How Charlotte FC survived a sloppy second half to secure a win over Philadelphia
Eighty minutes in, yellow card already in his pocket and a one-game suspension already looming, Wilfried Zaha collected a Pep Biel pass in stride and buried it into the far corner. Charlotte FC 2, Philadelphia Union 1. The Crown’s soaked supporters erupted. The crisis was over — barely.
Charlotte FC held on for a 2-1 win over Philadelphia on Saturday night at Bank of America Stadium, improving to 3-1-2 on the season in front of 25,865 fans.
Charlotte played the best it has all season in the first half. Captain Ashley Westwood’s through ball ricocheted off Idan Toklomati and back to him at the top of the box; he then drove it into the bottom left corner for the early lead.
The Crown controlled 64 percent of possession, held Philadelphia to two shots — neither on target — and generated enough chances that manager Dean Smith said afterward, “In my opinion, we should have probably gone in at halftime at least three goals ahead, and it’s game over then.”
Then the second half happened, and it almost cost them.
Philadelphia adjusted at the break, pushing fullbacks higher and flooding the midfield, and Charlotte had no response. By the 77th minute, the Union had outshot the Crown 11-6. Charlotte hadn’t registered a single second-half attempt.
A winless, pointless team — one that had entered the night 0-0-5, with four of those losses by a single goal — was manufacturing real pressure, and the Crown had no answer for it.
It caught up with them in the 78th minute. Danley Jean Jacques found space in the middle of the box and finished easily, tying the match 1-1.
Two minutes later, Zaha got redemption. Biel played him through, Zaha took it in stride, and the finish — into the far corner on the run — was exactly the kind of moment that frames Charlotte’s problem heading into next week. Zaha will serve a one-game suspension against Nashville after picking up his fifth yellow card of the season Saturday. He had collected one in each of Charlotte’s first four matches before going cardless in the 6-1 rout of New York Red Bull.
Smith, asked about the card, offered a careful non-answer before going further: “It’ll be a question whether he wants to keep playing in this league if he keeps getting decisions against him like he has this season. That’s for sure.”
Three-time MLS Goalkeeper of the Year Andre Blake kept the scoreline close with back-to-back stops late — a diving save on Liel Abada in the 82nd minute and a punch save to deny a second Zaha goal — before Charlotte survived seven stoppage-time minutes to seal it.
Philadelphia finished with 15 total shots after managing just two in the first half.
The win keeps Charlotte unbeaten at home and puts it fourth in the East. But with Zaha suspended next week and a second half on tape that won’t age well, Smith’s postgame words carry some weight: “We’ve got to learn how to make better decisions when a team changes their game plan at halftime.”