Photo @PhilaUnionII courtesy Philadelphia Union II communications
For the first half Marlon LeBlanc’s high school adolescents dreamed the dream that Philadelphia Union II might bring a trophy home from Texas as they led at the break 2-0. But in the second half Michel Garbini’s college men asserted themselves, scored three times and turned the Union II’s dream into a nightmare.
Since back in 2016 then Editor-at-Large Dan Walsh forbade anyone ever again to write that any match had been a tale of two halves, we cannot say that even though it clearly was.
Markus Anderson scored for Philadelphia in the ninth minute on a spilled blast by MLS Next Pro Goalkeeper of the Year Daniel Collodi. And less than nine minutes later in the 18th Eddy Davis doubled the score on a strike that Collodi could do nothing about.
But in the 51st North Texas striker from Oregon State and the third pick in last year’s Superdraft Logan Farrington struck a free kick brilliantly past Philadelphia goalkeeper Andrew Rick. And 14 minutes later in the 67th right midfielder Herbert Endeley crossed through the box to the far post where left winger Enes Sali had lost his marker for an equalizer against which Rick had no chance.
Finally, after Union II went down a man with 15 minutes to go for a clear last man back denial of a goal scoring opportunity (DOGSO), Pedrinho closed on the left post to score a similar cross from Tomas Pondeca for the win.
News in advance
Neither of the first-team parent clubs remains alive in Major League Soccer’s playoffs, but their two second teams were restricted to the 26 players they had already chosen for their playoffs’ rosters. We do not know who those 26 players were for either side.
An earlier, problematic, Saturday weather forecast had resolved. The storm system passed through Friday and Friday night. Game day was sunny with no mention of local cyclonic phenomena. Tap-off was under the lights and 64 degrees.
North Texas won the USL League One championship in 2019, the first year of its and that league’s existence. Current North Texas interim head coach Michel Garbini played in that match for North Texas.
Neither Union II nor its predecessor Bethlehem Steel FC had ever played a home playoff game before 2024, let alone won three of them to play away for a league championship.
The two teams had never played each other in an official match in any year. Unofficially, they had never met in a preseason friendly either.
The most important difference between the sides was their respective age philosophies. A distinctly younger team, Philly, was challenging an older one, North Texas. Eight of the 11 North Texas starters could have celebrated the win by walking into a bar and ordering beverage alcohol legally. Only one Union II starter could have done the same.
While our data concerning FC Dallas, North Texas SC, and Dallas’s Academy are less certain than our Union II information, we think we know that North Texas had no academy amateurs on its game day roster while Philadelphia had four. North Texas had four first team Homegrowns while Union II had five.
First half
In a single phrase the story of the first half was Philadelphia Union II’s counter-pressure and high pressure dominated. North Texas had never experienced it, took 20 minutes to catch their breath, and roughly 20 more to begin to adjust to it.
Union II won a corner kick 53 seconds after tap. They scored their first goal in the ninth minute with right back Gavin Wetzel all the way forward to the penalty box to intercept a poor clearance and deliver the assist. They scored their second in the 18th when Cavan Sullivan was as far forward as the North Texas center back and delivered the assist for a shot from moderate distance to the opposite post on which the North Texas keeper had no chance.
North Texas’s first shot on target happened after 40 minutes and was a header right at Union II keeper Andrew Rick.
Without any statistics to support the assertion, our eyeballs and the seat of our pants say that Philly won every second ball and every 50:50 ball.
The Texans had three first half shots with only one on target. The Pennsylvanians had eight and four.
Second half
Coach LeBlanc substituted striker Sal Olivas for goal scorer Anderson at halftime.
North Texas interim coach Michel Garbini shifted his shape from the initial 3-4-3 to a 4-2-3-1 with Farrington pushed forward as a lone striker to reduce the ability of Union II center backs Neil Pierre and Olwethu Makhanya to intervene against north Texas’s attempts to control possession and penetrate Philadelphia’s defensive third.
The Texans took control of the tempo and played with much greater poise and urgency. And as has happened before this year, Union II played with not quite the same level of intensity they had had in the first half.
The substitution move LeBlanc made in the 79th minute may have told a story. At that point 30 minutes of extra time looked like Union II’s future, and coach did something we do not remember him having done all season. He sat both CJ Olney and David Vazquez at the same time leaving only Nick Pariano from his original midfield four. it has been a long season and the midfield stalwarts may well have been quite tired.
For that last ten plus stoppage LeBlanc was in a 4-1-2-2 being a man down. It was an ingenious improvisation. Wetzel, Pierre, Carlos Rojas, and Westfield were the back four. Jamir Berdecio had come on for Sullivan and was a single six. And Pariano and Sequera were the twin midfielders with Riasco and Olivas the strikers.
Unfortunately Pedrinho and Pondeca imitated Sali and Endeley from earlier and the match was over.
