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MLS power rankings: Inter Miami’s ambitious plans are paying off

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MLS power rankings: Inter Miami’s ambitious plans are paying off


Welcome back to the Guardian’s MLS Power Rankings, where I have a beef with your specific team and your specific team alone. Please address your complaints to the desk of Garth Lagerwey, who really has nothing else on his plate. He’ll have time to address each complaint, I’m sure, because he definitely doesn’t have a roster to retool, a manager to hire, and a brand-new front office vacancy to fill.

Now, as a reminder, these aren’t your standard, run-of-the-mill power rankings. We’re still ranking teams from worst to first. But along with the rankings, we’re diving deep into a handful of teams from around the league who are doing particularly interesting things.

What to do when you have nothing to play for

29. San Jose Earthquakes

28. CF Montreal

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27. New England Revolution

26. Sporting Kansas City

25. Chicago Fire

24. Nashville SC

Forgive me for being blunt, San Jose, but you have nothing to play for. You’re sitting dead last in points across both conferences. One public postseason probability model gives you less than a 1% chance of making the playoffs, which is about as close to flashing a big neon sign that says “ELIMINATED” as you can get with one number and one percent sign. When hopelessness sets in, where do you turn? In MLS, a league without any real consequences for being bad enough that you start to feel hopeless, you turn to next year.

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In their final seven matches, San Jose have to sort out how club-record signing Hernán López is being used before the wheels turn towards 2025.

The Quakes splashed a reported $6m fee for the Argentine No 10 earlier this season. The issue? He doesn’t create many chances. He progresses the ball through midfield at a high level, but the guy isn’t producing in the final third. One way to tweak Lopez’s usage is to feed him more often. He takes 15.1% of his team’s touches in the final third, according to American Soccer Analysis, well below the league’s best attacking midfielders. Lucho Acosta averages 23.7%. Carles Gil averages 21.7%. Evander averages 18.7%.

Encouraging López to stay higher – and encouraging the players around him to find the Argentine more often – could be the first step towards a brighter future for the Quakes.

Eric Ramsay has Minnesota United in the playoff race. Photograph: Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images

The West’s best bubble team

23. Toronto FC

22. DC United

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21. Austin FC

20. FC Dallas

19. St. Louis City

18. Minnesota United

There are a few teams I tune into each and every week simply because they’re fun. I didn’t expect Minnesota United to be one of those teams when Emanuel Reynoso left the club earlier this year, but here we are.

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Under the guidance of first-year chief soccer officer Khaled El-Ahmad and first-year manager Eric Ramsay, the Loons have become more tactically intricate than they were at any point under former boss Adrian Heath. And after adding several key pieces in the summer transfer window, they’re building quite the deep and balanced squad, too.

Ramsay has settled on a 3-5-2 shape. In that setup, Minnesota United want to move the ball quickly upfield when in possession – they have the seventh-fastest direct attacking speed in MLS, according to Opta.

Ramsay wants his team to play forward quickly, but it’s not just about spamming hopeful long balls into the opposing half. No, Minnesota almost always seem to have a sense of control in possession. With a slew of players comfortable breaking lines on the ball and forwards who love to break in behind, including new Designated Player Kelvin Yeboah, Minnesota United can carve through an opposing block at a moment’s notice:

Sitting in ninth out West, they’re still far from being a playoff lock. But make no mistake: Minnesota United are dangerous. They’re noticeably stronger now than they were before the window opened, and that’s before new DP central midfielder Joaquín Pereyra’s debut.

The Loons are the most entertaining (and the best) bubble playoff team in the West.

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Change, change and more change

17. Philadelphia Union

16. Seattle Sounders

15. Orlando City

14. Charlotte FC

13. Atlanta United

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12. New York City FC

Atlanta United have cleaned house this year. The latest individual to exit the club is vice-president and technical director Carlos Bocanegra. Bocanegra joined Atlanta United as their technical director way back in 2015, helping to construct their roster for the 2017 expansion season and beyond.

Though the Five Stripes were a smash-hit in the early days under the leadership of then-president Darren Eales, vice-president of soccer operations Paul McDonough, manager Tata Martino and Bocanegra, success became hard to come by after winning MLS Cup in 2018 and finishing second in the East in 2019. Since 2019, Atlanta United have finished 23rd, ninth, 23rd, and 10th in the Supporters’ Shield standings. This year, they’re in 20th.

