and Everton star Wayne Rooney was coming back to the District to be their head coach on Tuesday, and the change couldn’t have come soon enough.

United, after all, had just lost 7-0 on national television to a Philadelphia Union side that has grown into one of MLS’s best-run clubs. The contrast—an intense, ruthless Union implementing a long-term, consistent vision to perfection against a D.C. side that was too open against a superior opponent, seemingly rudderless, and had no fight after an early concession—couldn’t have been more clear. One club has clarity in who they are and why they’re doing what they do, and the other does not.

This piece was going to hone in on a theme that D.C. United is a club at a crossroads, but let’s be real: they’ve been finding themselves at a crossroads for years now. Moving out of RFK Stadium and into the modern world of MLS was supposed to be where they made the turn, only for a series of choices that alienated many of the team’s most dedicated supporters, leaving scars that linger to this day.

Signing Rooney as a player in 2018 and bringing in Hernán Losada as the club’s head coach in 2021 were both moments to make that turn as well. Rooney left earlier than planned for understandable reasons, but the magic of 2018 had mostly vanished in the months before he departed.

Losada, meanwhile, charmed fans, but was let go early this year for an inflexible and reportedly abrasive approach in his dealings with staff and players. United’s tepid, unclear explanation of that choice left one segment of the fanbase angry at a perceived lack of high standards within the organization, and another portion disappointed that a potentially unhealthy culture of weigh-ins and humiliation seems to have been tolerated for over a year.

For United, it was back at the ol’ crossroads once again.

The pattern here is simple: United wants to get it right, but also hasn’t yet commited to long-term plans that are actually tenable. These ideas —a new stadium, signing a global superstar, an innovative coach—are all individual ingredients that could be used in building a sturdy, competitive MLS team over a long period of time. Sporting Kansas City used a new home to springboard into a decade of big crowds and contending for titles. Atlanta United, with Josef Martínez, is one of several MLS teams to make one perfect signing that defined their culture for years and got a generation of fans on board for life.

What these big moves won’t do is solve your problems by themselves. KC spent years being among the most shrewd operators when it comes to MLS roster rules and talent evaluation. Atlanta spent more than United ever has, and marketed themselves brilliantly. It’s not one thing; it’s all the things.

In D.C., the need for a comprehensive plan has often felt like it’s left aside for One Simple Trick, and the result is a temporary boost that fizzles after a year or so. United owner Jason Levien, speaking to reporters on Tuesday, acknowledged this to some degree.

“I saw where we were, and that we needed a real push—more than a push, we needed a direction—after Hernán left, and things just didn’t seem to be moving in the right direction,” said Levien. “There were some players this offseason that wanted to leave, and who I felt were quality players and quality people. And I wanted to understand: how do we build the right culture moving forward, that we’re attracting more players, and guys who want to be here?

“So there was an urgency, and it happened before the Philadelphia match. It happened in the four or five matches before that, where we said, ‘Wait a minute, where are we headed this season? Where are we headed next season? How do we build the kind of culture where we think we’re special, and we’re doing something positive in the community and positive on the pitch?’ And when we didn’t see that, there’s a lot of urgency.”

These are the right questions to ask, but to be fair, they’re also the same questions that have come up with these previous inflection points. It would be wrong to accuse United of not having plans, but it is fair to say that between the plans themselves and the execution, the organization keeps being in need of a direction.

Rooney was up front that this is a step in a managerial career that he wants to take to the top of the game. He’s not a mercenary, but he will want to progress to tougher challenges faster than MLS is going to become a Premier League-level enterprise. In other words, United cannot expect him to be here for a decade. This hire has to be part of a system of moves done in concert, or D.C. will be at the mercy of one of the dozens of European clubs that can offer a better opportunity in 2024 or so.

Is there reason to expect this time to be different? Believe it or not, United does have some of the pieces of the puzzle they need, though not in ways that have resonated nationally (ESPN and Fox effectively said “no thanks!” to putting United on TV once Rooney left) or locally, where diehards have been frustrated for nearly a decade and plenty of local soccer fans prefer to call it football.