Cavan Sullivan
The Philly Phenom spent less time creating overloads on the flank and more time trying for combinations in the middle, we suspect because Texas had practiced how to force Union II into that pattern. He took something of a pounding in the first half while the referee was taking a more laissez faire attitude toward policing bad fouls than he did during Texas’s half of dominance. Sullivan did get one excellent shot on goal from distance that forced a good save from Collodi.
Sullivan was good. He belonged. He was not spectacular. He is not yet ready to save the first team next year. Jim Curtin’s successor must cultivate his growth effectively.
Next match
Union II’s 2024 MLS NEXT Pro season is over, as is North Texas’s.
Whether there will be any Union II post-season friendlies as in previous years is a question we did not ask to avoid creating a commentator’s jinx. The news conference next Monday in Chester with the Sporting Director and the Principal Owner may further inform questions of postseason activity.
Three points
- Olwethu Makhanya allowed Farrington to get goal side of him in the 75th leading to the DOGSO red card. It was Union II’s first red card of 2024. It is ironic that two days after Jim Curtin was fired his play confirmed Curtin’s complaint that he tends to make game changing mistakes.
- We will never know exactly what interim Texas coach Michel said to his side at halftime about being college men shown up by high-schoolers. Judging by his first half body language and facial expression, we suspect he may have mentioned the point.
- Cavan Sullivan, Jordan Griffin who did not dress, Jamir Johnson who dressed but did not play, Andrew Rick, Neil Pierre, CJ Olney, and David Vazquez all were called up to either the USYNT U17s camp or the U19s camp in West Palm Beach and probably travelled directly thence from Dallas. Only one North Texas player from the match joined them, Diego Garcia.
BOXSCORE
Lineups
Union II (4-1-2-1-2, L-R) 1st – 8; 2nd – 8; A – 4. (Superscripts indicate which of the three roster sources applies.)
Starters: Andrew Rick1; Frank Westfield2, Olwethu Makhanya1, Neil Pierre2, Gavin WetzelA; Nick Pariano1; CJ Olney1 (Carlos Rojas2 79′) , David Vazquez1; (Jose Riasco2 79′)) Cavan Sullivan1 (Jamir Berdecio1 64′); Eddy DavisA (Giovanny Sequera2 67′), Markus Anderson1 (Sal Olivas2 HT) Starters’ Ave Age = 18.7
Rick | Westfield | Makhanya | Pierre | Wetzel | Pariano |
18.8 | 18.9 | 20.5 | 17.1 | 18.2 | 21.6 |
Olney | Vazquez | Sullivan | Davis | Anderson | |
17.7 | 18.7 | 15.1 | 18.4 | 20.9 |
Unused substitutes: Mike Sheridan2; Kyle Tucker2, Kellan LeBlancA, Jamir JohnsonA.
North Texas (3-4-3), 1st – 9; 2nd – 11; A – 0. (Superscripts indicate which of the three roster sources applies.)
Starters: Daniel Collodi2; Mats Westergren2, Carl Sainte1 (Anthony Ramirez2 61′), Nico Gordon2; Tyshawn Rose2(Abdoul Zanne2 61′) Diego Garcia2 (Tomas Pondeca1 67′), Nolan Norris1, Herbert Endeley1; Enes Sali1 (Malik Henry-Scott1 90+2′), Logan Farrington1 (Turner Humphrey2,90+2′), Pedrinho2. Starters’ Ave Age = 21.0
Collodi | Westergren | Sainte | Gordon | Rose | Garcia |
23 | 22 | 22 | 22 | 24 | 18 |
Norris | Endeley | Sali | Farrington | Pedrinho | |
18 | 23 | 18 | 22 | 21 |
Unused substitutes: Antonio Carrera1; Tarik Scott1, Nicholas Mendonca2, Daniel Baran2.
Goals
Union II 9th minute Markus Anderson (Gavin Wetzel)
Union II 18th minute Eddy Davis III (Cavan Sullivan)
N. Texas 51st minute Logan Farrington (free kick)
N. Texas 67th minute Enes Sali (Herbert Endeley)
N. Texas 90+1st minute Pedrinho (Tomas Pondeca)
Yellow Cards
Union II 47th minute Frank Westfield (foul)
N. Texas 51st minute Pedrinho (retaliation)
N. Texas 57th minute Herbert Endeley (foul)
N. Texas 59th minute Enes Sali (foul)
Red Card
Union II 75th minute Olwethu Makhanya (DOGSO)
Stats
NT | Statistic | U II | NT | Statistic | U II |
10 | Shots | 12 | 3 | Offsides | 2 |
6 | Shots on goal | 6 | 4 | Goalkeeper Saves | 3 |
4 | Blocked shots | 4 | 4 | Clearances | 7 |
528 | Total Passes | 267 | |||
79.9 | Pass Accuracy % | 67.4 | 12 | Fouls | 18 |
5 | Corners | 6 | 3 | Yellow Cards | 1 |
4 | Total Crosses | 7 | 0 | Red Cards | 1 |
Whistle & Flags
Ref: Joshua Encarnacion, AR1: Art Arustamyan, AR2: Jeremy Smith, 4TH: Jeremy Scheer, RAR: Max Smith. (Writer’s note: We believe RAR = replacement assistant referee.)
