āHe's still the king of Atlanta, and he will stay the king of Atlanta as long as he's there. Probably even after that, to be honest.ā
That was Julian Gresselās assessment of Josef Martinez last month, speaking on the podcast he co-hosts with Chicago Fire FC midfielder Fabian Herbers, in the wake of Gabriel Heinzeās unceremonious departure from Atlanta United and his former Five Stripes teammateās rather obvious role in it.
Josef, you may recall, had a falling-out with Heinze in the Argentineās final days in the ATL, prompting a brief exile from first-team activities, and if the lionās share of United fans didnāt already support their star striker in that conflict, subsequent reporting about the locker-room environment under Heinze further vindicated him.
Martinez has brought Golden Boot, MLS Cup, US Open Cup and Campeones Cup hardware to Georgia. Heās the face of the club, the avatar of their aggressive personality both on and off the field (when things are going well, at least), and the events of the past month or two have underlined the 2018 Landon Donovan MLS MVP's power at the club. Not so much in the political sense, though there is some of that, but something like a moral one.
Heās the keeper of the flame, ATLUTDās conscience in addition to their most entertaining performer and fiercest warrior. He's the one who proudly proclaimed that it was his FC Barcelona, his Real Madrid back when he signed a new contract in 2019. He doesnāt hesitate to call out teammates, coaches and staff, or even stalk off the training ground when his high expectations arenāt met.
Thatās the context for Josefās striking remarks to the media on Friday, where he issued both a welcome and a declaration of sorts to new head coach Gonzalo Pineda ahead of Sundayās nationally-televised visit from LAFC and his friend and scoring rival Carlos Vela (4 pm ET | ESPN ESPN Deportes).
āWeāve talked to [Pineda], and nothingās going to change [in tactical terms],ā said Martinez, flipping back and forth from Spanish to English during the post-practice availability, another sign of his centrality in ATL. āThe club shouldn't change because of a player or a coach. The club has to be the club. Many mistakes were made that shouldn't happen again. We're a little tired of the same story.
āI think what [Pineda] has done in Seattle will slap us with humility.ā
Josef is a fascinating character, an intensely driven performer who simultaneously exudes charisma and humanity. As now-D.C. United wide man Gressel noted, heās a larger-than-life figure in his clubās history regardless of what happens from here on out, and an X-factor who almost single-handedly makes Atlanta a contender when heās healthy and in form. Heās clearly eager for Pineda to steady the ship and restore their lofty ambitions, but heās also shown that he will stand up for his teammates, his principles and his ideas of what ATLUTD should be.
Right now, that means extending the good work Valentino has done to liberate and inspire the squad since Heinzeās departure. Theyāre clearly boosted by last weekendās 3-2 win at Columbus, which ended a 12-game winless streak and actually occurred without Josef as he sat out with a red-card suspension suffered in their prior match at CF MontrĆ©al.
āI think we feel freedom and are happy. Thatās what we have to recover because that's what we are,ā said Martinez, harking back to the Five Stripesā high-flying exploits under Tata Martino. āFor a lot of time, we played the beautiful game. The last game against Columbus, I was in the palco [box seats] and said, āThis is amazing because I don't see that maybe for a long time.ā
āI donāt think that's going to change, the freedom that we've had in these games, and the joy and the good things weāve been doing under Rob.ā
Pinedaās arrival has been complicated by his contraction of COVID-19, which along with other aspects of his move from the Seattle Sounders, will prevent him from taking charge in person until next week. Valentino is at the helm for their next two matches, charged with keeping the transition going since Heinzeās departure 13 league games into his MLS sojourn.
If Pineda needed any further reminders of the risks and rewards of his new gig, Martinezās candor will suffice. The Mexicanās time in Seattle under Brian Schmetzer familiarized him with a high-performance culture and all the trappings that surround it, which should help him touch down in Atlanta with credibility at his disposal.
But Pineda will need to win over his star striker quickly and effectively. Just ask his star striker.
āWhen you do this kind of job, you have pressure every day,ā said Josef. āWe don't care about the pressure. We have to win every day. Every game we have to f*ing win.ā