Those puzzle pieces are the unheralded infrastructure that has been built over the past three years. United Performance Center, the club’s new training ground, looks unimpressive from the outside, but the lack of aesthetically pleasing wood and glass surfaces that greet you belie a facility that has top-tier equipment and functionality once you step inside.

Literally down the street, Loudoun United has not won many games in the USL Championship, but it is succeeding in its actual purpose, which is developing players for the first team. That objective fits hand-in-glove with the team’s academy, which despite a lack of recognition has churned out players who are ready for legit pro minutes as teenagers and play with serious urgency and decisiveness. Homegrown players make up over 20% of United’s current roster, and that percentage was higher at the start of this season, before a club-record transfer sending Kevin Paredes to the Bundesliga with Wolfsburg, and Griffin Yow’s more recent move to Westerlo.

Three more players were signed to MLS deals after proving themselves with Loudoun, while 20-year-old center back Hayden Sargis was signed after showing his potential with Sacramento Republic. The club is, per The Athletic, weighing the prospect of keeping Loudoun United in the USL Championship while adding an MLS Next Pro team that would play in Baltimore.

There’s a through-line here, which is that United believes it can create a conveyor belt that turns youngsters into MLS-caliber players (academy or additions from elsewhere), and has truly invested in that idea. Rooney’s experience with Derby County, which he said involved giving “around about 20 debuts” to academy players at his introductory press conference, has prepared him to be the coach at that kind of club.

There’s genuine promise in pairing the club’s tangible move towards being a talent incubator with Rooney’s ability—proven at Derby County, where a team full of those aforementioned academy debutants managed 55 points in the Championship, only to be relegated due to financial penalties—to give young players minutes and still get results.

That said, they’re clearly not going for a full youth movement. The Washington Post has reported that free agent attacking midfielder Ravel Morrison is extremely close to signing with United, and The Athletic says England attacker Jesse Lingard has held talks over a move as well. Both players are 29, and between them, outstanding forward Taxi Fountas, strikers Michael Estrada and Ola Kamara, and newly-signed attacker Martín Rodríguez, it’s not like Rooney is going to leaning on an under-23 squad.

Still, the club on Friday traded Julian Gressel, their chief chance creator, to the Vancouver Whitecaps in part because Rooney rates United States under-20 attacker Jackson Hopkins. Interim head coach Chad Ashton started Hopkins on the right wing in the first game of the Rooney era (even with Rooney, who is awaiting his visa, restricted to the stands), and used his final sub on another homegrown, Ted Ku-DiPietro, while trying to overturn a 2-1 deficit at home.

United’s pivot towards being a place where younger players are developed either to become MLS regulars or attract European transfers should be the emphasis here, and that (or any other long-term vision) needs to be made clear. A recurring problem for United is that its fanbase feels in the dark about why things are happening and where the club is going. The Losada dismissal is relitigated among fans on social media after every defeat because United’s motivations weren’t plainly stated. The team put tens of millions into a training ground, and opening it made no impact in local perception because all fans saw of it was a corrugated metal exterior.

When there’s a team that wins games and presents a plausible vision to embrace, the DMV takes to them. Rooney’s tactical vision already appears rather clear: it’s less madcap, for sure, but there’s a good reason for that at a club that had given up 27 goals in its last 11 competitive matches before he stepped onto a stage at Audi Field’s Eagle Bank Club on Tuesday.

“You can’t just go and press all over the place with no structure,” Rooney told Pro Soccer Wire just before being officially unveiled as United’s new head coach. “You need to obviously have a structure to how you want to press, and of course, that’s how exactly I’ve worked with my time at Derby as well,” said Rooney, later adding that “watching games back and watching the last few games live, the organization has to be better.”

That might feel like a move back towards the pragmatism of many seasons spent under former United boss Ben Olsen, but it’s also in line with the unflashy game models of a team like the Seattle Sounders, the current CONCACAF Champions League winners and a team that makes the playoffs like clockwork every year.

You don’t have to be MLS’s wildest high-wire act to to appease fans or embark on the path to being one of the league’s most respected clubs. Plenty of MLS Cups and Supporters Shields have gone to mid-block teams that just execute a good plan, and make smart moves off the field. They’re clear in their intentions, and their big moves are undergirded by smaller moves, all built into a longer-term plan. The on-field success becomes off-field success, with ticket sales going up, sponsors who want to be associated with a winner coming aboard, and all of those boring but vital metrics showing improvement.

