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Listen: 'Soccer City' radio analyzes Loudon, welcomes Racing's coach
The latest Soccer City radio show — presented by Kentuckiana Toyota Dealers — served multiple purposes Saturday.
First, there was plenty to preview with Louisville City FC coming off its 1-1 draw with Indy Eleven, seeing its midweek contest with Sporting KC II postponed and now entering a matchup with visiting Loudoun United FC.
Host Lance McGarvey, who was joined at Lynn Family Stadium by Casey Whitfield and Kevin Kernen, also spent time with the recently announced coach for Racing Louisville FC, the NWSL’s 2021 expansion franchise.
Catch Soccer City live from 9-10 a.m. each Saturday on AM 790 WKRD or via the iHeartRadio app. Saturday’s edition can be heard below:
Game day! Follow along with LouCity-Loudoun United FC
Entering Saturday, Louisville City FC has 10 games left on its regular-season slate to climb up the USL Championship standings and into a playoff spot.
Says coach John Hackworth: the sense of urgency is “extremely high.”
Loudoun United FC comes to Lynn Family Stadium in what could be considered a must-win game for the chase to first place. The visitors aren’t within LouCity’s “Group E,” from which the top-two clubs make it to the postseason, but it’s a chance nonetheless to pick up a full three points.
The table…
Indy Eleven (5-2-1, 16 points)
Saint Louis FC (3-3-1, 10 points)
Sporting KC II (2-3-1, 7 points)
LouCity (2-3-1, 7 points)
“This group, our culture, is built around responsibility and accountability In terms of results, they haven’t gone the way we’ve wanted them to,” Hackworth said. “We have the opportunity right now to correct that, and we have the obligation to ourselves and to our fans and to our club because of what the standard is here.”

For Starting XI and in-game updates, follow @loucityfc on Twitter and Louisville City FC on Facebook. Also find us at louisvillecityfc on Instagram.
On the WMYO (My TV)/ESPN+ streaming call: Spencer Siegel (play by play) and Eric Dobrzanski (color).
And for AM 840 WHAS on the radio: Clay Ables (play by play) and Jeff Greer (color).
Preview: What to watch for with LouCity vs. Loudoun United FC
Louisville City FC enters Saturday’s matchup with Loudoun United FC, set for 8 p.m. at Lynn Family Stadium, seeking its finishing touch.
The boys in purple rank second in the USL Championship in shots taken with 103 and fifth in the league with 2,922 passes attempted. Clearly, opportunities are there.
But having netted five goals in six games, that’s a 6% scoring conversion rate, 33rd-best of 35 teams in the league. So LouCity’s still looking to take advantage of all it is creating.
Meanwhile, opponents have capitalized well on the 46 shots taken against LouCity, converting at a 15% clip.
The boys in purple had some extra time to hone their striking this week, as LouCity was scheduled to play Sporting KC II on Wednesday. But a positive COVID-19 test for a covered member of SKC II’s organization forced postponement.
It’s on to Saturday now and a rare matchup outside of USL Championship “Group E” play. Loudoun United FC notched its first victory of the season with a 2-1 decision Wednesday at New York Red Bulls II after an early red card put the visitors up a man most of the way.
A victory over Loudoun would mean three points toward LouCity’s playoff chase. In Group E, they’re all trying to catch Indy Eleven (5-2-1, 16 points), who played LouCity to a 1-1 draw last Saturday. Saint Louis FC (3-3-1, 10 points) is without a win in its last three games but remains second. Sporting KC II and LouCity both enter the weekend 2-3-1 with 7 points.
The top-two Group E finishers going to the playoffs in October at the end of a 16-game season.
Coach John Hackworth says…
“We’re not anywhere close to where we want to be. That’s the reality. But that’s in results. There’s so many parts about how we’re playing and the level we’re playing in that are satisfying. That doesn’t get you any brownie points when you’re not getting the results. It certainly isn’t what the fans expect or need. It’s not what this club is about, so we have a lot of work to do in that regard.”
Key players
LouCity: Losses in LouCity’s attacking midfield led Napo Matsoso to a new role in the Indy Eleven game, when he shifted to the right wing. Matsoso’s third-minute cross to Devon “Speedy” Williams marked his first assist of the season, and the native of Lesotho continued to push the attach from there, pacing LouCity with three of what Opta statistics termed “good” crosses. Matsoso figures to see more time up top having completed 77.7% of his passes in Indy’s half.
