Since its July divorce with center forward Milan Iloski, San Diego FC has received just one goal at Iloski’s spot and scored at a much lower rate in the nine games.
But because it also has slashed its goals-allowed rate, the first-year soccer club has sustained its average of 1.9 points per match to stay atop the 15-team Western Conference.
Numerous variables outside of SDFC’s center-forward play have affected SDFC’s play since a financial impasse sent Esconido’s Iloski back to Denmark in mid-July. He has since returned to Major League Soccer with the Eastern Conference-leading Philadelphia Union.
Even if a deal had been worked out, Iloski was unlikely to continue his white-hot pace of 10 goals scored over 479 minutes in 14 matches. Within that sun-burst flurry, the MLS rookie tallied four goals across 12 minutes at first-place Vancouver.
“That probably will never be done again in MLS,” club general manager Tyler Heaps said after the sides’ fruitless talk led to Iloski’s departure.
It’s probable, though, that if a contract with Iloski had been reached, San Diego’s offense would have more sparkle.
Iloski had meshed with several teammates. He appeared in peak fitness.
San Diego Football Club’s, Marcus Ingvartsen (7) fighting for position during Saturday’s Major League Soccer match against Austin FC, at Snapdragon Stadium in San Diego, CA. (Xavier Hernandez for the UT)
The most capable candidate on the roster to replace Iloski was Marcus Ingvartsen, 29, the starter whose April injury led Heaps to get Iloski on loan from SDFC’s sister club in Denmark.
Ingvartsen returned Aug. 12 against San Jose. He played midfielder that night, and he looked like himself. Physical and savvy, the 6-foot-1½ Dane had an assist and a goal in a 2-1 road victory.
But Ingvartsen hasn’t returned to the game roster.
San Diego FC has received a number of dangerous shots and other moments of flair from three others who’ve piled up minutes at center forward in this stretch, but it has received no goals or assists.
Tomás Ángel, who’d played often at wing, started the four games after Iloski’s exit. The 22-year-old Colombian pressed well as a defender but was more effective at wing.
In recent weeks, Heaps imported two MLS players with center-forward experience: Escondido native Corey Baird, 29, and Norway’s Amahl Pelligrino, 35.
They’ve each played in three matches, about the number Iloski needed to acclimate. Saturday, each newcomer flashed some skill.
The 6-3 Pelligrino, crashing the net, one-touched a crosser flush from eight yards (it was blocked). Baird, who at 5-10 is similar to Iloski in stature, flicked a clever header a foot wide of the far post.
But post-Iloski, only Anders Dreyer, the star wing, has scored from the center-forward position.
San Diego FC’s Milan Iloski, back right, celebrates his second goal against the Vancouver Whitecaps with Alejandro Alvarado Jr. (70) and Oscar Verhoeven (33) during the first half of an MLS soccer match in Vancouver, British Columbia, Wednesday, June 25, 2025. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press via AP)
None of Iloski’s replacements have matched his fit within the attack, his dribbling or the sure touch that the 5-9 1/2 UCLA alum displayed as Ingvartsen’s stand-in.
It’s also true that Dreyer and SDFC’s other star wing, Hirving “Chucky” Lozano, have mustered numerous threats without an established center forward.
And Saturday night, the adaptive ability of San Diego’s coach, Mikey Varas, drew strong praise from visiting coach Eric Ramsay following Minnesota United’s 3-1 victory in Mission Valley. SDFC continues to pose challenges with its high-press and ball-control game, Ramsay said.
“I think that’s obviously a problem position for them in the sense that they don’t have a natural No. 9 (center-forward) fit other than Baird, who came on toward the end (Saturday),” Ramsay said. “Iloski, he’s not a 9 in the same way that (Minnesota’s) Kelvin Yeboah is. Or Tani Oluwayesi, the 9 that we sold to Villareal (of Spain’s top league). But, certianly he’s a very good goal-scorer and certainly had a really good knack for movement and finishing.
“Obviously, they’ve got the two guys on each side and possibly (are) missing that piece down the middle a little bit. But, every other coach in the league would (love to have) Dreyer and Lozano, irrespective of what else you’ve got. It’s an impressive set of players, for sure.”
As the 34-game MLS season crawls toward the playoffs, which will begin in late October, SDFC (17-8-5) is one of several contenders that’s navigating flux — some of it good — at a forward spot.
Minnesota, which sits two points behind SDFC, got a reported $8.5 million for Oluwayesi last month, but thus was tasked with replacing its leader in both goals and assists.
Third-place Vancouver, which is four points behind SDFC but has played two fewer games, sold its best midfielder, Pedro Vite, to Mexico’s Pumas for $4.5 million in July. The club recently imported German great Thomas Müller.
Müller notched a hat trick Saturday in his league debut and Vancouver dismantled Philadelphia’s top-ranked defense on the way to a 7-0 win. The showing on Müller’s 36th birthday did not reflect well on MLS quality.
The bottom line here: Iloski isn’t coming back to Mission Valley … unless SDFC and Philadelphia meet in the MLS Cup.
Can someone else make the most of a great opportunity?
Originally Published: September 14, 2025 at 6:27 PM PDT