Timo Werner has found his role, and his form: MLS weekend wrap

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Timo Werner has found his role, and his form: MLS weekend wrap

Also: Sporting Kansas City are on pace for one of MLS’s worst-ever season, and Matt Turner is giving USMNT fans something to think about

Timo Werner has found his role, and his form: MLS weekend wrap

Also: Sporting Kansas City are on pace for one of MLS’s worst-ever season, and Matt Turner is giving USMNT fans something to think about

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In his near-30-year run as a head coach in the elite tier of American soccer, Bruce Arena has never claimed to be a tactical genius. In fact he has expressed open contempt for the concept, routinely brushing off well-meaning questions from journalists about formations and strategic approaches. He once memorably said that “we have a very important analytic, and that’s the score.”

It’s an attitude that’s almost wholly out of step with the way managers operate in 2026. Arena gets away with it because he wins, and he wins in large part because of the way he sets out the roles and expectations for his players. Robbie Keane, Arena’s star striker at LA Galaxy, once called him the “Sir Alex Ferguson of America.” Matt Turner, who during Arena’s tenure at the New England Revolution rose to be a USMNT starter, praised the “super powerful thing” Arena offers his players through man management.

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“When you have 25 guys that are on the same page, they know their role, and they know what they can do to help the team the best, it’s a beautiful thing and it creates this energy around the locker room that boosts everyone’s play,” Turner told the New England Revolution website in 2021. “It really simplifies the game so when you’re in higher-pressure moments you can execute.”

Judging from the 2026 MLS season so far, Timo Werner may have similar things to say. The German moved to MLS at the start of this year after a couple down seasons with RB Leipzig, the club where he first made his name as one of Europe’s most in-demand strikers. He filled a cadre of roles in his career, which took him to Chelsea and later to Tottenham on loan. His Premier League stays were uneven; impressive in moments but never scoring near as much as he did in Germany, due at least in part to a lack of consistent service. In San Jose, on a team that lost their best provider, Cristian Espinoza, in the offseason, it was fair to wonder if Werner could be an effective player while transitioning to a wholly different type of league.

Those doubts seem so silly now. With his brace on Saturday against Saint Louis City, Werner now has eight goal contributions in his first eight games – one factor among many that have propelled the surprising Earthquakes to the best record in MLS. Werner has not been a starter for all of these wins as he has built up his fitness, but he hasn’t had to be – in typical Arena fashion, the Quakes are more than the sum of their parts. Still, there’s no questioning that Werner has raised the level of the group as he has rounded into match form. Because that’s exactly what was expected of him.

“[Arena] said ‘You are the top player, and I want to win something with you,’” Werner told Goal.com last month. “He always said he would be behind me. He will help me.”

It helps that he’s been put in a system where his skills as an all-around player – a lethal finisher, a quick reader of the game, and a center of gravity willing to get his teammates open looks – have been accentuated. The Earthquakes are experiencing significant contributions not just from Werner, but also wingerOusseni Bouda, striker Preston Judd, and up-and-coming playmaker Niko Tsakiris. Without Werner on the field, they have done well enough to be considered a threat. But with Werner around to calmly finish off plays as he did in St Louis on Saturday, the Earthquakes have made the leap from solid to scary. – AA

The history of Major League Soccer is littered with awful teams and awful seasons. It’s early going yet, but Sporting Kansas City is starting to make a very good argument that they’re putting together the worst campaign in league history – especially after this weekend’s 5-0 drubbing by the Chicago Fire.

On paper alone, SKC have been staggeringly bad. After nine matches, the club has but a single victory, an unconvincing, 2-1 win over an LA Galaxy side that’s been navigating their own atrocious campaign. At minus-18, SKC are well on their way to shattering the record for worst-ever goal differential in a single season, having scored only seven goals through about a third of their campaign, a mark that also threatens the league’s all-time record.

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For years, Sporting have been held aloft as a model MLS franchise, the first example of an MLS original that reinvented and rejuvenated itself. They were among the league’s most consistently competitive teams for over a decade (even if they rarely made a deep run in the playoffs), but there were signs that something like this downfall was coming.

The club has gotten progressively worse over the past three years. No team in MLS has fewer points over that timeframe. The departure of Peter Vermes last year after over a decade in the technical area and in the front office – Vermes was both head coach and the chief soccer officer for his entire tenure – needed to be done, but a leadership void naturally followed. Sporing appointed widely respected former NYCFC sporting director David Lee as sporting director, but expiring contracts and declined options left the club with just 12 players entering the 2026 offseason. And the most experienced of those, forward Daniel Salloi, was soon traded to Toronto FC.

Still, there was a little hope that with more roster flexibility than any MLS team is likely to have without being an expansion team, the club might finally start turning a corner and building for the future.

Not so. SKC has rolled out something akin to a USL roster this year, though even that assessment may prove generous given the fact that Sporting got positively obliterated in the US Open Cup by the Colorado Springs Switchbacks, a midtable USL Championship side. Lee, alongside first-year head coach Rafa Wicky, says the team have a longer-term plan, a roster build that will start in earnest this summer with the addition of recruitment staff that never existed under Vermes. In the meantime, what could’ve been a transitional year has turned into – as of now – the worst season in MLS history.

There are, of course, other candidates. DC United had more own goals (4) than their leading scorer, Luis Silva, scored (3) during a staggeringly bad 2013 campaign, though that team somehow managed to win the Open Cup. FC Cincinnati put up a trifecta of awful campaigns early in their history which included a 20 (!) game winless streak in 2021. Reaching back further to teams like the NY/NJ MetroStars and Tampa Bay Mutiny feels more statistically challenging given the fact that the league lacked draws for several years and played significantly fewer matches.

Online discourse among SKC’s faithful seems to center around whether this is a coaching or talent problem. At the moment, it certainly feels like both, and however you cut it, this is by far the worst team in Kansas City’s 30-year history, by a wide margin. – PM

In news that will spark either joy or heated debate (or both!) among USMNT fans, Matt Turner is the best goalkeeper in the league right now, even as he’s expected to be a backup at this summer’s World Cup behind NYC FC’s Matt Freese.

Related: A long-term plan with mixed results: how Matt Crocker’s US Soccer tenure stacked up

The good news a welcome change of pace for Turner, who was between the sticks for the United States’ 5-2 loss to Beligum last month. Though Turner didn’t cover himself in glory in the effort, his performance was far from the USMNT’s biggest problem that afternoon, with head coach Mauricio Pochettino somewhat absolving him of responsibility in his post-game remarks.

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