Loudoun United FC: Kairou Amoustapha, a Niger international, registered his first assist Wednesday in what was just his second game with Loudon. Working on the wing, he has shown a knack for winning aerial battles while playing aggressively, also conceding three fouls against Red Bulls II. The 19-year-old boasts starting experience with his home country’s side in the FIFA U-17 World Cup in 2017, tallying three goals and an assists in 406 minutes of international play.
Follow along
For Starting XI and in-game updates, follow @loucityfc on Twitter and Louisville City FC on Facebook. Also find us at louisvillecityfc on Instagram.
On the WMYO (My TV)/ESPN+ streaming call: Spencer Siegel (play by play) and Eric Dobrzanski (color).
And for AM 840 WHAS on the radio: Clay Ables (play by play) and Jeff Greer (color).
Notes to know
The scoring load: LouCity has registered five goals in six games split between two players. Forward Cameron Lancaster has scored three, while midfielder Devon “Speedy” Williams accounts for two. Williams headed in an early cross Saturday to give LouCity an early 1-0 lead over Indy Eleven before the clubs played to a draw. The Jamaican international also scored the first goal in Lynn Family Stadium history going back to a July 12 matchup with Pittsburgh Riverhounds SC.
A few firsts: Last Saturday’s Indy Eleven meant new ground in 2020 for the boys in purple. They previously hadn’t played an opponent to a draw, nor had they carried a lead into halftime. Williams’ third-minute score — tapped in after midfielder Napo Matsoso secured possession on a sliding challenge — was also the earliest LouCity has scored a goal in a game this season.
Johnson sees the field: Forward Jason Johnson, another Jamaican who most recently suited up for the Western Conference’s Phoenix Rising, checked in Saturday for a LouCity debut. His 19 minutes off the bench marked his first action since an injury-riddled 2019 campaign. But two seasons ago, he tallied nine goals, including a soaring scissor kick that won USL Goal of the Month for June of 2018.
The right side of history: In 2019, coach John Hackworth’s first full season leading LouCity, the boys in purple also limped into August, fighting for a playoff spot off consecutive losses to end July. Can they similarly turn things around in 2020? August 2019 began a 10-game unbeaten streak for the club, which earned points in 12 of its final 13 games. That sparked a run back to LouCity’s third straight USL Championship Final appearance.
JoGo gets a start: Youth international Jonathan Gomez, who has represented both the United States and Mexico, logged 26 minutes across his first two LouCity appearances upon the USL’s restart. The 16-year-old left back then found his way into a starting role on July 29, the last time Sporting KC II visited. Gomez was unable to clear a ball into the box leading to the visitors’ initial goal but was otherwise solid in his first start on a professional contract, completing 90% of his passes from the left back spot.
Minus Magnus: LouCity and its leading scorer from last season, midfielder Magnus Rasmussen, agreed effective July 31 to terminate their contract. Rasmussen and his wife, Camilla, last month welcomed new daughter Olivia to their family in Denmark, where he will remain amid the COVID-19 pandemic. LouCity’s technical staff plans to re-sign Rasmussen for 2021 after he poured in 13 regular-season goals and four more in the playoffs in 2019.
In the stands: LouCity’s attendance of 4,850 (about 30% of maximum capacity) in its first five games back have marked the highest number of people to attend team sporting events in the country since the COVID-19 pandemic put sports on pause. Club officials are following local government guidance and the Venue Shield plan devised by stadium operator ASM Global that calls for wearing masks in the building, physical distancing and temperature checks, among other measures to keep fans safe.
Watch: Hackworth says LouCity has 'extremely high' sense of urgency
LouCity's McCabe sidelined with foot injury
Louisville City FC’s Niall McCabe has undergone successful surgery to repair a right foot injury, the club announced Monday, with the midfielder’s prognosis positive for a return to the pitch later this season.
McCabe appeared in five of six games so far during LouCity’s abridged campaign, pushing the attack with a pair of shots and a nearly 70% completion rate for passes in the opponent’s half.
“Obviously, losing Niall for the better part of this already strange season is a difficult situation because he is such an important member of our team,” said LouCity coach and sporting director John Hackworth. “However, we are hopeful that he will be able to return and contribute to our success in the postseason. In the meantime, his teammates will do everything they can to make sure our collective objectives are met.”