I hope they don’t promote this coach for the 1st team. He managed the game just like Curtin. Up 2 in the 2nd half and played to not lose. Then they gave up a goal and tried to preserve the 1 goal lead by taking out their phenom City Sullivan, with 20 minutes left to play. After North Texas tied it, they didn’t have the offense to get the winner. This is what happens when you play not to lose, rather than playing to win. Oh, yeah. He’s like Curtin in another way, too. He lost a Hardware Final!
After scoring 2 goals they just kicked and ran. Their passing game we had seen in the last game and for the fist part of the first half fell apart for some reason.
College v High School is true but a mask. The choke artists once again deservedly failed themselves and the undeserving fans. They got up 2-0 early and bottled it with a cowardly and unfocused breakdown in obtaining final victory. That’s what’s juvenile versus mature.
. . .
If they want mommy and daddy’s pampered consoling (and the soccer mom culture with attitude is endemic for anyone who attends U2 matches), they can kiss my ass. They’re chosen professionals and required to act like it. The best that can be said is that they might grow the hell up to learn what’s required to be a professional champion.
This club is Lucy with the football. That’s the clib culture, Guess why nobody knows who is the world record holder of silver and bronze? Because nobody gives a shit. Add in the cheap ownership, and the only silverware we’ll see is at the supper table.
. . .
Thankfully for them, there’s local soccer junkie fans like us that refuse to follow anything but Philly. Lord knows this club never earns it on merit.
RePete – you’re comical! It’s a shame, a person like RePete call himself a soccer junkie. Dude’s a clown…more likely never played the sport at any competitive level of meaning in his life. Therefore, you have no idea the commitment, talent level or mental toughness it takes to get to the level that those “boys” play – and yes I said boys because their average age is 18.5.
RePete, you couldn’t tie the boots of any of those kids that competed on the pitch that evening in Frisco that you call “choke artists.” You sound like a jealous, salty ass never was…with your comments. Talk about juvenile versuses maturity – next time you post please use proper punctuation and spelling in your criticisms- We can now decipher who the juvenile really is.
U2 provided a team to get behind and pull for in the midst of a down year for the 1st team. Look at the drwas they were getting throughout the year. Bunch of young kids, having fun, playing together, chasing their dreams. They provided faith in the process that maybe the Union are doing things right especially when it comes to the talent pool. The past has produced talent that helped build success and the future is filled with more & more coming through the pipe. I for one am proud of those boys and the job they did this year – what an incredible season – did it end the way we would have like – NOPE – but that’s sports. But the building blocks are their for a new foundation moving the club forward.
Don’t get on the wagon when they’re back at the top again – YOU HATER!
What happened to Tucker over the season? I guess he got buried on the depth chart but his experience would’ve been valuable in this game no?
The sad part is that the DOGSO was an unnecessary foul. The ball was far enough ahead of him that Rick would have had a chance at a save.
Credit to the Texas coach for changing his shape early on and bringing in subs that changed the game. The pressure reduced the UII to hopeful long balls in the second half. Their patience to work the ball up the field was gone.
It was fun attending the UII matches this year despite the all-too-common Philly type exit.
2-0 lead, then coming from ahead to lose in the last few minutes. SO typical Union; the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.
/
LeBlanc will fit right in on the first team.
‘RePete’s Owner’ Aww…precious.
. . .
Here’s some harsh reality again. You own the art of bluff over stuff. I won regularly in sports. Life has remained exceptionally successful. That’s not accidental. Part of winning requires an accountable mentality, so look, listen, and learn from those who know how.
. . .
Pissing away a two goal lead in a final through implosion is unacceptable, and professionally more so. It deserves every bit of heat so it doesn’t happen again.
. . .
They’re professionals. 18 is adult. They’re gifted with lifestyle and investment advantages where barrio boys learn to win younger with less. They are accountable.
. . .
That’s where you come in. You exhibit the participation trophy mentality that also fails the USMNT. It’s an institutional problem in US soccer.
. . .
If you’re a parent or otherwise connected to them, you’re setting them up for professional failure with that shit. If you’re a fan, you’re a poor one by excusing unacceptable controllable lapses regarding duties owed to you. “Bunch of young kids, having fun, playing together, chasing their dreams” my ass…this is professional sports, and they’re accountable when subpar lapses cost championships.