Of that foundational leadership group, Bocanegra was the only through-line to 2024. No doubt, he deserves some credit for the initial roster builds. But things have soured since then.

Atlanta spending big-money on flops like Ezequiel Barco, Pity Martínez, and Luiz Araújo didn’t pay off. The same goes for higher-priced squad players like Jürgen Damm and Matheus Rossetto. They’ve whiffed on U22 Initiative signings. Their managerial hires haven’t worked. Bocanegra didn’t even call Marcelo Bielsa back, for Pete’s sake.

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With club president and CEO Garth Lagerwey in his second season, it’s no surprise that he wanted to erase the board and start over. Lagerwey inherited a poor roster last year, one with Bocanegra’s fingerprints all over it.

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It sure looks like Bocanegra helped hold Atlanta United back in recent years. His exit, then, should help them move forward. Knowing Atlanta, they’ll take some big swings in an effort to leap back up the table as quickly as possible – Inter Miami sporting director, who worked with Lagerwey in Seattle, could end up replacing Bocanegra. But there’s growing pressure, and a growing to-do list, around Lagerwey as he amasses more control.

There’s a technical director to hire. There’s a manager to hire. There are two DPs to sign. There are multiple U22 Initiative players to land.

Atlanta United aren’t back yet. But they sure are about to be busy.

Houston rank second in MLS in possession this season. Photograph: Gary A Vasquez/USA Today Sports

Love and hurt in Houston

11. New York Red Bulls

10. Houston Dynamo

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9. Portland Timbers

8. Vancouver Whitecaps

7. Colorado Rapids

6. Real Salt Lake

Ben Olsen’s Dynamo are lighting teams on fire. Not far removed from their promising performances in Leagues Cup, Houston absolutely dominated LAFC in Los Angeles last week. Sure, there’s important context around LAFC’s performance: it was their sixth game in three weeks and came after they spent real emotional energy in the Leagues Cup final and the US Open Cup semis.

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But as I watch this sequence from the 24th minute, all of that context just seems to melt away. This. Is. Gorgeous.

The Dynamo do a better job of controlling games with possession than anybody in this league not coached by Wilfried Nancy. They’re second in MLS in possession, only behind the Crew. Up until this point in the year, all of that possession has primarily acted as a defensive mechanism. Houston sit eighth in MLS in non-penalty xG allowed per 90 minutes, according to FBref.

But now? After adding a couple of key pieces and getting time off after Leagues Cup? Now they’re starting to turn their possession into chances. They dropped three goals on Real Salt Lake last month, scored two against Toluca, and just bested LAFC by a wide margin.

Things are looking up for Houston. Or, at least they were before newly signed 22-year-old winger Lawrence Ennali went down with an ACL tear over the weekend. Ennali, along with striker Ezequiel Ponce, was a crucial summer addition for the Dynamo. He scored the game-sealing goal against LAFC. His injury is a sizable blow, for the player and club.

Houston and LAFC meet again on Saturday. How the Dynamo respond to a rollercoaster of a week will tell us a lot about their status as a potential contender.

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More than a flash in the pan

5. LA Galaxy

4. FC Cincinnati

3. LAFC

2. Columbus Crew

1. Inter Miami

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However you, dear MLS fan, feel about Inter Miami, you can’t deny this simple truth: they’re never dull.

Inter Miami weren’t good when they joined MLS as an expansion team in 2020, but they did break a handful of roster rules by playing with five DPs, two more than you’re allowed. They were caught and sanctioned, which doesn’t sound dull to me. They sure weren’t dull when Lionel Messi and friends arrived last summer. And now even with Messi still not quite returned from injury, they still haven’t been dull. They’ve won a crazy number of games without him and have three fingers on the Supporters’ Shield.

The latest example of the constant stream of intrigue that swirls around Inter Miami is the longest-lasting of all: Miami Freedom Park.

The Herons ditching their temporary home in Fort Lauderdale, Florida and moving into Miami proper has been in the works for some time now. But word circulated, along with new renderings, earlier this week that the new 25,000-seat soccer-specific stadium will house the club starting in 2026.

Between Inter Miami opening a soccer-specific stadium in Miami and New York City FC doing the same thing in Queens in 2027, MLS continues to march towards an era of permanence that seemed impossible when the league first began play in 1996.

