Philadelphia Union’s 4-1 loss to Los Angeles FC was a tale of two strikers.

During Philadelphia’s dominant opening stretch of the game, C.J. Sapong muffed a great setup in the 11th minute and failed to get a shot off. Fourteen minutes later, Los Angeles striker Adama Diomande played Mark McKenzie like a pirouette in the open field to score against the run of play and reverse the flow of the game. Momentum swung to Los Angeles and never went back. Diomande netted a hat trick. Sapong put in another subpar, anonymous performance most notable for his failings near goal.

Consider how different that game would have been if the Union had gone up 1-0 in the 11th minute while dominating the opening 24 minutes.

As good as Sapong is in other aspects of the game — he may be the league’s best defensive forward — if your striker isn’t dangerous in front of goal, your team is likely dropping points all season long.

Two years ago, I wrote that the Union didn’t need to import a striker from Europe because they had Sapong, and I was right.

However, this is a very different Union team in a different position.

The Union may be a good striker away from being a very, very good club. Like, the sort that contends for a title this year.

Ideally, that striker would be Sapong, and the Sapong of 2017 would be good enough for a title contender. He scored 16 goals in 2,794 minutes last year and earned his U.S. national team call-up with that play.

This year, he has two goals in 1,154. He looks cold, tentative, tired, and unsure of himself. We saw him in this zone before (late 2016), albeit perhaps not quite to this degree, so we know how it goes — not well. He’s not finding space in dangerous positions as often. When he gets opportunities, he’s blowing them in ways that seem more mental than physical. Right now, his play appears to be getting worse, not better. He looks like Andrew Wenger a few years ago: Poised for stardom, suddenly slumping, his confidence shot.

The Union need a change at striker, not just for the team’s benefit, but for Sapong’s. He remains a valuable player for Philadelphia who has shown he can regain top form after a cold streak. You could argue the Union need to keep starting him until he breaks his duck, but bringing him into games as a fresh sub against a tired defense could be exactly what helps him do it.

The alternatives

The Union have alternatives, whether they’re willing to spend money or not.

Cory Burke: Burke has two goals and an assist in 349 minutes, and his activity has made the team look more dangerous and opened opportunities for teammates. He’s very raw, however, and always looks inches away from spectacularly losing control. (Remember his red card in his first start.) The benefit in giving Burke some starts is that you see what you have on the roster while giving Sapong time to right himself in a different role without spending more money.

Burke has two goals and an assist in 349 minutes, and his activity has made the team look more dangerous and opened opportunities for teammates. He’s very raw, however, and always looks inches away from spectacularly losing control. (Remember his red card in his first start.) The benefit in giving Burke some starts is that you see what you have on the roster while giving Sapong time to right himself in a different role without spending more money. Jay Simpson: An option because he’s on the roster, but he’s unlikely to see the light of day. Let’s move on.

An option because he’s on the roster, but he’s unlikely to see the light of day. Let’s move on. Fabian Herbers: Herbers has rarely played striker in MLS, but it’s where he played in college. He netted a goal and two assists in a start up top for Bethlehem Steel this past weekend.

Herbers has rarely played striker in MLS, but it’s where he played in college. He netted a goal and two assists in a start up top for Bethlehem Steel this past weekend. An import from abroad: The summer transfer window opens July 10. Plenty of strikers will be on the move, as is the case every summer. The Union have a recent track record of good mid-season signings from Europe (Tranquillo Barnetta, Alejandro Bedoya). A loan might be preferred, particularly if the Union feel Sapong can regain his good form. Could Earnie Stewart and Jay Sugarman shock Union fandom into delirious optimism by springing for a striker before Stewart departs the club in August?

The summer transfer window opens July 10. Plenty of strikers will be on the move, as is the case every summer. The Union have a recent track record of good mid-season signings from Europe (Tranquillo Barnetta, Alejandro Bedoya). A loan might be preferred, particularly if the Union feel Sapong can regain his good form. Could Earnie Stewart and Jay Sugarman shock Union fandom into delirious optimism by springing for a striker before Stewart departs the club in August? Trade within MLS: MLS may not be overflowing with excess productive strikers, but there are legitimate trade prospects out there. Ola Kamara, LA Galaxy: The Galaxy have looked like a perfect trade partner all season. Prior to a recent injury, Kamara was shoehorned in as an inverted left winger to make room for Zlatan Ibrahimovic. Meanwhile the Union’s big off-season signing, inverted left winger David Accam is now the Union’s fourth choice winger due to lack of productivity. A straight up trade — throw in allocation money if need be — would help both teams. Meanwhile, the Galaxy also need quality center backs, which the Union have in spades. The Galaxy even have excess depth in center midfield. A deal is waiting to be made. Juan Agudelo, New England: Agudelo has lost his starting spot again in New England, whose biggest weakness remains central defense, where the Union are loaded. Agudelo even has south Jersey roots, having spent much of his childhood in Barnegat, Ocean County. Christian Ramirez, Minnesota: Minnesota is like that one team in every fantasy league that you can count on to make boneheaded personnel moves, so let’s slot them in as option No. 3. (Portland isn’t dealing Fanendo Adi or Samuel Armenteros with the latter only on loan.) They are awful in central defense, and they apparently don’t believe you can ever have too many wingers. Coincidentally, those are the two spots where the Union have the most talent. You might just be able to convince Minnesota GM Manny Lagos into swapping Ramirez, a solid No. 9 keeping Abu Danladi on the bench, for Jack Elliott and allocation money, or for David Accam straight up. Maybe throw in a few cold ones to seal the deal. (This entry is only half-joking.)

MLS may not be overflowing with excess productive strikers, but there are legitimate trade prospects out there.

Windows open, windows shut

Sometimes, you have to seize the moment.

The Union may have one. From goalkeeper to the No. 10, they have looked as good on the ball as any team in the league since May 12. The midfield has clicked, Keegan Rosenberry has regained his all-star form, and even Ray Gaddis is looking good in attack down the left flank. No, he’s not a true left back, which remains the Union’s second weak link, but he’s been fine in attack and, as always, very good in defense.

The wall is their striker situation.

The Union can fix it and, in the process, make a statement of intent to their fans. Just because you’re eternally building for the future, it doesn’t mean you can’t also try to win right now.