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Tag: Zack Steffen

  • Rapids to face rival Real Salt Lake with playoff hopes, trophy front and center

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    Confidence isn’t exactly surging in Commerce City.

    Entering the final two-game stretch of the MLS regular season, the Colorado Rapids are looking over their shoulder as they hit the straightaway of a marathon that began back in February.

    Closing in behind them is Real Salt Lake, which hosts the Rapids at 7:30 p.m. Saturday for the Rocky Mountain Cup finale in Sandy, Utah. Two weeks later, the Rapids close the season at home against the league’s current best attacking duo in Denis Bouanga and Son Heung-Min, who have scored LAFC’s last 18 goals in the eight games since Son joined the club.

    RSL, currently just three points back from the Rapids in 11th place in the Western Conference, has two things going for it: Momentum with a 3-1 win over sixth-place Austin last Saturday, and a knack for burying the Rapids at America First Field. Not to mention Colorado’s dismal road form as of late.

    A positive: The Rapids have beaten RSL this year already. That was back in May, when Djordje Mihailovic struck in the 70th minute for the game’s only tally. They had also been on a bad run of form away from home leading up to that match, going 0-3-1 in their previous four games.

    A little extra motivation: The Rapids could walk away with their second straight Rocky Mountain Cup with a win, draw or one-goal loss. The trophy, however inconsequential in the big picture, is taken seriously by the club.

    “It’s a two-for-one. I mean, it’s got all the reasons to win the game. The Rocky Mountain Cup is for our fans, so for us it’s one of the most important things,” Rapids coach Chris Armas said. “Every time there’s a trophy on the line, we want to be playing for that and put ourselves in that spot. You win that game, it puts you three points closer to the playoffs, gets us the Rocky Mountain Cup. It’s 100 out of 100 important to make the playoffs; same time, lifting that trophy would be huge for our fans.”

    The Rapids looked good post-Leagues Cup after Mihailovic forced his way out of Dick’s Sporting Goods Park in August, nabbing three points on the road against a top-3 Western Conference team in Minnesota United. Since then, they’ve collected seven points in six games, a stretch that could have yielded at least 10 points, and arguably more.

    That said, the Rapids do still have an ounce of control left in regard to securing an MLS playoff spot, mostly thanks to the West’s middle of the pack cannibalizing itself week after week. Mathematically, Colorado gets in with two wins.

    But when asked if the Rapids are up for that sort of mental challenge, goalkeeper Zack Steffen didn’t offer much certainty.

    “I have no idea. We’ll see come Saturday,” Steffen said after training on Tuesday. “All we can do is push every day in training, and when the game comes, give it our best.”

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    Braidon Nourse

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  • Rafael Santos impresses as Rapids beat Houston at the death

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    Rafael Santos is already worth the price of admission.

    Three games into his Colorado Rapids tenure, the club paying $125,000 in General Allocation Money — less than the going price of an international roster slot — is looking like highway robbery.

    The left back has three assists in that time span, including one on the opening goal in Saturday’s 2-1 win against the Houston Dynamo at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park.

    The assist itself wasn’t spectacular, but it was smart and required careful execution. On a free kick from striking distance, Santos lined up and postured to take it, but instead dragged it behind him to set up Cole Bassett for a shot on the move. The delicate setup created a path around the wall for Bassett to hit, which he did from about 22 yards out.

    The strike was Bassett’s third goal of the season and first since mid-July. It was his 31st all-time for the Rapids, tying him with Chris Henderson for the sixth most in club history.

    The Rapids’ winner came in the 90+6th minute, when a corner kick glanced off Paxten Aaronson’s head, then went in off Houston defender Felipe Andrade. All of DSGP thought Aaronson had scored his first goal for his new club, but it was credited as an own goal.

    Santos continued his hot start with a pair of impressive crosses later in the first half. Either one could have netted an additional assist.

