Look, Iām not here to tell you how to watch your soccer. But also, thatās exactly what Iām here to do.
Today, Iām turning you onto a slew of the best players in MLS who you might not be paying super close attention to these days. We might not quite be at the āliking the next viral band before they go viralā stage, but weāre not far off. You wonāt regret checking in on these 10 players as the 2024 season continues.
Onwards.
LAFC have two players inside the top 10 in MLS for goal contributions this year. The first? Well, thatās Denis Bouanga. Duh. Heās third in the league in goals plus primary assists (22). The second? Itās Mateusz Bogusz. The 22-year-old attacker is seventh in MLS in combined goals and primary assists with 17. He only trails Bouanga, Lucho Acosta, Chicho Arango, Evander, AndrĆ©s Gómez, and, oh yeah, Lionel Messi.
Bogusz has ascended this year. Heās sitting on just over 1,700 minutes ā heās already played a few more minutes than he did in the 2023 regular season. The Pole has transitioned from rotation guy to key cog in Steve Cherundoloās attacking machine.
Sure, heās vastly overperforming his expected goals, but his underlying numbers are still absurdly good for a player of his age and whoās been used in four different spots this season. Striker, right winger, left winger, No. 8 ā you name it. Bogusz has applied his fluid, good-at-just-about-everything skillset to that spot.
Boguszās stock is skyrocketing. Heās not the biggest name in LA, but heās one of the biggest reasons LAFC are sitting on top of the Western Conference.
To start this season, it felt like Gabriel Pec was living in Joseph Paintsilās shadow. Paintsil has a few years on Pec. He transitioned into the lineup more quickly. And it was very clear, very early that opposing defenders couldnāt handle his speed.
It took Pec longer to adjust. Without Paintsil-like pace to fall back on, the Brazilian had to find his way into Greg Vanneyās team. Eventually, an injury to Paintsil opened up the door for Pec to start on the right side of the attack and heās yet to look back. The left-footed winger leads the Galaxy in assists and expected assists, plus is in the 91st percentile in non-penalty xG + xA among his positional peers, according to FBref.
Pec is magic on the ball, but his off-ball movement has been even more impactful for the Galaxy.
Heās a Best XI-caliber winger, folks.
With Fidel Barajas already transferred to Chivas and Marko MitroviÄ inexplicably leaving Diego Luna off the US Olympic squad, weāre in for the summer of Luna here in MLS. He started the year somewhat slowly, but the 20-year-old has exploded with two goals and five primary assists in his last four matches with Real Salt Lake.
Luna understands where and when to move to make Pablo Mastroeniās possession play tick:
RSL could well add another player in his position when the Secondary Transfer Window opens on July 18. But at this point? Matt Crooks is more likely to exit the lineup than Luna.
Diego Rossiās MLS return didnāt spark fireworks when the Columbus Crew signed him last summer. Still, Rossi had a quietly strong end to the 2023 regular season with three goals and two primary assists in less than 800 minutes.
Even as things have changed around him both on and off the field in Columbus, Rossi has been red-hot in the last couple of weeks: heās notched three goals and four primary assists in the Crewās previous three games and is up to seven goals and 10 assists on the season.
When you look deeper into the tape or Rossiās statistical profile, the Uruguay international doesnāt pop in one specific area. Instead, heās good at⦠everything? With sharp vertical running, real goal threat, and above-average playmaking, good luck stopping one of the best No. 2 attackers in the league (alongside Cucho, of course).
Iāve hyped Felipe Mora for years, but the 30-year-old has rarely been healthy since arriving in Portland in 2020. Whenever he was on the field, Mora was productive for the Timbers. The issue, though, was he wasnāt on the field often enough.
Now, after missing the first several games of the year with a lower-body injury, Mora has been a regular fixture of Phil Nevilleās starting lineup ā and for good reason. The Chilean international has nine non-penalty goals in just over 1,100 minutes and ranks in the 92nd percentile in non-penalty xG per 90 among strikers in MLS, according to FBref.
