Inter Miami CF-New York Red Bulls Ends In a 2-2 Tie In Marquee MLS Game
It’s April 8, 2009. Lionel Messi is out there doing typical Lionel Messi things, casually bagging two goals in a Champions League match for Barcelona. Two days before that historic brace, a kid named Adri Mehmeti was born.
Fast forward 17 years to a humid Saturday night, and both of these individuals stepped onto the pitch, stared each other down, and had a massive say in a chaotic, thrilling 2-2 draw between Inter Miami and the New York Red Bulls. You genuinely cannot write a better script. It’s the kind of generational collision that makes you shake your head, laugh out loud, and instantly realize how incredibly old you are getting.
The Generational Divide On the Pitch
When Inter Miami took the field at their shiny, state-of-the-art new stadium, the atmosphere was absolutely electric. The fans were desperate to see a home victory, something that had eluded them since the building opened its doors. The defending MLS Cup champions were riding a solid unbeaten streak, but you could feel the tension in the stands. They didn’t just want a good performance; they wanted a coronation.
The Red Bulls, however, completely missed the memo. They didn’t travel all the way down to Florida to play the role of a passive audience for the Messi show. Jorge Ruvalcaba struck first, giving New York an early lead and momentarily silencing the raucous home crowd. But this is Inter Miami we are talking about. They don’t stay down for long. Mateo Silvetti found the equalizer right before the halftime whistle, injecting a massive dose of adrenaline back into the building.
Inter Miami Finds the Breakthrough
Then came the 55th minute, and a sequence of events that beautifully illustrates the sheer, unadulterated panic that Messi still induces in professional defenders. Messi picked up the ball and drove toward the penalty area. Instantly, four Red Bull defenders collapsed on him. They swarmed the Argentine legend like he was holding the last bottle of water in the desert.
Two of them threw themselves squarely between him and the net. Because all the defensive attention in the world was focused solely on the number 10, nobody bothered to check over their shoulder to see Germán Berterame floating into acres of space.
Messi had the ball poked away, but honestly, it didn’t even matter. The ball rolled generously to Berterame, who unleashed a lethal right-footed strike to give Inter Miami a 2-1 advantage. Messi was the first to arrive at the celebration, wrapping his teammate in a joyful headlock. For the first time in 150 minutes of soccer at their new fortress, the home team finally had a lead.
The Kids Crash the Party
Soccer is a cruel, unpredictable beast, and the Red Bulls decided it was time to unleash the youth movement. Just as the home fans were preparing to celebrate a massive victory, an 18-year-old named Julian Hall found a pocket of space near the goal line. He picked his head up and delivered an absolute dime of a pass. Waiting on the receiving end was none other than the 17-year-old birthday boy himself, Adri Mehmeti.
With the ice-cold composure of a 10-year veteran, the teenager buried his first-ever MLS goal in the 77th minute to tie the game. Let that sink in for a second. An 18-year-old setting up a 17-year-old to snatch a point away from the defending champions. The absolute audacity of these kids to ruin a perfectly good party.
Late Drama and the Final Whistle
The final 10 minutes were an absolute rollercoaster of human emotion. Both sides threw caution to the wind. Both teams had goals wiped off the board by the offside flag; New York’s came after a gut-wrenching video review that had the entire stadium holding its breath.
Then, in the 94th minute, the soccer gods offered up one final moment of pure theater. Inter Miami won a free kick about 25 yards from goal. Messi stepped up. The stadium went completely silent. Every single person in the building pulled out their phone to record what felt like an inevitable game-winner. He struck it beautifully, but Red Bulls Goalkeeper Ethan Horvath played the ultimate spoiler, diving to make a massive save and preserve the 2-2 draw.
When the final whistle blew, Inter Miami walked away with their six-game unbeaten streak intact, but the locker room was undoubtedly frustrated. They had the lead. They had the momentum. But on this humid Saturday night, a couple of teenagers proved that in this league, absolutely nothing comes easy.
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