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There are plenty more MLS teams in large markets with less than ideal stadium situations – New England Revolution and Chicago Fire, I’m looking at you. But to have one of the league’s most ambitious clubs sprinting closer to playing in one of the league’s best venues? That’s progress.

Even when Messi and his pals (and maybe even the man who made room for them all) are gone, Inter Miami are positioning themselves to be an attractive destination in the long term. They’re not leaving the headlines anytime soon.





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It’s Indiana and Miami in a college-football title matchup that once seemed impossible

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It’s Indiana and Miami in a college-football title matchup that once seemed impossible


It looked improbable two months ago.

Two years ago — impossible.

But against the odds, Miami and Indiana have a date in the College Football Playoff final — a first-of-its-kind matchup on Jan. 19 in the second national title game of the expanded-playoff era.

The Hoosiers (15-0), the top-seeded favorite in the 12-team tournament, stomped Oregon 56-22 on Friday night to reach the final. The Hurricanes (13-2), seeded 10th and the last at-large team to make the field, beat Mississippi 31-27 the night before.

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Indiana opened as a 7 1/2-point favorite, according to the BetMGM Sportsbook.

The game is set for Hard Rock Stadium in South Florida — the long-ago-chosen venue for a game that happens to be the home of the Hurricanes. Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza is a Miami native who grew up less than a mile from the campus in Coral Gables.

“It means a little bit more to me,” Mendoza said of the title game doubling as a homecoming.

Miami quarterback Carson Beck (11) holds the offensive player of the game trophy after winning the Fiesta Bowl NCAA college football playoff semifinal game against Mississippi, Thursday, Jan. 8, 2026, in Glendale, Ariz. Credit: AP/Ross D. Franklin

He’ll be going against the program known as “The U.” Miami won five titles between 1983 and 2001 and earned the reputation as college football’s brashest renegade.

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A quarter century later, they are one side in a tale of two resurgences.

Miami’s was sparked by coach Mario Cristobal, a local boy and former ‘Cane himself who came back home four years ago to lead his alma mater to a place it hasn’t been in decades.

Among his biggest wins was luring quarterback Carson Beck to spend his final year of eligibility with the ‘Canes.

Miami head coach Mario Cristobal yells from the sideline during...

Miami head coach Mario Cristobal yells from the sideline during the second half of the Fiesta Bowl NCAA college football playoff semifinal game against Mississippi, Thursday, Jan. 8, 2026, in Glendale, Ariz. Credit: AP/Rick Scuteri

Beck, steadily rounding back to form after an elbow injury that ended his season at Georgia last year, is getting better every week. He has thrown for 15 TDs and two interceptions over a seven-game winning streak dating to Nov. 8.

“He’s hungry, he’s driven, he’s a great human being, and all he wants to do is to see his teammates have success,” Cristobal said after Beck threw for 268 yards and ran for the winning touchdown against Ole Miss.

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It was the latest step in a long climb from No. 18 in the season’s first CFP rankings on Nov. 4 — barely within shouting distance of the bubble — after their second loss of the season.

The Hurricanes haven’t lost since.

Hoosiers rise from nowhere to the edge of a title

Indiana’s climb to the top is an even longer haul. This is the program that had a nation-leading 713 losses over 130-plus years heading into the 2024 season. Since then, only two.

The turnaround is thanks to coach Curt Cignetti, who arrived from James Madison and declared: “It’s pretty simple. I win. Google me,” while explaining his confident tone at a signing day news conference in December 2023 when he landed the core of the class that has taken Indiana from obscurity to the edge of a title.

But Indiana’s biggest catch came about a year ago from the transfer portal — the oxygen that drives the current game.

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Mendoza, who went to the same high school as Cristobal in Miami, chose Indiana as the place to finish his career. So far, he has won the Heisman Trophy and is all but assured to be a top-five pick in the NFL draft.

“Can’t say enough about him,” Cignetti said.

One more win and he’ll bring a national title and an undefeated season to Indiana, an even 50 years after the Hoosiers’ 1975-76 basketball team, led by coach Bob Knight, did the same.

Lots of people could see that one coming. Hard to say the same about this.

CFP selection committee almost kept this game from happening

It might seem like ancient history, but Miami almost didn’t make the playoffs.

