With Kevin Cabral traded to the Colorado Rapids in early December, the LA Galaxy already know their winger corps will look somewhat different during the 2023 MLS season â and they have at least one vacant Designated Player spot to work with.
But with preseason camp now underway, thereâs speculation the positional group will look drastically different as the five-time MLS Cup champions approach Matchday 1 â and a second DP spot may become available.
Grandsir leaving?
One area of uncertainty involves winger Samuel Grandsir, head coach Greg Vanney acknowledged at his first official press conference of the year. Grandsir, signed in March 2021 from Ligue 1 side AS Monaco, may have to leave the club and return to France due to personal reasons that recently arose.
âWe're just working through those things with him on a personal level with he and his family,â Vanney said. âAnd we'll have those solutions here, hopefully in the next week or so, and he'll either be here or he won't be here. Weâll see how that plays out.
âBut itâs family-related. Itâs not football-related, and thatâs why weâve got to work with the young man about what that looks like.â
Second DP spot?
Another possible change involves Douglas Costa, the former Brazil international who joined in February 2022 and previously played for UEFA Champions League regulars Juventus, Bayern Munich and Shakhtar Donetsk. This offseason, the DP winger has been linked with a reported return to recently-promoted Brazilian Serie A side Gremio, where he started his career and also spent a year on loan in 2021.
Costa is now on his way back to LA after spending the beginning of preseason in Brazil as he waited on a new passport. But Vanney also alluded to ongoing conversations with the player.
âWhen the passport came in, we needed to get the visa stamp on it, which took a little bit of time,â Vanney said. âIn the process of that, we were aware of any conversations that might have been going on or being had. And for us, if a player doesn't want to be here, we're not forcing a player to be here, but it's a collaborative plan.
âIf he wants to be here, then he'll be here and we'll line up with him and keep progressing him.â
Whatever arises, Vanney knows the importance of getting more goalscoring and chance-creation from LAâs wingers in 2023. Cabral, Costa and Grandsir combined for 8g/10a last season, placing increased importance and pressure on DP striker Javier âChicharitoâ Hernandez (18g/2a) and U22 Initiative striker Dejan Joveljic (11g/3a) delivering.
Winter/summer windows
The underlying factor, as announced in early December and stemming back to the 2019 acquisition of Cristian PavĂłn, is LA face transfer-related sanctions this year. The simple version: their international shopping in 2023 must occur during the ongoing winter transfer window, not in the summer.
Vanney didnât get into specifics position-wise, but the club seems poised for a busy few weeks.
âI will say that conversations that have happened for our potential DP spot are out there and conversations are going on, and also how we're going to manage that will kind of play itself out, I think, over the course of this month,â Vanney said.
Vanney later added: âIt's about complementary pieces here. It's about finding the DP, but also the other complementary piece or two pieces that fit with that to build out the pieces of the puzzle that we think can improve our team.â
Last summer was when LA signed three key players from abroad: Uruguayan international center back MartĂn CĂĄceres along with midfielders GastĂłn Brugman and Riqui Puig, the latter an FC Barcelona product whoâs a possible Landon Donovan MLS MVP candidate in 2023. Now, those types of midseason moves wouldnât be possible under the sanctions.
Elsewhere in roster-building, LAâs main moves this winter have involved free agency â landing both center back Chris Mavinga (ex-Toronto FC) and midfielder Memo RodrĂguez (ex-Houston Dynamo FC). But the pace and profile of signings, especially in the final third, may soon intensify.
âAgain, like I said, two to three good, sound moves here before the season starts," Vanney said. "And now it's just a matter of timeline because we don't have the summer window to look abroad.â
The Galaxy, who returned to the Audi MLS Cup Playoffs in 2022 after a two-year absence, open their new campaign on Feb. 25 at the Rose Bowl against arch-rival LAFC (9:30 pm ET | MLS Season Pass).
LAâs 2022 season ended in El Trafico's latest chapter, a 3-2 defeat in the Western Conference Semifinals at Banc of California Stadium. LAFC progressed and eventually completed the leagueâs eighth-ever MLS Cup-Supportersâ Shield double.