logo
St. Louis City fires head coach Olof Mellberg, seeks ‘return to a winning culture'

St. Louis City fires head coach Olof Mellberg, seeks ‘return to a winning culture'

New York Times28-05-2025
On Tuesday, St. Louis City announced it had fired head coach Olof Mellberg before the midpoint of his first season. The Swede lasted just 15 regular-season games in the job.
Mellberg is the third MLS coach to be dismissed in the 2025 season, following Laurent Courtois' firing by CF Montréal and Peter Vermes mutually parting ways with Sporting Kansas City. David Critchley, the head coach of St. Louis' MLS Next Pro affiliate, will serve as interim head coach.
Advertisement
'The decision to part ways with Olof goes beyond just results,' sporting director Lutz Pfannenstiel said in the club's press release. 'We've analyzed the team's performance across a number of factors, including the need to execute against a style of play that led to the team's initial success and has been part of our DNA for four years.
'As a club, we have certain standards we need to meet and believe a coaching change was necessary to improve our overall performance and return to a winning culture. Our fans deserve a better-performing team, and we intend to give them one.'
St. Louis CITY SC part ways with Head Coach Olof Mellberg.
🗞️ https://t.co/xjAGPxzThY pic.twitter.com/VkPYMddrnv
— St Louis CITY SC (@stlCITYsc) May 27, 2025
The move is the latest in a series of attempts to reignite a spark under St. Louis City.
Pfannenstiel became St. Louis City's first sporting director, joining the club in 2020 to help oversee the process of building out the club's sporting department. Among his most important decisions was naming Bradley Carnell as the club's first head coach, fresh off his impressive stint as interim coach of the New York Red Bulls.
Carnell and St. Louis were an instant hit upon debuting in 2023, fueled by a system that took many cues from the Red Bull Football Group's guiding ideology. Under Carnell, St. Louis had the league's most voracious forward press, creating plenty of goals and chances by forcing opponents into turnovers in their own third. The success came despite very little squad stability, as Carnell utilized 32 different starting lineups across the 34-game season.
St. Louis City shocked MLS by finishing atop the Western Conference in its first season, winning 17 games and totalling 56 points as many of the conference's usual powers underwent relative down years. Unfortunately, any momentum from this remarkable debut was quickly extinguished, as No. 8-ranked Sporting Kansas City upset St. Louis in the first round of the playoffs, needing just two games of the best-of-three series to eliminate the top seed.
Advertisement
Despite the strong first impression, Carnell was dismissed midway through 2024 as St. Louis notched just three wins and 10 draws in its first 20 games. After overperforming their expected goals by 18.01 in 2023, the team was narrowly underperforming by -1.4 just over halfway through the year. Technical director John Hackworth oversaw the rest of the year as Pfannenstiel began the search for Carnell's successor, with Mellberg appointed in late November.
'Olof has an incredible work ethic and reputation for being disciplined and detail-oriented,' Pfannenstiel said at the time of Mellberg's hiring. 'His leadership qualities as a captain, both at the highest club level and with his national team, will be key to managing our group. Olof's ability to develop young talent was seen at his Swedish club and we can't wait to see it translate here in St. Louis.'
A former center back at Aston Villa, Juventus and Villarreal, Mellberg's coaching CV was highlighted by bringing Brommapojkarna to the top-flight of Sweden, keeping them in the Allsvenskan for three consecutive years (a first in club history), including their record-high finish of 10th in the 2024 season.
Mellberg seemed to struggle to make the leap to MLS, though, even while inheriting many of the same players who had started under Carnell.
The squad saw few reinforcements ahead of the 2025 season, with two players signed on free transfers, one joining through the MLS SuperDraft and another on loan.
At the time of Mellberg's dismissal, St. Louis ranks 28th in the 30-team league. Only three teams have dropped more points from leading positions than St. Louis' ledger of 10. That doesn't count last week's U.S. Open Cup round-of-16 loss to Minnesota United, where the team came back from a 1-0 deficit to lead 2-1 in the 65th minute. Minnesota flipped the result again, with Anthony Markanich scoring two goals in the final five minutes to eliminate the visitors.
Advertisement
Adding further insult, Markanich was only available for the Loons after they acquired him from St. Louis in August 2024. Minnesota sent St. Louis just $50,000 of allocation money for the left back, the lowest denomination MLS allows teams to trade.
Although Mellberg didn't have much time to build a robust sample size, he seemed to want his team to play in a very different style from the 'DNA' Pfannenstiel cited when referring to the 2023 iteration. The team ranks 23rd in PPDA (passes per defensive action, a measure of pressing intensity), affording opponents more time on the ball in dangerous areas. While Carnell's side had a field tilt of 49.5% in 2023 — that is, possession when only counting attacking-third touches — Mellberg's version ranked last in MLS with just 34.5% of attacking touches.
Study the team's xG performance since their launch, however, and it's hard to see where this team should have been expected to fare better — including in their emphatic debut. The viz above charts the expected goals St. Louis accrues to the total it concedes; for the majority of their nearly two-and-a-half years of operation, they've played at a deficit in pure chance creation.
And so, for a second consecutive season, St. Louis will spend a crucial stretch of the season looking for a new coach. Meanwhile, Carnell has transitioned well to his new job with the Philadelphia Union, who lead an Eastern Conference boasting preseason favorites including the Columbus Crew, FC Cincinnati and Inter Miami. With the Union, Carnell has inherited a squad that reached the MLS Cup in 2022. It's a level of recent success that St. Louis seems desperate to attain, but another lost season running coaching interviews will do little to foster the requisite momentum to win in MLS.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Blake Snell is sharp in Dodgers return, but Rays get the win
Blake Snell is sharp in Dodgers return, but Rays get the win