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In its first ranking of the season, back in November, the CFP selection committee ranked the Hurricanes eight spots behind a Notre Dame team they beat to start the season.

The history of Miami’s slow crawl up the standings, then its leapfrogging past the Irish for the last spot, has been well-documented. If Miami’s trip to the final proved anything, it’s how off-base the committee was when it started the ’Canes at 18, even if they were coming off a loss at SMU, its second of the season.

Though these programs haven’t met since the 1960s, there is familiarity.

One of the best games of 2024 was Miami’s comeback from 25 points down to beat Cal. The quarterback for the Bears: Mendoza, who threw for 285 yards but got edged out by Cam Ward in a 39-38 loss.

With Ward headed for the NFL, the Hurricanes were a consideration for Mendoza as he sought a new spot to finish out his college career. But he picked Indiana, Beck moved to Miami, and now, they meet.

Miami cashes in big

The College Football Playoff will distribute $20 million to the Big Ten and Atlantic Coast Conferences for placing their teams in the finals — that’s $4 million for making it, $4 million for getting to the quarters, then $6 million each for the semis and finals.

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While the Big Ten divvies up that money evenly between its 18 members, Miami keeps it all for itself — part of a “success initiatives program” the ACC started last season that allows schools to keep all the postseason money they make in football and basketball.



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Tributes grow as police investigate Hollywood Beach killing

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Tributes grow as police investigate Hollywood Beach killing



New details are emerging in the death of a woman whose body was found on Hollywood Beach the day after Christmas.

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Police say 56‑year‑old Heather Asendorf was discovered by a passerby. People who frequent the beach say she was a familiar sight at the bandshell near Margaritaville, where she danced most nights in brightly lit shoes.

Harrison, a frequent visitor who did not want to give his last name, said he saw her nearly every day.

“She was very friendly, polite. She loved to dance,” he said.

Suspect arrested four days later

Four days after she was found, Hollywood police arrested 28‑year‑old Brandon McCray and charged him with sexual battery, kidnapping, and battery by strangulation.

McCray was taken into custody at a Hollywood motel off Federal Highway. His permanent address is listed in Coconut Creek, where no one answered the door when approached for comment about his arrest.

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Police are still working to determine how Asendorf’s path crossed with McCray’s.

Tributes pour in from friends

Tributes for Asendorf are pouring in, especially from the annual State College Townie Reunion community in central Pennsylvania, where she had deep roots.

Among the messages shared:

  • “A beautiful friend forever in our hearts.”

  • “Unforgettable. A sweet soul.”

  • “I still can’t wrap my mind around this one. She was so amazing.”

  • “One of our shining stars has left the stage.”

Investigation remains active

Hollywood police say their investigation is ongoing, and McCray could face additional charges as detectives continue to piece together what happened.

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Ole Miss S Nick Cull’s targeting call reversed vs Miami in Peach Bowl

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Ole Miss S Nick Cull’s targeting call reversed vs Miami in Peach Bowl


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Mississippi football’s Nick Cull avoided an ejection during the College Football Playoff Fiesta Bowl semifinal on Thursday, Jan. 8.

As Malachi Toney reeled in a catch from Carson Beck at the Miami 49 in the first quarter, he was hit by Cull in a helmet-to-helmet collision. Right away, the officials flagged Cull for targeting, with both Toney and Cull staying down on the field with an injury.

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After officials reviewed the play, the call on the field was overturned, as the officials determined that Cull did not launch and the collision seemed to be incidental. Replay assistant Matt Austin concurred with the call on the field.

The play had a major impact on the game as well. If the call had been upheld, Miami would have had the ball at the Ole Miss 34-yard line with a chance to expand its 3-0 lead. However, a few plays later, the Hurricanes were forced to punt from the 49-yard line.

On the first play of the second quarter, Ole Miss running back Kewan Lacey scored on a 73-yard run to give the Rebels a 7-3 lead.

Because he was not called for targeting, Cull was not ejected from the game, which means Ole Miss will have him for the remainder of the game, if he can clear the concussion protocol. He was in the tent following the play.

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Cull has 15 total tackles and three pass deflections this season for the Rebels.

Meanwhile, Toney went to the medical tent briefly for the Hurricanes, but returned to the game.



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