CARSON, Calif. — From its slow start to its melancholy finish, Javier Hernández's first season with the LA Galaxy has been a major disappointment.
Just ask Chicharito himself.
"This was a bad season for me," the Mexican superstar said Wednesday night after scoring only his second goal of 2020, but doing it during the game in which the Galaxy were eliminated from the MLS postseason race.
The 32-year-old forward who moved over from Europe to replace Zlatan Ibrahimovic has barely made an impact in 10 months with the Galaxy. The highest-paid player in Major League Soccer didn't score until the league's return tournament in Florida in July, and then he promptly missed most of the next four months with various injuries.
LA's 1-1 draw with Seattle this week was the first time in ages fans had seen a glimpse of the speedy, effective striker that the five-time MLS champions thought they were getting. That's mostly because it was only Chicharito's 11th game in the white uniform of the Galaxy, whose season ends at Vancouver on Sunday.
"I didn't give them my best, but I wanted to show at least in these last games that that's what I can give," Hernández said. "Because they deserve better. I deserve better. Everyone deserves better in this club. I joke with my teammates that I finally arrived ... (but) it's too late for this season, and I take responsibility on my side."
Rather than running from judgment, Chicharito has admitted his own culpability in the Galaxy's hugely disappointing season, which included the firing of coach Guillermo Barros Schelotto last week with just three games to play. LA is missing the playoffs for the third time in four years.
Interim head coach Dominic Kinnear, the assistant who took over when Barros Schelotto was fired, has barely gotten to know Chicharito this year because the star's injuries have kept him away from the team. They met this week to determine what role Hernández could play down the stretch, and that led to his insertion as a substitute against the Sounders.