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Blake Snell is sharp in Dodgers return, but Rays get the win

Blake Snell nearly had a flawless return from the injured list on Saturday afternoon. If only the Tampa Bay Rays didn't have slugger Yandy Díaz, or a quirky short right-field wall at their temporary home at Steinbrenner Field. Making his first start since the second week of the season, when he went down with a shoulder injury that shelved him, Snell largely looked like the ace the Dodgers thought they were getting when they signed him to a $182-million contract this offseason. Over a five-inning start that included eight strikeouts, no walks and a whole bunch of flailing swings by the Rays, the veteran left-hander flashed his two-time Cy Young Award-winning stuff and tantalizing late-season potential. However, in the Dodgers' 4-0 loss to the Rays, Snell gave up three runs on a pair of long balls to Díaz –– who twice took advantage of the ballpark's short porch in right field. After the Rays' permanent home, Tropicana Field in nearby St. Petersburg, had its canvas roof shredded during Hurricane Milton this winter, the club relocated to Steinbrenner Field for this season; using the New York Yankees' open-air, Tampa-based spring training park for its home schedule. Read more: Dodgers welcome deadline additions, hopeful arrival 'raises the floor for our ballclub' Since the 10,000-seat venue was modeled after Yankee Stadium in New York, its defining feature is a short right-field wall (similar to the one in the Bronx) that measures at just 314 feet down the line — eight feet shorter than the dimensions at Tropicana Field. In the bottom of the first inning, Díaz took full advantage, golfing a 3-1 fastball the other way for a solo home run. According to MLB's Statcast system, the ball traveled only 326 feet, and would have stayed in play at each of the league's other 29 stadiums. But not here, and especially not on a sweltering summer afternoon with a first-pitch temperature of 91 degrees. The first-row drive opened the scoring and it wouldn't be the last souvenir Díaz sent that direction on the day. Two innings later, Díaz came back to the plate with Snell seemingly in a groove, having retired seven of the next eight batters, including five on strikeouts. However, on a 1-1 fastball that was up in the zone, Díaz launched one to the opposite field again, hitting a two-run blast on a 341-foot fly ball that would've been a homer in only two other parks (Yankee Stadium itself, and Daikin Park in Houston). Frustrating results that overshadowed an otherwise auspicious day. In the big picture, after all, the Dodgers' main priorities for Snell are: 1) Stay healthy; 2) Pitch better than he did at the start of the season, when his bothersome shoulder contributed to two underwhelming outings that marred the start of his Dodgers career. Down the stretch this season, the Dodgers' biggest strength might be their rotation. Yoshinobu Yamamoto is in the Cy Young Award conversation. Tyler Glasnow has looked improved since returning from his own shoulder injury. Shohei Ohtani has showcased tantalizing talent in his return from a Tommy John procedure. And even Clayton Kershaw has been productive in his 18th season. The biggest linchpin, though, likely remains Snell — whom the Dodgers targeted this offseason in hopes of avoiding the tightrope they walked last October, when their injury-ravaged rotation was almost completely depleted by the start of the postseason. While the Dodgers had managed in Snell's absence, maintaining a narrow lead in the National League West despite another prolonged stretch of patchwork pitching, manager Dave Roberts acknowledged they had missed his 'presence' over the first two-thirds of the season. Having guys like him and Glasnow back, Roberts added, could mean 'everything' to the team's chances entering the stretch run of the campaign. 'Last year, we found a way to do it, not having that [rotation depth],' Roberts said. 