By Jared Young (@jaredeyoung)

The Crew played for the MLS Cup on their home soil last year only to fall short to the Portland Timbers, and while deep playoff runs always go hand in hand with a bit of good fortune, Columbus fans have every reason to believe their team will challenge again for this year’s title. Every player who started in the MLS Cup Final returned to the team and they added players, primarily on defense, where they needed help. Despite the stability the Crew will need great performances in three key areas to maintain their status as Kings of the East.

The Kamara Crew

The Columbus Crew’s biggest signing this offseason was locking down the return of the King of Scorers Kei Kamara to a long term deal. Kamara’s 22 goals last season was tied for the league lead and his physical presence up top sets the tone for the rest of the team. His long public and ultimately successful negotiation this offseason was proof that top players do have leverage and ability to loosen the very tight purse strings of the MLS single-entity system. The Crew will need another top flight performance from Kamara to keep their edge.



The biggest offensive signing of the offseason was fellow Sierra Leonean and Norwegian National Ola Kamara. Owner of 28 goals in his last three seasons in Norway and Austria, Kamara adds depth both up top and on the wings.

The Kings of the Crosses

The Crew are a team built around possession, boasting the second highest possession in the league last year. Possession teams tend to allow opposing defenses to set up a solid block as they approach, which in turn forces the offense to push the ball out wide to find space. Crosses in the run of play are generally a poor man’s attempt at create chances, resulting in a goal just 1.2% of the time last year, but the Crew took those opportunities to the bank last season. They led the league with 26.2 crosses attempted in open play per game, almost three more than 2nd place Portland. But more impressively they dominated the league in terms of the efficiency of those crosses. Here is a chart of MLS teams in terms of converting crosses into shots attempted and also goals. The Crew dominated in both categories, converting 1.9% of their crosses into goals, landing 17 goals of their 55 goals.



