Analysis / Union

Weekend thoughts amidst the Union’s on-going roster build

Photo PSP photo essay August 14, 2025

Almost certainly Philadelphia Union players officially report for physicals a week from yesterday, that is Saturday, January 10th, 2026. We conclude roster announcements may come thick and fast this week. We doubt that the roster build, particularly its announcements, will be complete before the team leaves for Spain on January 17th. That would be a departure from recent past practice, but for obvious reasons the 2026 season starts earlier than recent years .

A Glesnes replacement?

There are unofficial but almost certainly reliable reports that the Union will announce signing Danish center back Sery Larsen (25.7-years-old). That should ease worries about Philadelphia’s back line. Like Jakob Glesnes back in January of 2020, Larsen comes from Norway’s Eliteserien (top flight). Like Glesnes was then, so Larsen is now 25 years old.  Like Glesnes his stature is almost certainly physically solid judging by his reported height (6’1″) and weight (172 lbs.). Unlike Glesnes Larsen  was not however captain of his Norwegian side (SK Brann of Bergen).

Also unlike Glesnes his Transfermarkt estimated roster asset value at the time of original Philadelphia acquisition is over a million dollars, so he may perhaps represent a slight step up in quality. One hopes his top-level pace is greater than Glesnes’s, but unlike Union decision-makers we civilians will learn that only later via the eyeball test.

Glesnes, Baribo, & Wagner: The business plan
Player Acquired Est Buy Est Sale Profit
Glesnes Jan 2020 $    770 K $ 1,100 K $    330 K
Baribo Aug 2023 $ 1,500 K $ 4,000 K $ 2,500 K
Wagner Feb 2019 $       50 K $ 2,900 K $ 2,850 K
All three players had become TAM players for Philadelphia by 2025.

We used only monies that should already be in hand, excluding the enthusiasm of  further potential future revenues.

Venezuela

Given recent developments between Venezuela and the United States, monitoring travel conditions between the two countries may be relevant for Union fans as the team assembles in Philadelphia.

  • Philadelphia Union II 2025 center back Rafael Uzcategui who reportedly has a club option for 2026 (about which nothing has yet been announced) is thought to have earlier been training in Venezuela during the offseason, as per PSP colleague Alex Hayden.
  • First team primary defensive midfield reserve Jesus Bueno is Venezuelan, although supposedly has had family living with him in the U. S. during recent seasons.
  • Union II right back Gio Sequera who is recently rumored to have been permanently acquired by the Union itself after two years of loans to the second team is also Venezuelan.
A rebuilt defensive line
Left Back Left Center Back Right Center Back Right Back

Not yet known

Per@TomBogert

Makhnaya

U22; 21.7

Larsen

25.7

Harriel

HG; 24.7

Westfield

20.1

Martinez

23.0

Pierre

18.2

Mbaizo

28.4

??Griffin??

AcadAm; 17.3

Uzcategui

U II; 21.2

Sundstrom

19.1

Sequera

19.9

Ages and significant roster details are given below each player.

The dean of MLS’s own writers, Armchair Analyst Matt Doyle calls Tom Bogert “Tommy Scoops” and suggests all MLS fans set their IT communications devices automatically to receive notifications from him if they are interested in MLS roster developments. Since Bogert reports for The Athletic, a subsidiary of The NY Times, his reporting must conform to the Times’s rules about sources, especially those sources that remain anonymous. Since starting with The Athletic, Bogert has not been wrong about Union roster developments. He says the Union will sign a new left back so we believe him.

  • The defense diagramed above has three starting-caliber center backs, Makhanya (MLS), Larsen (Eliteserien), and Martinez (Liga AUF Uruguaya).
  • Pierre is number four and should begin to practice regularly with the first team this season. His game minutes may still come from Union II.
  • We expect Uzcategui to have his option exercised by Union II although our expectation iremains a guess, He could easily become Ryan Richter’s captain for 2026, but that is a also a guess.
  • Sundstrom is a promising windfall from North Carolina’s decision to suspend operations for its senior male team for the next two seasons. We expect Sundstrom initially to practice with Union II and sit their bench as a defensive reserve. Coach Richter will be teaching him Carnell’s philosophy and system as he did with Uzcategui did last year.

