Inter Miami rested Lionel Messi and suffered their first
defeat since the Argentine joined the club, with a 5-2 hammering at Atlanta
United damaging their playoff hopes on Saturday.
Messi had not made the trip to Atlanta, after a busy run of
games since making his Miami debut in late July.
Miami coach Gerardo 'Tata' Martino said after the loss that
Messi and had been suffering from "muscle fatigue" and that it would
have been "very reckless to bring him to play this game".
The 36-year-old had sat out Argentina's World Cup qualifier
against Bolivia in La Paz on Tuesday but watched his team-mates from the bench.
Messi was substituted in the final minutes of the 1-0 win
over Ecuador on September 7, after scoring the winner, but there have been no
reports of an injury.
With no Messi last week, Miami defeated Sporting Kansas City
3-2 but this time it was a very different story for Martino's team.
Miami went ahead in the 25th minute with a superbly taken
goal from in-form striker Ecuadorean striker Leonardo Campana.
Dixon Arroyo's shot flew out off the cross-bar and Campana
chested the ball down, lost Miles Robinson with a clever touch and then
volleyed home with his left foot.
But the response from Atlanta, sixth in the Eastern
Conference, was emphatic with three goals in the space of eight minutes.
A glancing header from French midfielder Tristan Muyamba,
which struck the inside of the post, was ruled to have crossed the line by the
assistant referee.
Five minutes later, Atlanta had the lead when Brazilian
winger Xande Silva dribbled to the byline and his pull-back was turned into his
own net by Miami defender Kamal Miller.
Miami's defence, without former Spain international
left-back Jordi Alba, were reeling and the rampant Atlanta attack took full
advantage, Brooks Lennon adding the third in the 44th minute with a sweetly
struck shot after being set up by Caleb Wiley.
The blitz of goals left Miami with plenty to ponder at the
interval and they came out strongly, pulling a goal back in the 54th minute.
Tomas Aviles' shot struck the arm of Atlanta defender Luis
Abram and referee Jair Marrufo pointed to the spot with Campana's composed shot
sending Brad Guzan the wrong way.
No comeback
Miami have made a habit of second-half comebacks in the
club's Messi era but lacking the impact of the former Barcelona star they were
unable to build sustained momentum.
As they pushed forward in search of an equalizer, Atlanta
caught them on the counter.
The break ended with Georgian substitute Saba Lobjanidze
squaring to Greek striker Giorgos Giakoumakis who slotted home his 14th goal of
the season, bringing him level with Nashville's Hany Mukhtar joint top scorer
in MLS.
Another well-worked swift break resulted in the fifth in the
89th minute with Lobjanidze again the creator, setting up Tyler Wolff to blast
home.
Miami remain next to bottom of the Eastern Conference, six
points behind DC United who occupy ninth place, the last playoff spot.
Martino defended the decision to leave Messi and Alba - who
he said also had muscle fatigue - at home ahead of a busy run of games with
league matches on Wednesday and Sunday before the US Open Cup final on
September 27.
"We risked worse consequences if they came to play this
game. It has nothing to do with the (artificial) surface," he said.
"Sometimes it is difficult to make decisions because
these are also decisive matches but there is a final on the 27th," added
the former Argentina national team coach.
Earlier the 'Hudson River derby' between New York City and
New York Red Bulls ended goalless.
Later on Saturday, Los Angeles FC host cross-city rivals
L.A. Galaxy in their derby while last year's MLS runners-up, the Philadelphia
Union host Eastern Conference leaders Cincinnati.
/KN/
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