The new kids in town, San Diego FC, take their first-ever trip to Texas this weekend, making their Lone Star State bows at Q2 Stadium for our Matchday 5 Sunday Night Soccer presented by Continental Tire clash at Austin FC (4 pm ET | MLS Season Pass, Apple TV+).
San Diego have figured things out quickly, or so it seems anyway, with two wins and two hard-fought draws in their four outings thus far. Theyāve exhibited a level of solidity that is unusual in an expansion side.
The hosts are finally finding the same, albeit in their fifth year of existence. Itās not sexy, but itās a necessary foundation for any kind of meaningful success in MLS.
Also necessary: goals. Austin are starting to be a little bit desperate for them.
Austin FC
- Austin spent eight figures on Brandon Vazquez this winter, but the big No. 9 has yet to find his first goal (or first good chance, to be honest). Would be a great week to break his duck.
- Winger Osman Bukari has just 2g/2a in about 1,000 minutes since his arrival last summer and has yet to produce a real āwow!ā moment.
- Young Owen Wolff has easily been Austinās most dangerous player this year, and Iām not sure thatās by design. Still, heās getting an opportunity and taking it.
San Diego FC
- With Chucky Lozano out injured for the past few weeks, more of the game has run through the other DP, right winger Anders Dreyer. And the Dane has risen to the occasion as heās been one of the best players in the league to start the season.
- Luca de la Torre is one of my favorite players in the league to watch. Heās so smooth on the ball and effortlessly puts his teammates into good spots. Heās shown some cutting edge the past two weeks as well.
- You probably wonāt notice Jeppe Tverskov out there, but to MLS sickos he looks like a Kyle Beckerman regen (complimentary) in so many ways. Time to start growing the dreads, Jeppe.
There will be no grumbles any time soon (I donāt think, anyway) about this team from a fanbase that really wants to see winning soccer, and are willing to take their time until they get to āattractive, winning soccer.ā There seems to be an overall understanding that new head coach Nico EstĆ©vez has a lot of work to do to piece a largely new roster together and get it all flowing in the same direction.
That work has progressed rapidly on the defensive side of the ball, as the Verde & Black have conceded just twice in four games and have posted the best underlying numbers in the league.
It has been slower offensively, where theyāve managed to score just twice (both from set pieces) and are in the bottom third in the league as per the underlying metrics ā despite having reportedly spent more than $30 million to fix the attack over the past two windows.
So yeah, there wonāt be any grumbles yet. But there might be some whispers that EstĆ©vez brought FC Dallasās attacking woes with him from his previous stop if they donāt generate an open-play goal sometime soon.
Ninety minutes at home in the national spotlight is a pretty great chance to show everyone that progress has been made.
The last time I was this impressed by an MLS expansion team was LAFCās inaugural year, back in 2018. Yeah, I know thatāll upset some folks in St. Louis ā CITY got out to a perfect 5W-0L-0D start back in 2023, and it was all pretty magical. But there were plenty of red flags with that team, from roster construction to underlying numbers to game model, that said it would fall apart. And by the two-thirds mark of that first season, it did.
Itās all pointing in the other direction for San Diego. They are unbeaten in four (2W-0L-2D), have conceded just twice, have won the xG battle every time out and, if anything, have been a little bit unlucky in front of goal. All while mostly playing without Chucky, their star signing.
One green flag after another, to be honest. The NiƱos are good, folks, and my bet is they'll get better throughout the season.
The job this week is simply to keep the vibes high, and the way to do that is to put the ball into the back of the net a couple of times.
Austin FC: Soooooo, who plays center back?
Injuries and the international break are the ultimate MLS tax man, and EstƩvez is undergoing an early defensive audit in Matchday 5.
Oleksandr Svatok (Ukraine) and Leo VƤisƤnen (Finland) are both away for massive international tilts. Svatok and Ukraine are attempting to gain promotion into UEFA Nations League A this window via a home-and-away series win against Belgium. Meanwhile, Finlandās 2026 World Cup qualifying journey begins against Malta and Lithuania.
That leaves Brendan Hines-Ike as the only healthy center back ā opening-day starter Julio Cascante is recovering from a hamstring issue ā and, in my view, only one obvious solution on the roster.
Thatād be Ilie SĆ”nchez, who played central defense in an emergency more than a time or two when he was in Kansas City. Which then begs the question: Would you rather Ilie defend space behind him (Cc: Anders Dreyer) or service in his own area?