A mainstay in purple since the club’s inaugural season, McCabe is no stranger to coming back strong from an operation. He shut down his 2016 season to proactively repair hip cartilage, then returned as a key piece of LouCity’s USL championship runs in 2017 and 2018.
McCabe, who scored on a pair of free kicks in 2019, logged every minute during LouCity’s run back to the title game last year.
“It’s disappointing because this is such a short season,” McCabe said. “The timeline I got from the doctors puts me back before playoffs, so hopefully my body responds well to the surgery and I can even maybe be a week or so early.
“This is very minor. It will reinforce my foot and make it stronger.”
A native of Ireland, McCabe attended Division II Young Harris College in Georgia while competing as an amateur for Chattanooga FC in Tennessee. He signed his first professional deal with LouCity and has remained in Louisville ever since.
'Shifty' Matsoso excels in a winger's role for LouCity
Midfielder Napo Matsoso said he was surprised to see a Louisville City FC lineup that on Saturday night moved him from the controlling midfield to a winger’s role. But it took just three minutes to understand why coach John Hackworth made the change.
Matsoso brought renewed pace to LouCity’s attach along with a standout play, regaining possession from Indy Eleven’s star striker Tyler Pasher, then delivering the cross that led to teammate Devon “Speedy” Williams’ headed goal at Lynn Family Stadium.
“I’ll take any opportunity that Hack gives me to play,” Matsoso said. “You take every moment and give it your all. It doesn’t matter what position I play — just giving everything I have and helping the team however possible to win.”
Matsoso’s lineup shift made room for both captain Paolo DelPiccolo and Williams in the defensive midfield during a 1-1 draw. It could also signal a more permanent change as the boys in purple face quick turnarounds, hosting Sporting KC II at 8 p.m. Wednesday before Loudoun United FC visits Saturday.
“We felt like we have not been at our best and Napo, Paolo, Speedy are guys that lead with their actions on the field,” Hackworth said. “We were trying to configure a way to get all of them on the field.
“Honestly, try and unbalance Indy a little bit because I don’t think they would’ve expected that initially. So, that’s what we came out with (Saturday).”
From his position out wide on the right side, Matsoso paced LouCity with three of what Opta statistics termed “good” crosses. He completed 81.8% of his passes against Indy Eleven, including 77.7% of attempts in Indy Eleven’s half of the pitch.
The boys in purple walked away with just one point in the USL Championship’s Group E standings with the draw. But in the bigger picture, Matsoso may have secured a key role moving forward.
“Napo is a great guy and a really good player and great to be around,” Williams said. “As you can see (Saturday), he played wing, and I don’t think he had played wing before, but he did a great job for us. He’s very shifty. In training he has guys running up and down in practice.”
Aside from Matsoso’s standout play, Williams saw the hot start as a product of an entire week of the squad training with a renewed vigor. The boys in purple carried a sub-.500 record — out of character for the historically competitive club — into the Indy game.
“I’m not sure [if] it was the lineup, but I thought it was our intensity,” Williams said. “Our intensity was really good, and they couldn’t handle it early in the game.”
“We’re disappointed that we didn’t get all three points,” Hackworth added. “We feel like we created enough chances once again — didn’t give up that many — controlled long stretches of the game, and really liked the collectIve effort and feel from the team.”
Kernen: The good and the bad from Round 1 between LouCity, Indy Eleven
Louisville City FC played rival Indy Eleven to a draw Saturday night, and although the result was cast as two points dropped rather than a point earned, let’s take a deeper look at what clicked for the boys in purple along with what’s left to desire.
The Good
Limited Pasher and other impact players
This might sound odd considering Indy Eleven’s star striker, Tyler Pasher, scored in the second half to level the game, and he was assisted by another talented player in Andrew Carleton. But LouCity took a measured approach to keeping them quiet for the better part of an hour. In particular, defenders Sean Totsch and Wes Charpie funneled the likes of Pasher to the wings, rather than letting him cut inside where he is most effective. Keeping him from running in straight lines where he can use his pace was imperative. To add, Ayoze played in this game, and I barely noticed.