'But having the starters healthy, pitching the way they're capable of, makes it a better quality of life for everyone.' Outside of the Díaz home run, Snell offered plenty of promise in his return to action. First and foremost, he filled up the strike zone, eliminating his habit of nibbling around the plate by throwing 57 strikes in 86 pitches. And, in another positive development, many of those strikes were of the swing-and-miss variety. Snell racked up 19 whiffs on Saturday, tied for third-most by a Dodgers pitcher in a game this season. Seven came on 12 total swings against his changeup, a key offspeed pitch that showed no signs of rust even after his long layoff. Five others were courtesy of his slider, with the Rays coming up empty on all five swing attempts against it. It wasn't enough to help the Dodgers win on Saturday — when their lineup managed only six hits and squandered its best opportunity to rally on Teoscar Hernández's bases-loaded, inning-ending double-play grounder in the top of the sixth. But it did raise the hopes about the potential of the team's late-season rotation, offering a glimpse of the dominance the Dodgers will need out of Snell the rest of the year. 'I think this is sort of what we envisioned,' Roberts said, with his pitching staff finally looking closer to its original design. 'It hasn't been linear, like it ever is, as far as how you get to a place. But … signs are kind of looking like the roster we all intended.' Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Blake Snell surrenders 2 home runs in return from IL as Dodgers lose 4-0 to Rays
Blake Snell surrenders 2 home runs in return from IL as Dodgers lose 4-0 to Rays

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Blake Snell surrenders 2 home runs in return from IL as Dodgers lose 4-0 to Rays

Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Blake Snell made his first start since April 2 on Saturday and gave up two home runs during a 4-0 loss to the Tampa Bay Rays. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Snell was activated off the injured list after missing the last four months with left shoulder inflammation. He had made only two starts to begin the season, allowing two earned runs and 10 hits in nine total innings. However, the left-hander only registered four strikeouts with eight walks, likely indicating something wasn't right. On Saturday, Snell went five innings and allowed three earned runs on five hits with eight strikeouts. Yandy Díaz, Snell's former teammate in Tampa, took him deep twice during the Rays' win. The Dodgers were curiously quiet at the MLB trade deadline, adding reliever Brock Stewart and outfielder Alex Call. But that may have been because the team anticipated getting pitchers like Snell back. If he's as effective as he's been during his previous nine seasons, Snell could be a more impactful addition than any trade acquisition. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts announced Wednesday that Snell was scheduled to start Saturday. He threw a bullpen session Thursday to get into his routine for a regular starting spot. Snell started 108 games for Tampa Bay, compiling a 3.24 ERA and 42-30 record while averaging 10.5 strikeouts per nine innings. He was traded to the San Diego Padres before the 2021 season and pitched for the Dodgers' NL West rivals for three seasons, posting a 3.15 ERA, averaging 11.9 Ks per nine innings and winning the National League Cy Young Award in 2023. After becoming a free agent following the 2023 season, Snell was one of the "Boras Four," clients of infamous super-agent Scott Boras who had difficulty getting lucrative long-term contracts on the open market. Ultimately, Snell settled for a two-year, $62 million contract with the San Francisco Giants. But he opted out of the deal after the first year, trying free agency again after notching 145 strikeouts in 104 innings. Snell signed a five-year, $182 million deal with the Dodgers last November, joining what appeared to be a powerhouse rotation for one of the best teams in baseball. Injuries have prevented that rotation — which includes Tyler Glasnow, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Roki Sasaki, Clayton Kershaw, Tony Gonsolin and Shohei Ohtani — from following through on that promise. But with nearly all of those pitchers now recovering, the Dodgers could have a formidable rotation by the end of the season and into the postseason if they remain healthy.

