With more goals scored across Saturday and Sunday than in any previous opening weekend in league history (and more teams scoring four-plus goals than in any opening weekend in the modern era), itās safe to say the 2025 MLS season kicked off with a bang.
As we look back on Matchday 1, what burning questions popped up across the first set of games? And how will the answers to those questions impact Matchday 2 and beyond?
Letās dive in.
After playing a midweek game against Sporting Kansas City in the Concacaf Champions Cup, new manager Javier Mascherano rotated a chunk of his squad for Saturdayās clash with New York City FC. Specifically, he swapped newcomer Gonzalo LujĆ”n for homegrown Noah Allen at center back, with the 20-year-old starting next to TomĆ”s AvilĆ©s in the heart of the backline.
Against NYCFC, the backline didnāt hold. AvilĆ©s earned himself a red card less than 25 minutes into the match at Chase Stadium, forcing his teammates to play with 10 men. And Allen, for all of the value added via his positional versatility, isnāt exactly a towering presence through the middle. With David MartĆnez recovering from an ankle injury and LujĆ”n on short rest, Miamiās pool of quality available center backs quickly dried up in the 2-2 draw.
With another CCC game this week and Leagues Cup and Club World Cup games coming later this year, Inter Miamiās defensive depth will be tested in a real way. Sure, Maxi Falcón and LujĆ”n should be able to play regular minutes as the year goes on. MartĆnez should get back to full fitness soon, too. But even then, Falcón and LujĆ”n are new to the league, and AvilĆ©s and Allen (plus potentially Sergio Busquets) post questions at center back.
Weāve already seen how defense remains Miamiās weakness ā and weāre literal days into the 2025 season. Itās fair to wonder if they'll find solutions when visiting Houston for Sunday Night Soccer (7 pm ET | MLS Season Pass, Apple TV+).
For almost 40 minutes, the new-look Chicago Fire were taking it to the Columbus Crew.
Defensively, new manager Gregg Berhalter encouraged his team to defend with aggression both in a high press and in a compact 4-3-3 mid-block ā to the point where they even managed to fluster Wilfried Nancyās Crew team at times. In possession, Berhalter clearly instructed his players to control the ball with short passes in their own half while looking for space to release new Designated Player left winger Jonathan Bamba.
There was a whole lot of beautiful ball from Chicago in the opening stagesā¦
ā¦and then, well, they crumbled. Playing out of the back went wrong. Multiple times. Continued defensive aggression turned into poorly executed tackles. Adjustments were slow to arrive after Nancy tweaked his teamās positioning midway through the first half. The result? A 4-2 defeat.
But, again, there were legitimately promising signs from the Fire. They truly owned the beginning of this game on the road against a well-drilled, albeit short-handed, Crew squad.
Itās too early to tell if Berhalterās Chicago will be a great (or even good) team in 2025. But with matches against D.C. United, FC Dallas, and Toronto FC coming up next on the schedule, it shouldnāt shock anybody if they start to stack points.
I have to say: Iām fascinated by whatās going on in San Diego.
Judging by how Sundayās performance at the LA Galaxy backed up the stylistic comparisons the club has been making between themselves and the Columbus Crew, itās safe to say we havenāt seen an expansion team commit to controlling the ball like San Diego FC are doing this year.
They smothered the Galaxy in the first half of their 2-0 debut win, progressing the ball with ease out of their clearly defined 3-2-5 attacking shape:
And on the defensive side, even the stars were bought in on the counter press:
I think San Diego FCās progression play and defensive effort will be close to constants when their first-choice starters are on the field. Still, there are big questions about their ability to create in the final third. After all, San Diego created nothing in the first half and their two goals arrived via a brutal LA Galaxy giveaway inside the 18-yard box and a counterattack in second-half stoppage time.
Exactly how willing Mikey Varas is to slide up the risk scale in the final third against a compact block is absolutely something to watch on Saturday in their first-ever home game against St. Louis CITY SC (10:30 pm ET | MLS Season Pass, Apple TV+).
Donāt look now, but the San Jose Earthquakes are on top of the Supportersā Shield standings!
Okay, fine, that distinction is just about as meaningless as it gets after only one weekendās worth of games. Still, San Jose looked incredibly competent in their season-opening 4-0 win against Real Salt Lake.
Under new manager Bruce Arena, the Quakes set up in a 3-4-1-2 attacking shape, with HernĆ”n López playing underneath Josef MartĆnez and Chicho Arango while Cristian Espinoza and Jamar Ricketts operated as wingbacks. Despite the star power up front, it really was Espinoza (two assists) and Ricketts (a goal in his first MLS start) who stole the show.
Defensively, San Jose weren't airtight. Diego Luna found looks from his spot in the left halfspace and Salt Lake managed a 21-to-14 shot edge over their hosts. Thereās work to do without the ball, a fact that showed even against a rotated RSL squad amid Concacaf Champions Cup play.
But for the team that allowed more goals last season than any other in MLS history? Itās worth celebrating a massive win ahead of next weekendās road trip to Kansas City (8:30 pm ET | MLS Season Pass, Apple TV+).
As it turns out: Emmanuel Latte Lath isnāt just fast. Heās bouncy, too.
The reported $22 million man, who arrived for an MLS-record fee this offseason, became the first player in Atlanta United history to score a brace on his debut. Latte Lath was an absolute menace in the Five Stripes' 3-2 win over CF MontrĆ©al, showing off his aerial ability, predatory scoring instincts inside the 18-yard box and line-stretching pace. Itās early days, but Atlanta Unitedās attack looked reborn with Latte Lath up top and Miguel Almirón floating inside from the right wing to drive the ball downhill.
Atlantaās visit to Charlotte FC on Saturday will provide a tougher test for Latte Lath against Dean Smithās traditionally solid defensive outfit (2:15 pm ET | MLS Season Pass, Apple TV+; FOX, FOX Deportes).
Of course, Latte Lath wasnāt the only big-money striker signing to find the back of the net this past weekend. KĆ©vin Denkey, who arrived from Belgium for a then-record $16.2 million transfer fee early in the offseason, scored the game-winner for FC Cincinnati against the New York Red Bulls:
His mixture of off-ball movement, size, strength and crisp hold-up play gave Pat Noonanās team a valuable reference point ahead of Evander, who made his first start for Cincinnati since an MLS-record trade with the Portland Timbers.
With a trip to Philadelphia on Saturday (7:30 pm ET | MLS Season Pass, Apple TV+) after a midweek CCC clash with Motagua, we wonāt have to wait long to see more of Cincyās new stars.