    His signing was done in part to give competition to Sam Vines for the role moving forward with a less-than-impressive campaign from the Homegrown. So far, it’s a landslide at the top of that totem pole.

    What impresses about Santos is what has been lacking from Vines. Vines made a name for himself in 2021 running in attacks and whipping in solid crosses, essentially making himself a winger who tracked back to defend. His service has not been the same since returning to the Rapids for the 2024 season.

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    Braidon Nourse

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  • USMNT Snubs Ricardo Pepi, Zack Steffen Show Leaving MLS For Europe Can Backfire

    USMNT Snubs Ricardo Pepi, Zack Steffen Show Leaving MLS For Europe Can Backfire

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    There’s a general consensus that the best young American MLS players should try to test themselves at the top levels of the European game if they have the opportunity. Where there is less agreement is just how eager those prospects should be to take any European offer at the expense of waiting for one that will offer a better long-term fit.

    And Wednesday’s announcement of manager Gregg Berhalter’s 26-player U.S. men’s national team World Cup squad — and particularly the omission of striker Ricardo Pepi and goalkeeper Zack Steffen — may influence future young MLS talents to be pickier about when and how they make the move.

    While it’s impossible to say either Pepi or Steffen would be heading to the 2022 tournament in Qatar if they’d stayed in MLS, it’s almost certain their paths since leaving have not contributed positively to their chances. And in both players’ cases, the obstacles they faced to continuing to develop as players were predictable before their European moves became official.

    When Steffen left the Columbus Crew for Manchester City after winning the 2019 MLS Cup, Ederson had been established as City’s No. 1 goalkeeper for two-and-a-half seasons. It was already apparent Steffen would have to gain his first playing time on a loan assignment, which he did at Eintracht Frankfurt in the German Bundesliga.

    None of those factors played into the recurring injury issues he has faced in that time. But he faced a lack of playing time regardless of his health when he returned to City for the 2021-2022 season. And he appeared to clearly suffer from it in his outings for the U.S. national team during international breaks or his occasional starts in a City shirt in cup competitions.

    His jarring error for City in a 4-1 FA Cup semifinal defeat to Liverpool in April may have ended his time at a club that are defending back-to-back Premier League titles. He’s officially still on the City payroll, but now on a year-long loan to Middlesbrough of the League Championship, where he’s finally found regular playing time again.

    There were also early reasons to fret over Pepi’s move to FC Augsburg in the German Bundesliga. The 18-year-old had only one full season as a regular MLS starter, and not only was he going to a new country, league and club, but to the kind of situation where center forwards with more experience often struggle: a defensive-minded team focused on staving off relegation. To ratchet the pressure higher, a reported $20-million transfer fee was a club record for Augsburg and an MLS record for an outgoing American.

    Pepi struggled profoundly, never scoring in a league match for Augsburg, and struggling for the U.S. as well after he produced three crucial goals early in Concacaf World Cup Qualifying. It got bad enough that Augsburg eventually agreed to a loan to Dutch Eredivisie side Groningen early this season. Pepi has regained his scoring form with the move, but apparently not convincingly enough to recapture Berhalter’s attention and confidence.

    Pepi and Steffen may yet live up to their European expectations. But the instability of their early journeys there certainly seems to have cost both men at a critical juncture in their international careers.

    Beyond implications for other young Americans in MLS, it also probably gets at a more global truth in professional sports, that stability is rare and underrated.

    Just take the newly unveiled U.S. squad. Of the players that were likely the “last in” to Berhalter’s 26-man squad, nearly all of them have spent more than one season with their current teams, be it Seattle’s Jordan Morris and Cristian Roldan, Norwich City’s Josh Sargent, Fulham’s Tim Ream or Antalyaspor’s Haji Wright. The probable “last out” have all been on the move more recently, from Steffen and Pepi to Union Berlin’s Jordan Pefok and FC Dallas’ Paul Arriola.

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    Ian Nicholas Quillen, Contributor

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