Atlanta United is trying to make the best of this unprecedented situation.

Liam Curran, the position coach, sends video clips to the players, which includes Guzan, Kann and Brendon Moore. The group will gather on email to discuss the clips.

“It’s uncharted waters, right?” Guzan said. “We’ve never had anything like this happen for anyone in the world. To kind of try to navigate it has been unprecedented, but we are trying to do the best we can.”

Kann said that while watching video of himself he has picked up on at least one tendency that he wants to improve once teams train again. He said he was setting too high off his line and the ball was getting to him too quickly before he was able to set his feet and react.

“Not something I would have noticed had I not seen the video,” he said.

To watch Atlanta United’s goalkeepers during a normal training is to watch constant movement as drill-after-drill is checked off. Under Aron Hyde the previous three seasons and now under Curran, the goalkeepers go through numerous exercises to sharpen their fundamentals, reflexes, shot-stopping, decision-making and deliveries. They move from one side of the goal to the other, working on angles.

Among last year’s results: Guzan tied for the league lead in shutouts (14). Kann helped the club win the U.S. Open Cup with starts in the early stages and was in the net for the Campeones Cup championship win against Club America.

Guzan, 35, said he is approaching training now as if he’s in the offseason, which ended two months ago. He said he is trying keep himself physically fit. He and Kann, 29, said the goalkeeping rhythms will return.

“It’s more about keeping yourself engaged mentally and switched on and thinking forward into what you want to get out of the season once it comes back into fruition,” Kann said.