It may go without saying, but due to the medium weāre working in here, weāll say it anywayā¦the 2024 season has been anything but conventional for Minnesota United FC.
Hell, the season defied any sort of convention even before it began, as many assumed the club would have settled on a worthy successor to Adrian Heath, the clubās one and only head coach to have led the Loons for the entirety of its seven-year MLS history, long before camp opened. From the outside looking in, it may have even seemed like there was a lack of urgency by the club to install a new leader in the locker room, but those leading the search knew that was never the case.
To the credit of Loonsā managing partner Dr. Bill McGuire and team president Shari Ballard, patience was always the virtue during their search. They set out with a goal of finding the right people, rather than making conventional hires from a field of the usual suspects. Even in the face of outside scrutiny, they maintained a focus on finding a person that was best fit to usher in a new era in Minnesota. But, even before landing on their chosen hire for head coach, they found a person who shared their unique vision for the clubās future and held the belief that creating a culture of success goes beyond the first-team locker room.
To a casual fan, last November's hiring of Khaled El-Ahmad as the clubās Chief Soccer Officer and Sporting Director may have felt a bit out of left field. Even with his wealth of international experience across different facets of the game, including his time spent scouting for City Football Group from 2015-2021, El-Ahmad didnāt exactly fit the mold of others in similar positions across Major League Soccer. But, to her credit, Ballard was searching for somebody shake up the status quo in the Loonsā front office, and after having an opportunity to see the imprints heās already made on the pitch, and at every level of the organization, itās clear to see why the uncommon choice was, indeed, the right one for Minnesota United.
El-Ahmad and his expertise certainly made him a welcome contributor to the search for a head coach, but starting the preseason and regular season without a permanent hire on the sidelines is far from standard practice for any club at the professional level. Thankfully for all Loons fans, one of the right people they were searching for was already on board, and thatās former MNUFC2 head man Cameron Knowles. Even in the face of individual and organizational uncertainty, Knowles stepped in to lead the team in January and stepped up to the challenge of preparing them for the season ahead. Not only did he rise to the occasion in his interim role, but his ability to keep his team connected as a whole, communicate with his players, and keep this squad competing at a high level cannot be understated in its impressiveness. His unconventional wisdom was a guiding force in changing the clubās fortunes to start off this 2024 season, and his seat next to Coach Eric Ramsay was well earned.
Now, as the Loons continue to ride their late-season hot streak into their First Round playoff matchup with Real Salt Lake, itās tough not to find a new appreciation for Head Coach Eric Ramsay and the job heās done for this club in 2024. I know that I jokingly refer to the man as Chef Ramsay, which Iām sure he just ālovesā, but kidding aside, I do feel heās proven over the course of the season to be one of the most important ingredients in this clubās recipe for success in 2024. That might seem obvious considering he is the head man, after all, but it shouldnāt take away from all the ways heās proven himself to be the right person for this job. His impressive background and coaching lineage was indeed a factor in the clubās pursuit of his services, but Iām not sure Iāve seen many step into their first official head coaching gig with the type of poise that Ramsay has shown.
Pressure on a first-time head coach is nothing new, but itās far from conventional to have your first head coaching gig also qualify you as the youngest head coach in the history of Americaās top professional soccer league. If that werenāt enough to chew on for the young man, starting that new job with the season already underway presented its own unique set of challenges. It was a true trial by fire for Ramsay, as he had to learn about each playerās strengths while simultaneously adapting those strengths into a strategy he believed would result in success on the pitch. Sounds like some challenging circumstances to contend with while trying to find results in your first season as the head man. Throw in a handful of non-schedule-friendly international breaks that summoned some of your most talented players away for weeks at a time, and youāve truly got some seriously tough odds stacked against you.
In the case of Eric Ramsay, the key to his success has been getting his players to buy into the fact that they can compete with anyone in the league. Itās something you can see if you run down each of the final score lines from every fixture of the 2024 regular season. Even when this club was in the throes of their winless streak during June and July, the Black and Blue remained competitive. No matter who has been available to play, no matter how heās had to tweak or alter a formation, Coach Ramsay has consistently gotten his club to believe they were getting closer and closer to finding their rhythm as a unit, even if that wasnāt being reflected on the scoreboard for that particular week.
When Ramsay and Khaled El-Ahmad finally did get their opportunity to collaborate on the missing pieces needed to bring their collective vision together during the summer transfer window, thatās exactly what they did. Together, theyāve added the likes of striker Kelvin Yeboah, midfielder JoaquĆn Pereyra, and defender Jefferson DĆazāall of whom have played a part in bringing stability on the pitch, and have proven themselves to be major contributors to the Loonsā late-season momentum.
To me, this late-season surge feels like the recipe for success that all parties had been working to create from the get-go, even if each had to work through their own unconventional circumstances to get here. And, at the risk of adding one more cooking analogy into the mix, there are plenty of good cooks out there, but sometimes it's about having the right cooks in the right kitchen at the right time to whip up something truly different from anything youāve been served before. š¤