Philadelphia Union v Toronto F.C.

United States of America

Major League Soccer

Saturday 2nd March 2019

Kick Off 13.00 Actual 13.10

Philadelphia Union 1 Toronto F.C. 3, attendance 16,498

45’ + 3, 0-1

62’ 0-2

73’ 1-2 (pen)

90’ + 4, 1-3

@ Talen Energy Stadium

1, Stadium Drive

Chester

PA 19013

Admission $42 + $6.75 fees, Print at Home Ticket.

No Programme.

The Talen Energy Stadium (current sponsor name) was opened in 2010 and has an all seated capacity of 18,500. The stadium is in the town of Chester, some 14 miles south west of the centre of Philadelphia and is reached by taking the SEPTA (South Eastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority) train towards Wilmington, which takes around half an hour. It costs $5.25 each way and on matchdays the club run a free shuttle bus to and from the main station in Chester to the stadium.

It was a bit concerning to have arrived in Philadelphia on Friday afternoon to be greeted by 3 inches of freshly fallen snow, although unlike in England, everything was carrying on as normal and later that evening the club had tweeted pictures of the pitch having been cleared, so the game would be going ahead. Again, unlike at home, where the club would have just postponed the match and made no effort whatsoever in getting the game on.

This was the season opener for both clubs. In fact, it was actually the first match to get underway in the entire league. The standard in the MLS is improving, but most of the teams would probably struggle to survive in the Championship in England. The crowd, which looked far less than the announced figure, still have huge numbers who don’t appear to really understand what they are watching and certainly don’t get the basics of the offside rule and seem to think any tackle where their player falls over is a foul and a yellow card to the opposing teams player. They certainly didn’t get that the ball has to actually cross the goal line for it to count as a goal, which was evident when a shot was easily cleared. It didn’t help that VAR was in use for the match, which meant any close call took an age to decide on whether it was offside/handball/ a goal etc. etc.

Union had plenty of possession, but rarely threatened. Toronto did very little, but having had a penalty saved after 34 minutes, went ahead in stoppage time through American international Michael Bradley. The second half really opened up and Toronto went 0-2 up when Bradley added a second goal just after the hour mark. Union pulled a goal back from the penalty spot, but the visitors finally killed the game off with a third goal deep into stoppage time.

The match itself was certainly enjoyable and a decent watch as a neutral. What was a pain though, was the ten minutes late kicking off, not helped by having to go through two national anthems before we got underway. Added to five minutes stoppage time in each half and what felt like endless stoppages for VAR decisions and players rolling about pretending to be injured, then a match scheduled to kick off at 13.00 didn’t finish until 15.09 !

Thankfully, there wasn’t a train back in to Philadelphia until 15.54, so plenty of time for the shuttle bus to get back to the station and we could start thinking about the next sporting event, which was later that evening and was certainly the hottest ticket in town…………..