Major League Soccer teams have enjoyed a hiatus from league play since July 20, but clubs stayed busy on the field with the Leagues Cup and off the field with the summer transfer window.
The transfer window is a short but vital opportunity for all 29 teams to make personnel changes. The MLS has just 10 games left before its playoffs begin, so the window gives teams on the playoff bubble an opportunity to improve and potentially secure a postseason spot.
Here are two teams on the bubble that made season-changing deals that could prime them for a playoff run:
In sixth in the Western Conference, Houston has had a strange season. After winning the U. S. Open Cup in grand style in 2023 and securing its spot in the CONCACAF Champions Cup, it has spent much of 2024 looking a little off its game.
Houston's defense and midfield have played well, sometimes even great, but its front line has failed to deliver goals. The Dynamo have scored just 33 this season, well off the 51 Houston scored last season.
Enter the summer transfer window and Ezequiel Ponce.
The Argentine striker, who joined Houston from AEK Athens, quickly changed the Dynamo's fortunes in front of the net.
In the Leagues Cup against Toluca, Ponce scored the game-tying goal. Against Real Salt Lake in the Leagues Cup, his effort went down as a Justen Glad own goal, but one must give Ponce credit for his vision and positioning.
Ponce makes it 3!#Hustlin4More | #LeaguesCup2024 pic.twitter.com/XTXxU1uTqm
— Houston Dynamo FC (@HoustonDynamo) August 6, 2024
In sixth in the Eastern Conference, Charlotte is one of the feel-good stories of MLS, morphing from an expansion club to a playoff challenger under the watchful eye of coach Dean Smith.
Despite the positivity, momentum and statement-making wins over powers Columbus and Cincinnati, Charlotte has always seemed a bit brittle and inconsistent. It spent much of this season riding high on the unexpectedly strong performances of its young players.
Now the young players are reinforced with a veteran, U.S. Men's National Team defender Tim Ream, whom Charlotte signed in the transfer window.
Ream has plenty of top-level experience with Fulham of the English Premier League and in MLS. In his debut season in 2010, he played for the New York Red Bulls, who won the Eastern Conference.
At 36, Ream won't be with the team for the long term, but Charlotte doesn't need him to be. It needs him to show its young defenders the ropes and lock down their play patterns before the postseason, a role that suits Ream perfectly.
Look for Ream to guide midfielder Andrew Privett, 24, and defender Adilson Malanda, 22.
MLS returns to regular-season play on Saturday.
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