If Rooney and United are going to at long last make a turn that takes the club to better days, and not end up back at this same old intersection they keep turning up at, they need clarity, coherence, and consistency at all levels as much as they need Rooney to improve results in the short-term.

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Why D.C. United? Wayne Rooney explains decision to manage MLS side

The 36-year-old says he felt the timing and the job was right to get back into coaching

Wayne Rooney did not have to take the D.C. United job.

After a season and a half in charge of Derby County, Rooney had established himself as a promising coaching prospect, which, coupled with his legendary status as a player, opened the door to a potential top-tier job in England.

In fact, Rooney turned down the chance to interview for the managerial role at his boyhood club Everton last season, citing his loyalty to Derby.

Having left Derby after its relegation – the product of a 21-point penalty that was not Rooney’s fault – it appeared the 36-year-old would be able to sit back and wait for a major job to open up.

And Rooney himself was planning on sitting back, but when D.C. called he felt the opportunity was too tempting to turn down.

“There’s a few clubs who got in touch … but my plan really was to take a rest in football for a while,” Rooney told Pro Soccer Wire.

“Then my agent called me and said D.C. had been in touch, and I just felt it was the right time in my managerial career to come back here and to challenge myself.

“It’s a competitive league, tough league to play in. I’m sure I’ll find out it’s a tough league to manage in. And so in terms of my own development as a coach and a manager, I felt it was the right time to come in and challenge myself.”

Rooney outlines plans to improve United

United’s most recent match was a 7-0 drubbing at the hands of the Philadelphia Union, a match Rooney watched with keen interest.

“Watching the last few games live, the organization has to be better from the players,” Rooney said. “It’ll take a lot of work obviously to [get everyone] on the same page, but I’m sure the players once they get used to how I want to play, they’ll really benefit.”

“You can’t just go and press and play with no structure,” Rooney added. “So you need to obviously have a structure to how you want to press. And of course, that’s what I hope to have here as well. But also becoming more comfortable on the ball and in possession, which I think the team needs as well. So we just have to be organized.”

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D.C. United names Wayne Rooney head coach

Rooney returns to manage the club he played for in 2018 and 2019

D.C. United has announced that Wayne Rooney, the club’s former striker and one of the best players of his generation, has been named its new head coach.

Rooney played for DCU in 2018 and 2019 before returning to England to play for, and eventually manage, second-tier side Derby County.

At DCU, Rooney will take over a struggling side that fired its head coach Hernán Losada early in the season and did not turn things around under interim boss Chad Ashton. Currently United is tied for the fewest points in the league, with a record of 5W-10L-2D.

“Wayne is a soccer legend and one of the most exciting and dynamic up-and-coming managers in our sport. He’s already proven in his young coaching career that he knows how to lead a group through adversity,” said DC co-owners Jason Levien and Steve Kaplan in a statement.

“He has an understanding of our league and what it takes to be successful in Major League Soccer thanks to his two-year stay with us as a player. The passion he showed while wearing Black-and-Red electrified our city and our club and we are so excited to welcome him back as our head coach.”

After a career that saw him become the all-time top scorer for Manchester United and the England national team, Rooney retired in January 2021 to take on the full-time managerial role at Derby.

Rooney guided Derby through a tumultuous 2021-22 campaign that saw the club hit with a 21-point penalty for financial mismanagement. Despite a strong campaign, the point deduction proved too much to overcome and the club was relegated to League One, with Rooney resigning shortly thereafter.

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Jackson Hopkins, US Under-20s not feeling the pressure at CONCACAF U-20 Championship

“The coaches gave us the confidence… We didn’t need to feel any pressure.”

The U.S. under-20 men’s national team could have been forgiven for carrying a burden from past troubles into the CONCACAF U-20 Championship, but according to D.C. United attacker Jackson Hopkins, the group approached the tournament—which serves as qualifying for both the 2023 U-20 World Cup and the 2024 Olympics—with confidence.

