MLS Coaching GradesGOAL

Grading MLS coaching hires: Michael Bradley looks ready for the Red Bulls challenge, but is Raphael Wicky ready for another shot in MLS with Sporting KC?

It's new manager season. With MLS Cup long gone, most teams have been in offseason mode for a while. And that means there are new coaches in the fold - and one or two older ones making their return, as well. Every club now has a head coach. Some big clubs, including New York Red Bulls, Atlanta United, and LAFC, have brought in new faces, while others are also in need of help as they look to push to the top of the standings. 

The headline hire is surely Tata Martino, who is looking to show that soccer reunions can indeed be successful. But there are others, too, with Michael Bradley penning a deal to take over at New York Red Bulls - his first top-level managerial job in professional soccer. Henrik Rydstrom has the inenviable job of replacing Wilfried Nancy at Columbus Crew. Not all of them will work out, of course. But some might just be strokes of genius. 

GOAL looks at the key hirings and firings of the MLS offseason - and why some may prove inspired while others carry real risk.

  • Inter Miami v Atlanta United - 2024 MLS Cup PlayoffsGetty Images Sport

    Tata Martino, Atlanta United

    Status: Official
    Why he was hired: Ronny Delia was sacked after a disastrous 2025 campaign. Martino is an unsexy pick, but he's a smart one. The manager led Atlanta United to immediate success when he took the job in 2016, and many didn't want him to leave two years later. He is still regarded by many Atlanta fans as their quintessential coach and will undoubtedly restore a sense of calm at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. 

    Tactical identity: Flexible, but attacking. His teams have always pressed high and focused on keeping the ball once they win it back. They are less about chaos and more about control - think Pep Guardiola rather than Jurgen Klopp's famed Gegenpress. Martino wants to have the ball and allow creative players to express themselves (which is why Miguel Almiron was so good for him first time around).

    Why it makes sense: He knows the club, and he gets results. Martino is not a tactical revolutionary, but he understands the Atlanta ethos, has brought MLS Cup success to the Five Stripes before, and will certainly make the side much more disciplined. Will they win with him right away? No. But they won't do loads of losing, either. 

    Why it might not work: Martino was excellent during his first stint at Atlanta United, but his 2023 return comes in a very different MLS. His managerial record since leaving the club in 2018 has been mixed, marked by struggles with Mexico and inconsistency despite the talent at Inter Miami. For all the talk of a hometown hero returning, fresh ideas may ultimately prove more valuable.

    Grade: B+

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  • Michael Bradley, New York Red Bulls IIGetty

    Michael Bradley, New York Red Bulls

    Status: Official

    Why he was hired: Sandro Schwarz’s firing may have been harsh, but after failing to reach the playoffs, the Red Bulls clearly felt new ideas were required. Bradley is regarded as one of the brightest young minds in American soccer, and it would not be surprising if success at the club level eventually puts him in the USMNT conversation. The former Red Bulls midfielder has learned from some of the game’s best - including his father Bob and Jesse Marsch - and received a strong grounding in the RB system before moving into full-time management last summer. He knows the club well, and it is easy to see the appeal of the defensive-midfielder-turned-coach narrative.

    Tactical identity: There is still plenty to be determined. Bradley has been a first-team coach for only six months, having taken over New York Red Bulls II in June. At the time, he told GOAL that he strongly subscribes to the Red Bull ethos of high pressing and expressive football. Since then, however, he appears to have evolved, with sporting director Julian de Guzman noting that Bradley was hired in part because of the new wrinkles he showed outside that system. His Red Bulls II side was the highest-scoring team in the MLS Next Pro playoffs and went on to win the championship, offering early evidence to support those claims. Expect a 4-3-3, but with less than a year in professional management, Bradley is still very much finding his feet.

    Why it makes sense: It's aligned with the Red Bull philosophy. What we have here is a bright young mind who wants to win games and look good doing so. He has played for the club, knows what it means to wear the badge, and has a steely sort of determination that will make his team competitive. The fact that he has plenty of experience on both sides of the Atlantic should help, too. 