If the Timbers add a Designated Player this summer, it should be used on the wing, not in Moraās striker position.
Itās hard to imagine a more perfect coach-player pairing than Chris Armas and Cole Bassett.
Coming into this season, the book was out on Bassett as a central midfielder who lived on late-arriving runs into the box. He was a useful ball progresser, but the young American was more a runner than ball mover. When Armas became the Rapidsā coach ahead of this season, he didnāt try to change Bassettās game. Instead, he relied heavily on the midfielder to provide a twist of goal threat from deeper areas. Armas prioritizes depth over width in the attack, sending waves of runners into the box to overwhelm the opposing defense.
Bassett thrives in those situations and has a career-high seven goals to show for it.
No, Maren Haile-Selassie is not the law firm that puts up all those billboards on the side of the freeway. Although, if heās looking for a post-soccer career, his name is purpose-built for the legal sector.
In reality, Haile-Selassie has been one of the lone bright spots for a struggling Chicago Fire team in 2024. The Swiss attacker benefited from Frank Klopasā shift to a 3-4-1-2 shape and has thrived playing as the other half of his teamās front two next to Hugo Cuypers. Haile-Selassie has five goals on the year ā four of those five have come since the coaching staff moved him inside from the wing. He also leads the team in non-penalty xG + xA per 90, with a lovely 0.57.
Itās too early to tell if Haile-Selassieās long-term spot will come closer to goal or if heāll move back out wide right when reinforcements arrive this summer. Regardless, the speedy attacker is a legitimate threat in the final third. The Fire need more of those.
Left wingback. Right wingback. Right winger.
Luca Orellanoās ability to thrive on either side of the field and in multiple layers of his teamās shape is a huge part of why weāve seen Pat Noonan tinker with tactics in 2024 more than ever. Noonan even ditched his 3-4-1-2 shape in favor of a 3-4-3 over the weekend for the first time I can remember.
Lucho Acosta deserves the lionās share of your attention when watching FC Cincinnati. But donāt let this fact escape you: Orellano has been an even more productive sidekick to his Argentine countryman than the excellent Ćlvaro Barreal was last season. Barreal was in a two-horse race with Kai Wagner for the best left-sided outside back in MLS last year. This year, Orellano is the runaway winner in that category. Barrealās 2023 campaign has Orellano beat in the chance-creation category, but the newcomerās goal output and xG are both far above what his predecessor produced last season.
You canāt skip the chance to watch Orellano. Itās that simple:
With Mounsef Bakrarās conversion issues, the No. 9 spot was open at the top of New York Cityās attacking shape. But now with eight goals in just over 700 minutes, Alonso MartĆnez might be the answer to Nick Cushingās striker question.
A bunch of MartĆnez's goals have come in chunks against bad teams ā a hat trick against San Jose and a brace against MontrĆ©al. Still, sharp movement points to him being a useful, if not downright excellent, attacking option for NYCFC moving forward.
According to American Soccer Analysis, only 11 players in MLS have added more value with their receiving than the Costa Rican international. MartĆnez is adept at finding the right pocket of space, waiting for the ball to meet him, and then causing problems.
The more minutes MartĆnez gets, the scarier New York City will become.
I donāt think itās a coincidence the best week of MartĆn Ojeda's Orlando City career coincided with Oscar Pareja moving him into a central position.
Thereās been a ton of chopping and changing in Orlando this year. Ojeda, and many others, have played deeper, theyāve played higher, theyāve played wider, and theyāve played narrower, all while Pareja searched for an optimal tactical setup.
Now, with a goal in each of his last two games, Ojeda looks right at home playing behind a striker. Heās not a classic, through-ball threading No. 10, but the Argentine is clean on the ball, adds playmaking value, and crashes the box better than most in this league:
Itās been time for the DP to get the keys to Orlando Cityās attack for a while now. It looks like Pareja finally agrees.