Shaking things up
When the lineups were announced with Napo Matsoso playing on the right wing rather than in the midfield, more than a few people were scratching their heads. On the surface, Matsoso has all the hallmarks of a decent winger: an explosive first step, a modicum of technical ability and a high motor. He has a nose for goal, too, and was a big part of the offense in his college days at the University of Kentucky. The Lesotho international showed his ability in a new position for him at LouCity all game long, with the assist on the sole goal serving as the high water mark in the third minute. In his postgame comments, coach and sporting director John Hackworth admitted that he was looking to give Indy Eleven a few new looks that forced them to adapt, and it worked. This will not be the last time we see Matsoso him out wide.
Dictating the game
LouCity leapt from the starting blocks, taking only 130 seconds to score — obviously an ideal start. Probably a bit shell-shocked from conceding so quickly, Indy Eleven made a number of errors that should have been more clinically punished. Also, the 4,850 spectators made their presence known, but if Lynn Family Stadium had been packed to capacity for this iteration of the Louisville-Indianapolis Proximity Association Football Contest, the crowd would have certainly added to that pressure. While no team can control an entire game, LouCity nearly owned the entire first half, and that was precipitated in part by Devon “Speedy” Williams’ goal. While scoring the opening goal is important, putting the opposition away is where one point turns into three.
The Bad
Leaving food on the table
Missing shots is bad. I can give you a numerical analysis, expected goals and paint the boys in purple as if they have forgotten how to score. They haven’t. Yes, they should have put the game to bed in the first half, tucking Indy Eleven in with a passage from “Goodnight Moon.” But they didn’t. It is hard to square these two ideas, so just take consolation in the fact that this team has something left to prove in the next three matchups against its rival.
Not shutting down Pasher completely
In the first stanza it was all LouCity, but by the second frame coach Martin Rennie and Indy had figured out how the home side was handling Pasher. They adapted. Lesser teams would have simply stuck a man on Pasher for the entire game. That would have caused a knock-on effect that might cause more problems than it solves. Either way, playing a playmaker like that straight up means that defenders have to know exactly where the player in question is and, more importantly, where he wants to go. A lapse in focus, losing track of Pasher, and you could be picking the ball out of your own net, and that is what happened. It may be down to communication, or simply not diagnosing and adapting quick enough on the pitch.
More needed from front players
Cameron Lancaster looked a bit isolated at times. It was always going to be tricky for the 27-year-old going up against the sizable back three that the Hoosiers presented, but I would have liked to see Lancaster come back and involve himself more in the buildup like he has done in years past. He set up shop on the shoulder of their back line and stayed there. Against some teams, that works. I did like the stream forward of a couple midfielders, especially Paolo del Piccolo, but the rest of the front three got slightly too high up the field, not leaving enough space to run into, at least in my estimation.
To close, a reminder that in sports, you are never assured anything. A 2019 USL Championship Final appearance guarantees you nothing in 2020. If LouCity wants to be the best of the league, or even the USL’s Group E, then draws won’t be good enough. The table does not make for light reading, but the fact that every game is essentially a six pointer means that things can, and will change fast. The pieces are here. Now it is just a case of putting it all together over the final 10 games.
Watch: Hackworth says Indy Eleven draw's a 'positive step forward'
LouCity, Indy Eleven even after first LIPAFC meeting in 2020
Rivals Louisville City FC and Indy Eleven will play three more times during the shortened USL Championship season, and it’s those meetings in which the 2020 Louisville-Indianapolis Proximity Association Football Contest will be decided.
The boys in purple leveled with Indy Eleven in a 1-1 draw Saturday at Lynn Family Stadium, where a Devon “Speedy” Williams header provided early theatrics for the home side. Later, the inevitable happened when Indy’s league-leading scorer, Tyler Pasher, equalized in front of an announced 4,850 fans.
As a result — a point to both clubs — the USL’s Group E standings stood pat with Indy Eleven (5-2-1, 16 points) extending its lead slightly. LouCity (2-3-1, 7 points) remained fourth in the pod after the first of three games in a frantic eight days. The boys in purple host Sporting KC II on Wednesday before welcoming Loudoun United FC on Aug. 15.
“If most teams are playing Indy, and it’s 1-1 late, they’re not the aggressors — not the ones putting their foot on the gas and not throwing attacking players on,” said LouCity coach John Hackworth. “We literally had a lot of control of the game until the very last whistle, so I think it’s something very positive to build on.