50-Year-Old Woman in Disbelief After Neighbor Called Her ‘Sad' for Complaining About Party: ‘Should We Have Sucked It Up?'
50-Year-Old Woman in Disbelief After Neighbor Called Her ‘Sad' for Complaining About Party: ‘Should We Have Sucked It Up?'

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

50-Year-Old Woman in Disbelief After Neighbor Called Her ‘Sad' for Complaining About Party: ‘Should We Have Sucked It Up?'

'Should we have just sucked it up, closed our windows and stayed inside?' she asked, following the confrontation with her neighborNEED TO KNOW A 50-year-old woman teamed up with a group of neighbors to confront a tenant in their apartment complex who hosted a large party Recalling the situation on Reddit, she said the exchange became "toxic" when the other person and her friends began hurling insults at the group 'Should we have just sucked it up, closed our windows and stayed inside?' the woman askedA 50-year-old woman is having second thoughts about her decision to confront a new tenant in her apartment complex. On Monday, July 28, the woman penned a lengthy post on Reddit's Am I the A------ forum, explaining that she lives in a large apartment complex with 'historical significance.' She said it has huge communal gardens that are great for sitting in with friends or solo. In recent years, however, neighbors have been using the shared space to host parties with over 50 attendees on the weekend. She said the events are often noisy until the early hours, guests use residents' parking bays and the grounds are used as a toilet due to no available facilities nearby. 'Recently, a new-ish tenant declared her intention to hold a big party in the grounds and her Facebook post got a few 'likes' (from her friends), but when it came to the weekend in question she had hired in a massive marquee that could easily hold 100 people and decided to put it up right in the middle of the gardens,' the woman wrote. The woman said the tenants who live in the apartment complex have a Facebook group, where many began to complain about the disruptive party and the size of the marquee. She recalled that other members of the group, who 'don't get impacted by garden parties as they're on the other side of the building,' started hurling insults. 'We are apparently 'sad, mean, despicable, douchebags,' just some of the choice phrases,' the original poster recounted, before revealing that several members on her side of the group were also trolled privately. The woman said everyone who complained about the party noise was accused of 'piling on' the host. 'We then received a massive 'pile on' of messages ranging from the 'mean, miserable, despicable, sad old farts' to the petulant 'I hope you're happy' grumpiness backlash piled on all weekend,' she continued. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. She described the exchange in the Facebook group as getting 'toxic very quickly.' She argued the comments made by those who disagreed were the party were 'really tame,' while those who supported the event made it personal. 'So, AITA [am I the a------] for being part of the no group?' the woman asked Redditors. 'Should we have just sucked it up, closed our windows and stayed inside?' Responses to the post reassured the woman that it was the right decision to confront the tenant hosting the loud party. Many advised her to make a noise complaint with the police or to report the tenant to the housing manager. 'NTA [not the a------]. Communal spaces such as this are intended for the use of residents, not to be used by mobs of outsiders. No event should be allowed to affect any of you in the ways that you describe,' one person commented. 'NTA. I think you all are being way too polite about huge parties of people p---ing in your gardens. More people should be loudly angry about that,' another wrote. Read the original article on People

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store