The crew emptied the union and turned the tables

Mohammad Persian scored the first half stops in the second minute of the first half stop time on Sunday night, and the Columbus Crew closed the visiting Philadelphia Union to win 1-0.
Columbus (10–3–7, 37 digits) pulled behind a defense behind a defense within three points of Philadelphia (12–4–4, 40 digits) at the Eastern Conference, which leads its commonly stinging opponents. The union allowed the second place to finish in MLS at night, but it was a crew, but it was in 14th place, which distributed a clean sheet and did not give any shot on the target.
Persian took care of crime after a beautiful build-up in the middle of the pitch. A long ball below Lassi Lalanan on the left side by Amar Sejdik jumped. The Persian ran down in the middle and clinically ended an innocent cross from Lalanan’s previous goal Andre Blake.
Nearly an hour of weather delay increased the beginning of the second half but little to change the pace of the game. Philadelphia managed only seven shots for the night, barely crossed the number of yellow cards (six).
In the second half, the Sangh had the best possibilities in stops time. But the attempt from the right side of Kavan Sulivan to the right from right to the right increased to the right to the right in the second minute of the stoppage and in the fifth, the header of Jesus Buono also leaked to the right.
Columbus finished the night with eight shots and Blake came with a pair. The crew set up its fourth clean sheet of the season and for the first time since 22 March, when they settled for a scorer draw with New York City FC.
Teams combined for 33 fouls and eight Yellow in a physical stability. Columbus ended with 59.8 percent occupation after placing the ball for more than 62 percent in the first half, when Philadelphia reduced two shots.
Dialon Chambost matched two Persian shots for the crew, while Ellajandro Bedoya was the only player for the Sangh squeezing two shots. Three of Philadelphia’s seven shots were blocked.
-Bield level media