If the rest of Major League Soccer was waiting to see whether San Diego FC’s expansion magic would fade in its second year, the early returns suggest the opposite.
Through two matches, SDFC looks more complete, more disciplined and perhaps more dangerous than the team that shocked the Western Conference a year ago.
A week after dismantling CF Montréal 5-0 in its opener, San Diego followed with a composed 2-0 victory over St. Louis City SC at Snapdragon Stadium last Sunday.
The score narrowed, but the statement might have been bigger. In both matches, SDFC scored in the first 15 minutes of each half.
SDFC coach Mikey Varas attributed scoring quickly to “wanting to play with initiative.”
“We want to impact the flow of the game right away,” Varas said. “We want to get after it, early and often.”
SDFC (2-0-0) will look to continue its hot start on Saturday, when it faces Sporting Kansas City (0-1-1) in its first match away from home this MLS season.
The match kicks off a grueling gauntlet of contests. SDFC will play five matches in the next 16 days, including two midweek duels against back-to-back Liga MX Champion Toluca FC in the Concacaf Champions Cup Round of 16. Three of SDFC’s next four matches across all competitions are away from home.
SDFC had the most regular-season road wins in MLS last season with 12.
“We’re ready to be on this journey together,” Varas said. “We established this road performance mentality last year, and this year, we want to show that it wasn’t just a one-off.
“It’s an attitude that we have, to go there and continue being brave, continue being relentless, and showing who we are through our performance.”
Mikey Varas of San Diego FC celebrates after the season opener against CF Montreal at Snapdragon Stadium on Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Meg McLaughlin / The San Diego Union-Tribune)
The upcoming stretch will reveal how real San Diego’s start truly is.
Expansion teams often explode onto the scene with adrenaline and unpredictability. Sustaining success is assuredly much harder.
Through two matches, SDFC looks up to the task. The team has scored seven goals, conceded none, and controlled large stretches of both matches.
Across all competitions, 10 players have scored a combined 11 goals. SDFC leads MLS in possession with 67%. It’s a small sample size, but it’s also exactly how a team with championship ambitions wants to start.
And perhaps more importantly, SDFC has done it in two very different ways.
The opener showed explosive attacking capability. The St. Louis match showed discipline and structure.
Together, they hint at a team capable of adapting to different types of games.
The rest of the league is now trying to figure out how to slow them down.
Goalie update
Duran Ferree has two clean sheets in two career starts in MLS.
The 19-year-old San Diego native has earned another start, but it’s not guaranteed he will get it on Saturday. CJ dos Santos is getting healthier by the day and Pablo Sisniega is available to play.
It’s a three-way competition, according to Varas.
“All the guys are clear,” he said. “I know that doesn’t usually happen in other clubs in the world, but it’s one of our strengths, that we embrace competition.
“We have the characters in that group to make the best of this. This is actually an ideal situation because competition always makes everybody rise.”
Varas said choosing a starting goalkeeper is no different than choosing a starter at any of the other positions.
He explained: “We may think one player in a position has a superpower that the other guy in that position doesn’t have. It might be a game plan specific thing, but mostly what we’re looking at is how are they training, and how are they playing in games with the most recent form of games being, obviously, the highest priority.”
Another competition
The fourth edition of the cross-border Leagues Cup competition between MLS and Liga MX starts Aug. 4.
SDFC will open against Club América, Mexico’s all-time winningest team, at Estadio Banorte in Mexico City.
The exact date has yet to be announced.
The chrome and azul will then return home to face the Tijuana Xolos at Snapdragon Stadium on Aug. 9 and close out the first round on Aug. 12 against Puebla FC.
BOX: The Road Ahead: A revealing stretch of opponents
SDFC’s next five MLS matches will provide a clearer measure of the club’s early momentum.
at Sporting Kansas City (0-1-1), Saturday
2025 finish: Last place in the West
2026 outlook: Rebuilding roster
Sporting K.C. (0-1-1) struggled last season and entered 2026 attempting to reset their squad. Road matches in Kansas City are rarely comfortable, but San Diego should control possession.
at FC Dallas (1-0-1), March 14
2025 finish: Seventh in the West, playoff team
2026 outlook: Competitive but inconsistent
Dallas (1-0-1) represents the first genuine measuring stick. For SDFC, maintaining defensive balance will be essential.
vs. Real Salt Lake (1-1-0), March 22
2025 finish: 9th in the West
2026 outlook: Playoff bubble
Real Salt Lake (1-1-0) is one of the league’s most tactically disciplined teams. They rarely allow matches to become open.
at San Jose Earthquakes (2-0-0), April 4
2025 finish: 10th in the West
2026 outlook: Unpredictable
The rivalry with the Earthquakes (2-0-0) has already shown flashes of regional intensity. San Jose matches often become transitional battles.
vs. Minnesota United (1-0-1), April 11
2025 finish: Fourth in the West
2026 outlook: Playoff contender
Minnesota (1-0-1) is arguably the strongest opponent in this stretch. This match could offer the clearest early indicator of where SDFC stands in the Western Conference hierarchy.
San Diego FC (2-0-0) at Sporting Kansas City (0-1-1)
When: 5:30 p.m. Saturday
Streaming: AppleTV
Radio: 760-AM, 1700-AM (Spanish)