“Whatever you are going to ask, it’s new for me,” the smiling head coach said during a recent video interview. “It’s an overload of information at certain moments, but it’s necessary and it’s part of this change.”
The professional side is not as settled for the Argentine, who in January left a head coaching job in Belgium and a 15-year stay in Europe to become MLS’s youngest leader. He then had to wait several weeks for a work visa before meeting his employers and players for the first time.
Losada will get started with the club’s two longest-serving players recovering from offseason surgery and another key figure rehabbing a long-term knee injury.