Nashville is ready to challenge the union in the clash of SC East Powerrs

Two of the top teams at the MLS meet on Saturday night as Nashville hosts the Shield of SC supporters who heads Philadelphia Union.
Nashville (11-4-5, 38 digits) enters the night on an unbeaten streak of just two points and MLS Play (8-0-4) behind the union (12–4-4, 40 digits) which goes back on 26 April.
This is thanks to the part of the Sam Saraij (16 goals), who scored a penalty spot in a 1-0 win against DC United last Saturday. It scored 10 goals to the Golden Boot Leader in its last six matches.
Nashville’s head coach BJ Kailaghan said, “We know where Sam wants to score.” “And therefore, our job is to continue building opportunities and make ways for it, I will now say, Sam to score goals, but it’s for everyone.”
Kailaghan noted the game of Hani Mukhtar (eight goals, eight aids) as an instrument for the success of Sarij.
Kailaghan said, “Hani (Sirij) is a great level of contribution. He is the one who draws penalty kick (against DC) and has drawn several penalty kicks this year.” “So, we know that way we want to play. We know that we want to create high quality round-scoring opportunities.”
Beyond creating opportunities for yourself, the purpose of Nashville will be to limit the opportunities of his opponent. Philadelphia’s Tai Bribo, an MLS All-Star Selection, are just three goals behind the Siri in the Golden Boot Race.
The Sangh, who lost 3–1 to Nashville on 16 March, saw the Columbus crew 1–0 defeat on Sunday at the end of its 11-match unbeaten streak (8-0-3).
“Unfortunately, we slept for an action, a moment,” said Bradley Carnel, the head coach of the union. “If you ask any neutral eye and any professional eye, perhaps a draw would have a proper result of that game. It did not mean.”
Carnell removed the fact of the potential impact that could be on the sports table and the league-municipality of its club.
“(I) is not yet interested in standing,” he said. “Surely, we have the situation, and of course have a goal on our back. But at the end of the 34 match, when you round the table and see where you are finished.
“… There are other teams in which one is shouting and one to say. So at the end of 34 matches, we will know where we are standing.”
-Bield level media