SANDY, Utah--Third-year homegrown player Jordan Allen is starting to knock on the door when it comes to consistently breaking into Real Salt Lakeâs starting XI. The team's currently got a talented attacking corp scoring goals--so Allen will need to break through without the help of injury or card accumulation as his next step in progressing from Development Academy Player of the Year.
He did start his fourth game of the season in this past Saturdayâs 2-1 win over Houston, and provided a goal and an assist in his 90 minutes. Heâll need to keep that up to earn a regular starting spot.
âItâs competition,â said Real Salt Lake head coach Jeff Cassar. âYou want to see consistency from the great performance that he had, consistency during the week and [consistency im] what heâs going to do to the game, whether heâs starting or coming off the bench.â
The 21-year-old filled in this season during games in which Javier Morales wasnât able to suit up; this past weekend he started in place of forward Joao Plata. His contributions so far have helped RSL win four games when Morales wasnât in the lineup, three more than they did last year without him.
Aside from his technical skill, and ability to play anywhere from outside back to forward, Allen is fast. He's often used his speed to get around defenders and open up space for him and his teammates--and he's applying the same pressure in his own career trajectory.
âWhether Iâm in the XI or not, every day Iâm trying to get better and trying to work,â he said. âThatâs something that I donât think will ever change. There are guys that donât have their best season until theyâre 28 or 29, so whether Iâm starting or not right now, thereâs no need to take my foot off the pedal.â
The question is--and he gets it plenty--is, what position is in Allen's future? Whether heâs the heir apparent to Morales or the next wide forward, heâs non-committal. âIâm an attacking player by nature,â he said. âSo Iâd rather play in an attacking role in any environment, and especially here.â
Thatâs good news for Real Salt Lake, who have watched Allen blossom in their academy in 2011 and 2012 before signing him after one year of college as the sixth Homegrown Player in their history. His work in the academy, the NCAA, and the youth national teams now has him in a position to keep pushing toward to that starting spot.
âItâs all up to him,â Cassar said, âBut if he keeps progressing, heâs going to have a very, very bright future in this league, probably on the national team, Iâd suspect. Heâs still early; he needs to be consistent, and I know he will be.â