Robinson leads DC United in "must win" over Revs

WASHINGTON ā€“ Robbed of starting center backs Bobby Boswell and Steve Birnbaum by suspension and international duty, D.C. United were forced to give Jalen Robinson his first MLS start in a position that's still relatively new for him when Kei Kamara and the New England Revolution hit RFK Stadium on Saturday.


Not only did United cruise to an assured 2-0 win, Robinson turned in one of his team's best performances, completing 84 percent of his passes and limiting Kamara to two shots (both blocked) and only 35 total touches.


ā€œJalen was tremendous,ā€ said goalkeeper Bill Hamid. ā€œFor him to get the start and do that well against one of last year's leading goal scorers in the league, it speaks volumes about how hard he's been working. A lot of eyes haven't been on him, so he's had to kind of work in the cut. But he's been pounding away at transforming himself into a center back ā€¦ I'm very proud of him.ā€


The 22-year-old D.C. Homegrown was the foundation on which the Black-and-Red built what veteran Sean Franklin dubbed a ā€œmust-winā€ result, as United prepare to spend nearly all of July ā€“ four straight games ā€“ on the road against rugged opposition.


ā€œWe were hungry,ā€ Robinson said. ā€œWe knew we needed this win, and then we have a big away stretch so we're gone for almost a month. We just really needed this result ā€“ we have to make RFK a fortress.ā€


Just as importantly for a D.C. side that has struggled at times in its efforts to evolve to a more assertive, proactive style of play, United were dominant when they needed to be against a Revs side packed with experienced, technical players. Rolling out a new-look 4-1-4-1 formation, Saturday's hosts enjoyed plenty of the ball early on as Argentine playmaker Luciano Acosta thrived in a free role underneath targetman Alvaro Saborio.


Acosta set up Lamar Neagle for the game's opening goal, a superbly taken volley, and Saborio's canny pass to Neagle set the stage for the Sean Franklin goal that assured the win.


ā€œSome of it's about getting our most dangerous guys on the field together, and asking them to work in a way that isn't always natural for them, but doing it for the betterment of the group,ā€ said coach Ben Olsen of the new tactical ā€œwrinkle,ā€ one that he said would be used again in the future.


ā€œToday they did that, and at the end of the day that's why we come out with three points. ā€¦ I'm looking forward to building off of this group that we played tonight.ā€