Speaking exclusively with Pro Soccer Wire a day after the U.S. clinched their first Olympic berth since 2008 with a 3-0 win over Honduras, Hopkins said that rather than look at qualification from a position of feeling pressured, the team was hyped for the opportunity.

“I think everyone is just more excited to play in an environment like that, than they are nervous or anything,” said Hopkins, who spent his 18th birthday on the field for the final 19 minutes as the U.S. held Honduras off to qualify for Paris 2024. “No one really felt any real pressure, they’re just excited, and had confidence. The coaches gave us the confidence, and all the preparation that we needed to know that we’d do well. We didn’t need to feel any pressure.”

For Hopkins, it’s been a whirlwind. Barely 11 months ago, he was making his pro debut for D.C.’s USL Championship affiliate Loudoun United as a 17-year-old academy player. Since then, the Fredericksburg, Va. native was called in for D.C.’s preseason camp (where he scored against Inter Miami), culminating in an MLS Homegrown contract signed in late April and five league appearances.

And now to all of that, you can add qualifying for two major youth international tournaments, breaking a run of heartbreak for U.S. Soccer on the men’s YNT side of the program.

“It’s been really quick. Last, like a year ago, I was in Dallas with the u-17s, so it’s definitely been quick,” said Hopkins with a smile. “I played my first game for Loudoun end of July (2021). So I don’t know, I’m just enjoying it, and every opportunity I get, I feel like I’ve done well. So that’s just what I’m trying to do is take every opportunity I get.”

The experience has been something a bit different for Hopkins and the entire U-20 team. CONCACAF produces situations that MLS, USL, and academy play don’t replicate. Fans tossed drinks onto the field during the second half of Friday’s win against Honduras, while the quarterfinal win over Costa Rica that clinched a World Cup spot ended with a scuffle that saw CONCACAF doling out suspensions.

Hopkins said he sees the environment as something to carry forward in his career.

“It was a crazy atmosphere, all the whistling, and people throwing bottles on the field,” said Hopkins. “I think it’s good to play in an environment like that at this age, just to get the experience early, and know what it’s like to play in a hostile environment like that.”

Hopkins described the entire tournament as “intense,” noting that the team has largely spent its down time resting and relaxing during an event that packed four knockout rounds into nine days. He also credited the preparation head coach Mikey Varas and his coaching staff provided for seeing the team through the challenge.

“Pre-camp I think definitely helped us. You got everyone understanding the style, the press and everything that Mikey (Varas) wants to play. He made it clear for everyone,” explained Hopkins. “The video (sessions) and everything sets us up perfectly to know exactly where the space is, how to win the game, so it helped.”

The U.S. squad has had to bond quickly, but according to Hopkins, it hasn’t been very difficult. “I think it’s been pretty easy for me actually, just because I’m playing against at least half the team since I was 13-14,” he said, alluding to the fact that the Philadelphia Union have four players on Varas’ roster, and two more come from the New York Red Bulls. “I think the coaches have also done a good job of pointing out everyone’s strengths and stuff, so we all know each other pretty well.”

One theme that Hopkins and the U-20s are looking to take with them into Sunday’s final against the Dominican Republic is that this is a special moment for all of them.

“It’s not an environment everyone gets to play in,” said Hopkins. “I think everyone knows, it might not happen again for them, an environment like that.”

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Gareth Bale reportedly chooses MLS, signs with LAFC

Out of nowhere, LAFC emerges as Bale’s next landing spot

Gareth Bale’s next move appears to be one that will take him across the Atlantic for a stint in MLS.

MLSsoccer.com reported Saturday morning that LAFC will sign the Wales star to a one-year deal in the coming days, and expect to be able to field him when the summer transfer window opens on July 7. That would allow LAFC to give Bale—and Juventus legend Giorgio Chiellini, who recently joined the club—their debuts against the LA Galaxy, as El Tráfico is scheduled for July 8.

Bale’s deal will reportedly not require a Designated Player spot, a rather stunning turn of events given his profile and the fact that as a free agent, he  would join LAFC on a free transfer. According to The Athletic, Bale could extend his deal through the end of the 2024 MLS season, and if that option is taken, his contract would make him a DP.