“The guys in the locker room are all disappointed. Sometimes a tie feels like a win. Sometimes it feels like a loss, and this one feels a little bit like a loss. At the same time, we have to understand where we are and use this as a positive because we have two hard games coming up in the next seven days.”
Williams moved LouCity ahead on a third-minute header, much in part to teammate Napo Matsoso’s work out wide. Moving away from his goal, Matsoso won a sliding challenge, turned and crossed, finding Williams on the other side of the box for the Jamaican international’s second goal of the season.
“This one felt much better,” said Wiliams, who also scored the first goal in Lynn Family Stadium history back on July 12. “I don’t know why, but it felt great. The entire week the entire squad was really good, and that is why we started the game so much stronger.”
LouCity continued pouring in chances during the first 45 minutes, going on to out-shoot Indy Eleven 22-10 by the final whistle. Particularly, in the seventh minute the home side nearly doubled the lead when striker Cameron Lancaster’s blocked shot landed at the foot of midfielder Brian Ownby, who pulled his try wide left.
Ownby had another nice look in the 68th minute this time forcing Indy Eleven’s goalkeeper to make a save. And Williams took another headed chance in the 81st minute that would have been good if on frame.
By that point, the boys in purple were trying to break a tie. In the 59th minute, Indy Eleven’s Andrew Carleton looped in a pinpoint cross to Pasher, who needed just one touch to equalize while racking up his seventh goal in eight games, best across the USL.
“I can’t believe that he’s not playing in a higher league,” Hackworth said. “He’s that good. He scores every time he plays against us, by the way.”
“He’s a good player, and I think we did a really good job trying to keep him silent,” Williams added. “He got that one unfortunately, but we did a good job of keeping him silent as much as we could.”
Outside of shots, the stat sheet is a balanced one, and that’s where the LIPAFC rivals will leave it until finishing their season series Aug. 26 at Lynn Family Stadium before contests Sept. 5 and Sept. 16 at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.
Game Summary: Louisville City FC vs. Indy Eleven
Date: August 8, 2020
Venue: Lynn Family Stadium
Kickoff: 8 p.m.
Weather: 86 degrees, sunny
Man of the Match: Devon “Speedy” Williams
Attendance: 4,850
Scoring
Louisville City: (1,0,1)
Indy Eleven: (0,1,1)
Goals
Louisville City FC: 3’ – Devon “Speedy” Williams header from the left side of the box to the bottom right corner. Assisted by Napo Matsoso with a cross following a sliding challenge.
Indy Eleven: 59’- Tyler Pasher left-footed shot from close range to the bottom right corner. Assisted by Andrew Carleton with a cross.
Lineups
Louisville City FC: 39- Ben Lundt, 15- Pat McMahon, 6- Wes Charpie, 4- Sean Totsch,19- Oscar Jimenez, 13- Corben Bone, 36- Paolo DelPiccolo (70’ 77- Jason Johnson), 80- Devon “Speedy” Williams, 10- Brian Ownby 27- Napo Matsoso (85’ 29- Antoine Hoppenot), 17- Cameron Lancaster (85’ 9- Luke Spencer)
Subs not used: 1- Chris Hubbard, 8- Akil Watts, 42- Jonathan Gomez, 3- Alexis Souahy
Head Coach: John Hackworth
Indy Eleven: 1- Evan Newton, 29- Patrick Barrett, 15- Neveal Hackshaw, 20- Karl Ouimette, 7- Ayoze Garcia, 2- William Conner Antley, 6- Drew Conner, 4- Tyler Gibson, 30- Andrew Carleton (73’ 8- Matt Watson), 14- Iljia Ilic (73’ 17- Nick Moon), 23- Tyler Pasher
Subs not used: 0- Jordan Farr, 5- Mitch Osmond, 16- Felicien Dumas, 18- Jeremy Rafanello, 22- Cameron Lindley
Head Coach: Martin Rennie
Discipline:
Louisville City FC: 77’ Devon “Speedy” Williams- yellow card
Indy Eleven: 43’ Neveal Hackshaw- yellow card, 55’ Patrick Barrett- yellow card
Stats Summary: Louisville/Indy Eleven
Shots: 22/10
Shots on Goal: 3/4
Saves: 3/2
Corner Kicks: 4/2
Fouls: 11/12
Offside: 3/3