    Why it might not work: Bradley is 38 and inexperienced in top-flight management. This is a Red Bulls side that missed the playoffs for the first time in 15 years, and will need a bit of a reset in order to move into a new era. This could be one year too soon - regardless of Bradley's credentials.

    Grade: A-

  • Marc Dos SantosGetty Images

    Marc Dos Santos, LAFC

    Status: Official

    Why he was hired: To play it safe. LAFC were excellent over the last couple of months under Steve Cherundolo - who walked away from the job at the end of the season. And in Dos Santos, they have simply promoted his assistant. Dos Santos has been around the block, held a previous MLS head coaching position, and should allow for some crucial continuity for an LAFC side that came within a penalty shootout of playing for MLS Cup. 

    Tactical identity: Possession-based 4-3-3, which will be a bit of a difference from his predecessor. Cherundolo got flexible with things, but his LAFC side were at his best when they played on the counter, with Son Heung-Min and Denis Bouanga as an attacking two. Dos Santos' teams have been more methodical and played with more obvious wide players throughout the years.

    Why it makes sense: It's an unbelievably safe pick - and the kind of thing you see good teams do all of the time. Dos Santos has been in Los Angeles since 2022, and has seen this group grow and develop. He already has relationships with the players and will know exactly what he's working with from Day 1. 

    Why it might not work: His record as a head coach is mixed. He made the playoffs just once with Vancouver, and even if he was working with very little, other coaches have succeeded at the club with largely the same resources. He has yet to prove himself as a reliable main man. And Ange might have been available...

    Grade: B-

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  • Yoann Damet FC Cincinnati Getty

    Yoann Damet, St. Louis CITY SC

    Status: Official

    Why he was hired: St. Louis CITY SC need a complete reset. Olof Mellberg was a disaster from Day 1, and lasted until May 27 before being let go. St. Louis promoted their MLS Next Pro manager, David Critchley, to the interim job. But he didn't get much more out of the team, either. And after losing their sporting director, Lutz Pfannenstiel, to Aberdeen of the Scottish Premier League, Damet is the face of a new era. He has held a series of solid assistant jobs, most recently under the excellent Wilfried Nancy at Columbus. 

    Tactical identity: Largely unknown. His influences have all played attack-minded football, including Nancy, Mikey Varas, and Greg Vanney. And during his interim spell at FC Cincinnati, he focused on possession-based football. But that was six years ago - and Damet was just 29. St. Louis have a squad built to keep the ball, but whether Damet is as expressive as his influences remains to be seen.

    Why it makes sense: What do they have to lose? This is a project, and St. Louis finished 15th in the West last year. They were the second-worst team in Major League Soccer, and are in total rebuild mode after their sporting director left, too. There are some talents to work with, but this is otherwise a young team building from the ground up. Damet is an interesting manager who is overdue for a head coaching job. 

    Why it might not work: They need someone to steady the ship. St. Louis have some quality, but they're also in free-fall. Even in MLS - where fortunes can change quickly - they are two years away from being real competitors. A veteran manager who knows how to navigate the ups and downs of a season might have been a smarter pick.

    Grade: C

  • MATT WELLSGetty Images

    Matt Wells, Colorado Rapids

    Status: Official

    Why he was hired: The Rapids had a good manager in Chris Armas, but faced a tough decision when his contract expired at the end of the season. They invested heavily to try to give the U.S. Soccer Hall of Famer a competitive squad, but a collapse in the final weeks of the campaign effectively made their decision for them. Wells is another young mind who, as an assistant, has followed a handful of solid coaches around Europe. His time at Fulham, Brugge, and Tottenham has all brought varying degrees of success, but he has been around some of the best - most recently Thomas Frank - and should provide a real energy. 

    Tactical identity: TBD.