LAFC would be hoping to add Bale to an attack that already has Carlos Vela, but the question of the Mexican star’s status is still open. ESPN’s Taylor Twellman reported Saturday that Vela had re-signed with LAFC, but the club has made no announcement as of yet.

Bale was previously linked to an MLS move with D.C. United, with the capital club holding his MLS discovery rights at one point. However, talks fizzled earlier this month and according to Twellman, those rights ended up with Inter Miami, who are not pursuing Bale and thus are prepared to trade those rights to LAFC.

Getafe also claimed to have been offered a shot at signing him via his agent, though Bale laughed that suggestion off almost immediately. Signs had been pointing towards Bale signing a short-term deal with his hometown club Cardiff City, with fitness heading into the World Cup his objective.

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Audi Field in Washington D.C. set to host 2023 MLS All-Star Game

It will be only the second time that Washington, D.C. has hosted the MLS All-Star Game

Audi Field in Washington, D.C. will host the 2023 MLS All-Star Game, sources have confirmed to Pro Soccer Wire.

The news was first reported by the Washington Post.

An official announcement of Audi Field hosting the match is expected next week.

For the city of Washington, D.C., it will be something of a consolation prize after its combined World Cup 2026 bid with Baltimore was rejected by FIFA this week when it named the 16 host cities for the tournament.

Washington, D.C. has hosted the MLS All-Star Game two times before, in 2002 when the MLS All-Stars took on the U.S. national team in the first and only iteration of the game in that format, and in 2004 when the Eastern Conference All-Stars faced the Western Conference.

After 15 years of MLS All-Star teams facing teams from Europe touring the U.S. during their preseason, the league changed format in 2021 to a match featuring all-star teams from MLS facing all-star teams from Liga MX. This year’s All-Star Game in Minnesota will be the second straight year of that format.

Audi Field opened in 2018, replacing RFK Stadium which had served as the home of D.C. United since the team’s inception in 1996.

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Ex-D.C. United goalkeeper Chris Seitz told a sad and strange Hernan Losada story

The goalkeeper, who retired earlier this year said that an incident with the club’s former coach left him at “rock bottom”

During his brief tenure as D.C. United head coach, Hernan Losada was widely known to be a stickler for fitness.

Losada asked his DCU team to press almost constantly, aiming to put opponents under pressure all over the field and win possession quickly after losing it.

In order to play such an uptempo style, Losada ran his teams hard in training and also monitored every element of his players’ diet, conducting regular weigh-ins at the team’s training facility.

Some players responded well to Losada’s regimented style while others did not – including Paul Arriola, whom The Athletic reported left the club in large part due to Losada.

Losada was fired early this season after just 15 months in charge. Perhaps a different coach would’ve been given more time but the Argentine had clearly rubbed many within the organization the wrong way.

Seitz says Losada left him at ‘rock bottom’

On Tuesday, former DCU goalkeeper Chris Seitz told a story that elucidated some of Losada’s methods on Twitter.

Seitz, who retired earlier this year, said he was confronted over, of all things, a photo of his wife and kids having a picnic.

“One day I came in early to practice to do my run and our strength coach came up to me,” Seitz said. “It was Mother’s Day the day prior and I posted a photo of my wife sitting at a picnic table eating a sandwich with chips with our kids, I was not in the photo & the photo was from 2 years prior.

“He told me the coach had pulled him into the office to talk about the photo I had posted and why I was eating poor food choices. It was a picnic at the park and there was sandwiches, chips, and waters and sodas on the table.

“I thought he was joking, I was working hard, damn near starving myself, and doing everything he asked of me, to be who he wanted me to be.

“This was right when I got benched and after a poor start to the season from myself and the team so this broke me. It put me in a place [of] self doubt and depression.”

Seitz added that his wife would later remark that he had become a different person, adding that he knew he had hit “rock bottom.”

The 35-year-old went on to say that his wife and nutritionist helped save him from injury and that he “realized that life, happiness, family, mental health, and everything outside of the sport was so much more important to me than making one coach happy!”

Read Seitz’s entire thread on Twitter