A Larson-like acquisition at left back would make the Philadelphia starting back line credible keeping Harriel in the right channel. Westfield would be the top outside back reserve for either outside channel. Mbaizo is a proven reserve at right back . We expect Sequera will accumulate experience in early-in-the-week first team practices and second team games as the heir apparent to Mbaizo who is 28.4-years-old (roughly the same age as Wagner and Baribo). Assuming amateur Jordan Griffin continues to play his soccer for Philadelphia’s Academy and not for some new organization, he should have another year of play as the second team left back.

The depth above should suffice for the defense to fulfill the Union’s 2026 schedule, barring injury.  Excluding improbable upsets in the Concacaf Champions Cup (C C Cup), between C C Cup and MLS’s regular season that schedule will play nine games in the season’s first 32 days, quite the opening sprint!

3 Comments

  1. I forgot to include one relevant detail. The maximum individual salary budget charge for 2026 is $803,125. That is the maximum salary the league itself will pay.
    .
    Any salary greater than that number must be paid by the club itself using either TAM, GAM, or cash.
    .
    Remember that the league itself is involved in paying only six “special players,” i.e., DPs and U22s (either 3 and 3, or 2 DPs and 4 U22s). TAM players’ money above and beyond the individual maximum budget charge is the club’s responsibility directly.
    .
    I assume without any direct or indirect outside corroboration that the total aggregated salary budget charge — the same for each club and discoverable in the relevant collective bargaining agreement (CBA) available on the players Union’s website — is paid to the league by the club itself. I have no idea how far in advance.
    .
    In other words the Mas brothers in Miami pay Messi more than $11 million directly above and beyond the the $803,125 they pay him funneled through the league.

  2. Gruncle Bob says:

    Sundstrom has been a starter for a full season in a league that is better than Next Pro. Being a reserve for U II is a step down. It will be interesting to see if he can force himself into the line-up.

  3. Father of Ben says:

    Thank you for your in depth reporting, I definitely learn a lot from your detailed analysis. However, honestly, I have to admit that I reject the premise of your first chart.

    Listing a “Profit” assigns no value to the money that you saved from stability at a position that required no further spend on transfer funds. Often, no spend is required over numerous years.

    Additionally, a simple delta of “Sell” price minus “Buy” price applies no weight to the actual performance garnered over that contract period. More importantly, the equation is further incomplete because after the “Sell” you must roll that new money into a new player. Granted that next player may be cheaper and you can get back some money, but what if they are an inferior performer to the previous player, or both?

    I prefer to think of it on the front end of the calculation. If you are able to mine lower division talent around the world for low transfer dollars, have them for a number of years on a slowly sliding up pay scale, and especially if they happen to become MLS Best 11 players, you have already won.

    The comparisons to the “Moneyball” method, that always comes up about the Philadelphia Union’s financial approach, too, is something else that never made sense to me. The Moneyball method was most notably applied to baseball, where a small market team has local TV money and can’t compete with the large market teams. They aren’t selling anyone high. Most acquisitions would be for Free Agents, so it is simply mining undervalued players for cheap payroll.

    As everyone knows, most transfers in soccer are not of the free variety. Therefore, most of the profit that the Union takes ultimately goes right back out the door (for inferior talent to what is leaving, or talent that needs more time to mature). For example, Carranza left and in came Damiani. Carranza’s first loan year was 16 Apps: 7 Goals, while Damiani’s first year was 28 Apps: 5 Goals.

    Since it’s not really an apples to apples comparison to “Moneyball” anyway, and in true Philly fashion, I prefer to just refer to this CHEAP Soccer philosophy as “Unionball”!

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