Post Tagged with: "C.J. Sapong"

Video

Postgame video: Union 2-2 Toronto

PSP’s Mike Servedio and Greg Orlandini break down the match. Interviews with Rosenberry, Blake, Medunjanin, Bedoya and Sapong. Postgame press conference with Curtin. Click on for more.

Player ratings

Player ratings: Whitecaps 0-0 Union

Who impressed? Who didn’t? PSP hands out player ratings for the Union’s opener.

Players to watch

Player to watch: Alejandro Bedoya

We look at Alejandro Bedoya, the final player in the season preview’s “Players to watch” series. The U.S. international will be asked to do many things. Where will he excel, where will he struggle, and is he the face of the Philadelphia Union?

Featured / Questions to answer

Question to answer: Are the Union a playoff team?

Can the Union meet or even exceed the benchmark they set last season? PSP’s Jim O’Leary takes stock.

Union / Union match reports

Match report: Philadelphia Union 2-2 Montreal Impact

Montreal twice came from behind to earn a 2-2 draw against the Union in preseason play.

Union / Union match reports

Match report: Philadelphia Union 3-3 Orlando City

C.J. Sapong equalized for the Union and Ilson, Jr. produced a brilliant goal as the Union played to a 3-3 draw in a 135-minute scrimmage that was not available for viewing by the public.

Union / Video

Video: Philadelphia Union Media Day

Interviews from Union Media Day with Jim Curtin, Josh Yaro, C.J. Sapong, Auston Trusty, and Fabian Herbers.

Photo by Earl Gardner
Offseason Issues

A chat about the 2017 Union: Part 1

PSP’s Dan Walsh and Peter Andrews have some thoughts about the 2017 Union. About a week’s worth of thoughts, actually. Part 1 looks at the striker position.

Union / Union match reports

Match report: Toronto FC 3-1 Philadelphia Union

Sebastian Giovinco, Jonathan Osorio, and Jozy Altidore were all on target as Toronto FC dispatched the Union in the first round of the MLS Playoffs.

Photo by Earl Gardner
A View from Afar / Commentary

The Union’s collapse is not a regression to the mean

The Union should be a good team right now. Instead, they’re collapsing toward the playoffs so poorly that they don’t deserve the off-season, and the coaching staff deserves some of the blame, writes PSP’s Dan Walsh.