Inter Miami Sees Offense Come Alive In 4-2 Win Over Toronto FC As Lionel Messi Makes MLS History
There are nights when soccer feels tactical and calculated, and then there are nights when Inter Miami decides to turn a Major League Soccer match into a traveling Broadway show featuring Lionel Messi, Rodrigo De Paul, and a Toronto defense that probably wanted the final whistle by minute 70.
After coughing up a brutal collapse against Orlando City just days earlier, Miami walked into BMO Field carrying pressure, frustration, and more questions than answers. Were they too dependent on Messi? Could the defense survive 90 minutes without drama? Was the new-look midfield actually working?
By the end of the night, those questions got drowned out by goals, swagger, and a familiar feeling: when this team clicks, MLS defenders start looking like they accidentally wandered into the wrong stadium. Inter Miami rolled past Toronto FC with a convincing 4-2 performance that felt less like a bounce-back and more like a reminder.
Rodrigo De Paul Brought the Fire Inter Miami Needed
Every great team needs a player willing to throw a chair, emotionally speaking. Not literally. This isn’t hockey. That player for Inter Miami on Saturday was Rodrigo De Paul. The Argentine midfielder opened the scoring with a thunderbolt after his own free kick ricocheted off the wall. Most players reset after a blocked attempt. De Paul treated the rebound like it insulted his family name, smashing a volley into the bottom corner with pure rage and technique.
Coming off the embarrassing Orlando collapse, the club looked wounded. The confidence had cracks in it. But De Paul played like a guy who drank espresso mixed with gasoline before kickoff.
His fingerprints were everywhere, including a beautiful assist later for Messi’s goal. The chemistry between the Argentine stars looked unfair at times, almost like Toronto defenders were watching a private training session from five feet away.
Lionel Messi Did Lionel Messi Things Again
At this point, talking about Messi feels like trying to describe gravity. We know it exists. We know it’s inevitable. Yet somehow it still surprises you when it hits. The numbers tell part of the story. The movement tells the rest.
Messi assisted Luis Suárez with a perfectly weighted square pass before eventually finding the net himself in the second half. The finish was classic Messi: calm, surgical, and somehow disrespectful to the goalkeeper without looking flashy.
Toronto had moments early. They pressed. They threatened. They even forced some uncomfortable defensive sequences from Miami. But Messi kept floating into spaces that made the entire match tilt toward pink shirts. And maybe the scariest part for the rest of MLS is this: he didn’t even look like he was operating at full chaos mode. This was “business trip Messi.” The devastating version usually arrives later.
Inter Miami’s Attack Looked Dangerous From Everywhere
Luis Suárez added a goal of his own, Sergio Reguilón joined the party, and suddenly the attack that looked shaky a week ago started humming again. That balance matters.
For stretches this season, Inter Miami looked too predictable. Everything flowed through Messi. If opponents slowed him down, the offense stalled. Against Toronto, the danger came from multiple angles, and it forced the defense into panic mode.
The movement off the ball was sharper. The passing felt quicker. Even the energy looked different. This wasn’t a team surviving on reputation. This looked like a contender waking back up. Toronto grabbed two late goals, but unlike the Orlando disaster, there was never a sense that the match was slipping away.
Why This Win Matters For Inter Miami
The MLS season is weird. Momentum swings wildly. Panic arrives early. Fans overreact by halftime, but this result felt important beyond the three points. Inter Miami needed personality again. They needed bite. They needed to stop looking like a talented group waiting for Messi to rescue them every week. Saturday night finally delivered that response.
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