    He has worked under two managers with starkly different styles in Ange Postecoglou and Thomas Frank at Tottenham. Wells ran much of the day-to-day training under Frank and was also heavily involved during Postecoglou’s stint. Colorado’s squad is not built to sit deep, and it is unlikely he will look to park the bus.

    Why it makes sense: It feels very Colorado. The Rapids have a capable squad with enough quality, but what they need most is a clear tactical hand to bring it together. Wells effectively ran the show for Frank in recent months and held significant day-to-day roles under Postecoglou and Scott Parker, both of whom were tactically detailed operators, for better or worse. His man-management remains an open question, but his tactical acumen is not.

    Why it might not work: Inexperience. He has never held a head coaching job and has little knowledge of MLS. Even the best coaches can succumb to that harsh reality.

    Grade: B

  • Henrik RydstromGetty

    Henrik Rydstrom, Columbus Crew

    Status: Official

    Why he was hired: Wilfried Nancy left. The Frenchman was, by some distance, the best coach in MLS, and could have bolted in the summer. But he saw out the season, and gave the Crew time to bring in a fresh face. In Rydstrom, they have brought in something a little different. The Swedish manager was once a rock-solid defensive midfielder who spent most of his career at Kalmar FF. But management suited him. He won the Swedish League twice with Malmo, and earned plaudits from fans and other coaches alike for his unique football. He is an interesting tactical mind who will have a solid philosophy when it comes to setting up his side.

    Tactical identity: "Relationism."

    Rydstrom's sides are interesting. They play, loosely, a 4-2-3-1, but most of their shapes are slightly asymmetrical. The focus is not necessarily on positions as much as creating overloads and finding the spaces to create numerical advantages. The Crew, under Rydstrom, will likely dominate possession, but look to play more of a controlled style than fans might be used to. It might be a little slow at times, but they will have a lot of the ball and create plenty of chances.

    Why it makes sense: It's a tactically groovy decision for a club looking for something new. Darlington Nagbe is gone. Nancy created, in effect, the whole club's identity before he departed. The Crew need a central figure who will shape the identity of the team, a man with a plan to push the side back towards the top of the Eastern Conference. Tidy tacticians have worked in this league before. He could be another successful case.

    Why it might not work: Too much tactical rigidity. His Malmo side were one of the worst running teams in the league in 2025, and when results went south, Rydstrom didn't really have a backup plan. Coaches need a plan B. It's unclear what Rydstrom's is. There's also the fact that Nancy will be very hard to follow.

    Grade: B+

  • Raphael Wicky, manager of Young BoysGetty Images

    Raphael Wicky, Sporting KC

    Status: Official

    Why he was hired: Sporting KC were without a head coach for a while. Peter Vermes left his dual role of CSO-head coach in March, and the club elected to stick with an interim until the end of the year. Former NYCFC man David Lee was swiftly announced as CSO before the season ended, and the head coaching search has yielded a seasoned vet who has won in Europe and turned in a solid stint in MLS before. This will be a tricky job for a rebuilding side who struggled immensely last year, but Wicky certainly has the talent.  

    Tactical identity: Wicky loves to have the ball. His teams are pretty traditional in their set up, preferring some version of a 4-4-2 diamond shape - the system that saw him garner success at Young Boys in 2022 and 2023. He likes an old-fashioned sort of No.10, a high defensive line, and encourages his goalie to be able to play the ball out from the back. At times, Wicky has also experimented with a 3-4-3 system, too. 

    Why it makes sense: What do Sporting have to lose? Wicky was pretty highly regarded a few years ago, has experience in MLS, and knows the American soccer landscape well enough. Kansas City are going through a rebuild no matter what, and with a fresh face in the front office, it only makes sense to have a solid tactician in the dugout.

    Why it might not work: Wicky's tactics are a little old-fashioned, and it's unclear if the current squad suits his vision. Two-striker setups are rare in soccer these days, and His previous stint in MLS was concerning, too, as he won just 12 games in two years for Chicago. Still, that was half a decade ago... 

    Grade: B

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