Dennis te Kloese originally inherited a mess.
Years of bad management had reduced the standard bearers of the league for two decades into a head-shaking quagmire. When the Mexican Football Federation executive was hired as the new general manager in December, the roster was an uneven mess, a mish-mash of personalities cobbled together from different ideas and managers. The much vaunted academy was failing to keep up with the competition, and the kids with talent were quickly finding a way out of Los Angeles.
The club needed a lot of work.
Nine months later, the fruit of his labor is apparent.