No matter how EstƩvez tackles the problem, the tax man cometh.
San Diego FC: Welcome to the Onni Valakari show
With 1g/1a in 117 minutes, the Finland international has been an effective attacking sub for Mikey Varas in all four games and put up big numbers per FBRef: 0.31 xG + 0.65 xA per 90.
With AnĆbal Godoy away with Panama for Concacaf Nations League games, itās likely time to see Valakari from the jump. At 6-foot-2, heās a threat on set pieces ā see his Matchday 4 game-tying goal vs. the Crew ā and puts himself in good spots to receive the ball in dangerous positions.
What San Diego need most from whoever replaces Godoy is progressive passing INTO the final third, mostly to put Dreyer in positions to change the game.
Austin FC
We have a good idea of what they'll be defensively, as itās clear EstĆ©vez made fixing the defense his No. 1 priority. Look at the way they stymied LAFC in LA last week:
Iāll admit some surprise that itās actually a 4-4-2 ā Vazquez has been playing up top with this winterās other big signing, Myrto Uzuni (who will miss this game on international duty) ā instead of some sort of 4-3-3, which is what EstĆ©vez preferred in Dallas.
But I think that speaks to the issues still present in the roster build: thereās no truly creative midfield hub who can carve open opposing defenses and create chances for the front line, thus it makes sense to sacrifice a bit of possession and a ton of field position for space to counter into. Vazquez, Uzuni and Bukari are all somewhere from āpretty fastā to āextremely freaking fast,ā and so the open field should be Austinās friend. In theory.
In practice, they havenāt even really made use of that. So far theyāve managed just two through-balls all year as per Opta, which is (as youād expect) down near the bottom of the league. They hit a lot of long balls (fourth in the league) and complete a good amount of them (Vazquez has done a Benteke-esque job of contesting aerials), but the vast majority of those have been in midfield. As such, Austin are tied for just 19th in final third entries and haven't been efficient at turning those into chances when they make the trek upfield.
So yeah, very much a work in progress. My short take is they spent a lot of money on the front line without entirely thinking through their plans to get the ball to them in good spots, and it shows. But also, theyāve been so good defensively and on restarts that theyāve given themselves some breathing room anyway.
San Diego FC
Through four weeks theyāve played maybe the most compact soccer in the league, and have been committed to that no matter the game state. You can crack them open, but you have to be brave and precise:
Thatās their plan when they donāt have the ball: compress the field and make you string together several special plays to get them into rotation. Iāve written before that they remind me of nothing so much as the great Real Salt Lake teams of 15 years back (weāll count this as my second Beckerman reference of the column), and that became even more true in the second half of last weekendās draw with the Columbus Crew when Mikey Varas switched the NiƱos out of their typical 4-3-3 into more of a 4-4-2 diamond with two strikers attacking the channels.
That type of formational flexibility breeds tactical flexibility. San Diego, more than anything, want to get on the ball a ton and control the game with it. Theyāre at or near the top of the league in possession, passes per possession, passes into and within the attacking third, field tilt and all the rest. Varas told us in preseason that this is how theyād play, and heās been good to his word.
But when theyāve needed to pull another club out of the bag theyāve done so, both in terms of changing up their attacking shape and changing up their pressing structure (look for San Diegoās center forward, if theyāre playing a 4-3-3, to sit on Austinās d-mid, be it Ilie or Dani Pereira, and make it very difficult for him to conduct the game).
This one could feel very chess master-y. Force me to make a guess and Iād say that Austinās low block will force one of San Diegoās fullbacks to play higher and be more aggressive pushing into attack than weāve seen from them over the first month.

I think itāll be the 4-4-2 again but donāt be shocked if itās really a 4-3-3 with Bukari and JĆ”der Obrian flanking Vazquez. Also, be aware that this will be a VERY makeshift backline. Wiebe's theory, which I have bought into, is Ilie will move to center back with Pereira coming back into the CM mix. Could be a chance for the kid to prove a point.

Not as hard-hit by absences as Austin, but there will be some work to do on that backline and central midfield. I'm still expecting the 4-3-3, but Varas has got that diamond in his pocket.
EDIT: And then we got some late-breaking news that starting No. 9 Marcus Ingvartsen will be out for a while. So this team's depth is really starting to be tested.