CHESTER, Pa. - With four of their first five matches at home, the Union had an opportunity to get their season off to a positive start. But with a 1-2-2 record, capped off by a 2-0 loss to Orlando City on Friday night at Talen Energy Stadium, the Union are wondering what went wrong (see observations).
"I didn't get the job done," Union manager Jim Curtin said. "I take responsibility for the group. I know we have a really strong team. We've played good soccer at home, we just need to bury those chances."
The poor results haven't come from a lack of effort. The Union have outshot opponents, 87-48, this season, and are currently fifth in MLS in possession at 54.3 percent. But like Curtin said, it's been about the finish. They've been outscored, 6-3, this season and are averaging just over a half goal per game.
"The ball is not bouncing our way right now, it's not going in the net," Curtin said. "And with that, confidence drops. I understand the frustration from the fans. The players are frustrated, I'm frustrated and it's difficult. We need to stick together in the hardest moments."
According to midfielder Haris Medunjanin, the Union are pressing too hard to score. He said on Friday after the loss that the team was off in every facet, and that the lack of offense isn't bad luck, but a patience issue.
"We need to keep the ball more," he said of the midfielders. "We want to attack every attack and that's not possible. You can't attack every attack. That was our problem today. We were not patient, we attacked too quick. I think we need to learn from that and play as a team."
Philadelphia Union
His frustration was palpable.
"It's about scoring goals," he said. "If you have just one chance and you score a goal and it's 1-0, it's enough. It's about winning games. It's not about how many chances you create, it's about scoring goals."
Between David Accam, Borek Dockal, Fafa Picault and C.J. Sapong, the Union should have enough firepower to find the net. And though it's not connecting right now, Curtin is confident his team will find that scoring groove. It just has to relax.
"We have quality attackers and they all want to contribute and help," Curtin said. "Maybe sometimes they press and try to do too much. We have to find the balance. When our team is at its best, it's Haris and (Alejandro) Bedoya controlling the tempo of the game. Right now, it isn't clicking. At the same time, I know we have the possibility to break out."