
Matchday 6 after MLS’s first international break delivered high drama: Son Heung‑min’s four‑assist explosion and LAFC’s 6–0 rout headline a weekend of late comebacks, a brand‑new stadium opening in Miami that exposed defensive frailties, and notable movement in power rankings as teams balance domestic form with looming Concacaf commitments.
MLS Matchday 6 power snapshot
The international window created fractures and opportunities across MLS. Long trips and national team call‑ups shifted momentum, while a handful of individual performances and two late comebacks reshaped perceptions heading into important Concacaf Champions Cup fixtures.

Clubs 30–11: who’s slipping and who’s stable
30. Sporting Kansas City (Previous: 30)
29. CF Montréal (Previous: 29)
28. Atlanta United (Previous: 27)
27. Philadelphia Union (Previous: 18) — early-season regression continues.
26. New England Revolution (Previous: 28)
25. Orlando City (Previous: 22)
24. D.C. United (Previous: 25)
23. Colorado Rapids (Previous: 25)
22. St. Louis CITY SC (Previous: 26)
21. Portland Timbers (Previous: 21)
20. Austin FC (Previous: 23)
19. Toronto FC (Previous: 20)
18. LA Galaxy (Previous: 15) — underperforming given roster talent.
17. Minnesota United (Previous: 19)
16. FC Dallas (Previous: 17)
15. Columbus Crew (Previous: 16)
14. Houston Dynamo (Previous: 12) — defensive lapses again exposed.
13. FC Cincinnati (Previous: 9) — early drop raises questions on depth.
12. New York Red Bulls (Previous: 13)
11. Charlotte FC (Previous: 10)
Top 10: form, momentum and what it means
10. Real Salt Lake — climb continues
Diego Luna’s first start and Zavier Gozo’s audacious strike underlined RSL’s attacking youth pipeline. A 3–1 win over Sporting KC showcased depth and tactical balance; RSL now look like a legitimate dark horse in the West.
9. Chicago Fire — defense wins the day
A 1–0 victory over Nashville revealed a disciplined back line centered on Jack Elliott and Mbekezeli Mbokazi. Gregg Berhalter’s side defended resolutely but must convert that defensive foundation into more sustained possession and attacking reward.
8. New York City FC — promising pieces, poor closure
NYCFC dominated periods yet conceded a late equalizer to St. Louis. Nicolás Fernández and Keaton Parks provide creativity, but finishing and late-game concentration remain concerns for a team with higher expectations.
7. Seattle Sounders — steady and opportunistic
Paul Rothrock’s late winner kept Seattle unbeaten across four and extended a remarkable run of clean sheets. With momentum into a Concacaf Champions Cup quarterfinal against Tigres, the Sounders’ depth — especially in goal — gives them an edge.
6. San Diego FC — red card costs dearly
Manu Duah’s early dismissal and a 3–0 defeat to San Jose halted San Diego’s bright start. Anders Dreyer still produces chances, but San Diego’s need for another high‑impact DP forward is now glaring.
5. Inter Miami — spectacle overshadowed by structure
Nu Stadium’s opening was a storybook moment marred by defensive breakdowns and a lack of reliable striking options beyond Luis Suárez. Messi’s influence is undeniable, but Miami’s defensive holes and overreliance on veteran finishing expose a team that’s not yet complete.
4. San Jose Earthquakes — youth and experience converging
Niko Tsakiris’s two‑goal masterclass and smart use of Timo Werner signal San Jose’s maturation under Bruce Arena. The Quakes are combing youthful dynamism with veteran touches, positioning them as real contenders in the West.
3. Vancouver Whitecaps — late-game resilience
A stoppage-time comeback against Portland highlighted Vancouver’s clutch mentality and roster depth. Thomas Müller’s penalty and Sebastian Berhalter’s late winner indicate this team still has the hunger that powered last season’s Cup run.
2. Nashville SC — a first stumble, not a collapse
A 1–0 loss to Chicago ended a long unbeaten streak but didn’t expose systemic failure. Nashville’s attacking trio remains elite; the test now is how quickly they refocus ahead of Concacaf Champions Cup commitments.
1. LAFC — ruthless and authoritative
Son Heung‑min’s four assists and Denis Bouanga’s rapid hat trick propelled LAFC to a 6–0 win over Orlando. That performance reaffirmed LAFC’s complete attacking profile and defensive solidity, making them the league’s benchmark as the season’s first international break ends.
Key themes and what to watch next
Late goals reshaped several matches this weekend, underscoring concentration and fitness as decisive factors. Teams juggling MLS and Concacaf schedules — LAFC, Seattle, Nashville and others — must manage rotation without losing identity. Inter Miami’s new-stadium euphoria exposed roster imbalance; unless they add consistent attacking production beyond Suárez, defensive issues will keep them from maximizing Messi’s brilliance.
Conclusion
Matchday 6 offered a microcosm of what this MLS season can be: individual brilliance, tactical nuance, and thin margins that separate contenders from pretenders.
Son Heung-min tied Lionel Messi's major MLS record
Momentum is fluid; squad depth, late-game temperament and front-office decisions in coming weeks will define who sustains a run toward the Supporters’ Shield and continental success.
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