Rafael Navarro’s seventh goal of season lifts Rapids past Vancouver on wet night at DSGP

What bet­ter way to respond to an ugly loss than with an ugly win?

Just a few days after blow­ing a 2–0 lead to the worst team in the West­ern Con­fer­ence, the Col­orado Rapids (6–4‑3) earned a bet­ter result against a bet­ter team, get­ting the best of the Van­cou­ver White­caps (5–4‑3), 1–0, to move into a four-way tie for sec­ond place in the West.

The lone goal for the Rapids on a rainy Wednes­day night at Dick’s Sport­ing Goods Park came from the penal­ty spot in first-half stop­page time thanks to Rafael Navar­ro, who is now a per­fect 4 for 4 on penal­ty kicks.

“It’s impor­tant for a strik­er to score the goals, and the group and the staff have embraced me very well,” Navar­ro said after scor­ing his sev­enth goal of the sea­son. “That does a lot for my con­fi­dence and it is very high right now.”

A month and a half between now and the end of June sep­a­rates his team-lead­ing sev­enth goal and a loom­ing deci­sion by the front office about his future with the club. A $4.5 mil­lion price tag awaits Pádraig Smith and the Rapids’ front office, though the club is expect­ed to try to nego­ti­ate that down.

The inter­est to keep Navar­ro is strong, espe­cial­ly as he keeps find­ing his stride both from the spot and in open play. His goal against Van­cou­ver marks the third straight match in which he’s found the back of the net.

The penal­ty came by way of VAR review on a play where Omir Fer­nan­dez played a won­der­ful ball to Cole Bas­sett in behind the defense. Bas­sett found Djord­je Mihailovic crash­ing toward the six-yard box, but his shot was blocked from point-blank range by a slid­ing Bjørn Utvik.

Upon review, ref­er­ee Alex­is Da Sil­va deter­mined the ball went off of Utvik’s arm in an unnat­ur­al posi­tion and con­clud­ed it was a denial of an obvi­ous goal-scor­ing oppor­tu­ni­ty. Because of that, not only was a penal­ty award­ed, but Utvik was shown a red card.

Coach Chris Armas didn’t pull any punch­es up a goal and a man in the sec­ond half. He could have replaced for­wards with more defen­sive play­ers and parked the bus, but Armas brought in fresh attack­ing legs ear­ly and often in the sec­ond half while con­tin­u­ous­ly instruct­ing his team to attack and per­haps push the lead to two or more, though that nev­er happened.

“It’s a weird one. We’re hap­py with the win, but for me espe­cial­ly as an attack­er, you want to get goals and assists in that (type of) game,” Bas­sett said. “We def­i­nite­ly didn’t get enough in the sec­ond half, so per­son­al­ly a lit­tle frus­trat­ed we didn’t score more.

“Our pro­gres­sion as a team, we’ve had a cou­ple of times where teams have got­ten red cards this year and we haven’t buried a lot of chances even though we’ve cre­at­ed a few of them. So I think that’s the next step as a team.”

Colorado Rapids head coach Chris Armas takes the pitch for the first half of an MLS soccer match against the Vancouver Whitecaps Wednesday, May 15, 2024, in Commerce City, Colo. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
Col­orado Rapids head coach Chris Armas takes the pitch for the first half of an MLS soc­cer match against the Van­cou­ver White­caps Wednes­day, May 15, 2024, in Com­merce City, Colo. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

There were plen­ty of oppor­tu­ni­ties in the sec­ond half to extend their lead, but the Rapids time and time again just bare­ly got it wrong. While nobody uses the pitch con­di­tions as an excuse, the ball was cer­tain­ly mov­ing a lot quick­er than usu­al on the wet field.

Armas was con­tent with the chance cre­ation and even hap­pi­er with the three points. He drew com­par­isons to Man­ches­ter City, which he said is “arguably one of the best teams in the world,” but one that also strug­gles to exe­cute the final action in attack­ing moves.

“It’s not so easy some­times to make the right deci­sion with the right pace on the ball, get­ting the guys arriv­ing in the right moments then again mak­ing the best deci­sions,” Armas said. “But the effort was good in the sec­ond half to push. We cre­at­ed lots of those moments and it would have been nice to get that sec­ond one, but there’s also some­thing to be said for a 1–0 victory.”

The one damper on an oth­er­wise pos­i­tive night was Mihailovic hav­ing to be tak­en off in the 72nd minute.

After nar­row­ly miss­ing a shot from dis­tance, he went down grab­bing the same heel he injured against Cincin­nati and for which he had to sit against NYCFC. He walked off the field under his own power.

The club did not pro­vide any addi­tion­al infor­ma­tion, but his avail­abil­i­ty for Saturday’s Rocky Moun­tain Cup rematch against Real Salt Lake is like­ly in jeop­ardy. The match will begin in Salt Lake City at 7:30 p.m.

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