Gone goal-less last season in his Minnesota United debut, Finnish midfielder Robin Lod has scored nearly every which way — with his head and both feet — in a second MLS season that has thrown every obstacle at him and his teammates.
A year ago, Lod arrived in midsummer after he finished his season in Spain's second division — even went on holiday afterward — before he joined a new team in a new league in a new country. He played 10 games approaching season's end and scored neither a goal nor an assist.
Now in a season waylaid by the coronavirus pandemic, Lod leads his Loons with nine goals in all competitions, including seven in regular-season games only, tying him with veteran Kevin Molino.
"Pleased for Robin," Loons coach Adrian Heath after Lod scored his latest with a tying header in Wednesday's 2-2 draw with Chicago Fire FC. "He's doing well, considering he can't score by all accounts."
That's a reference — real or exaggerated by the gaffer — to criticism Lod received last season. That's when the Loons signed him using targeted allocation money and paid him a rich $952,496 guaranteed-compensation salary that didn't produce a goal in six starts and 10 total games played.
Now in a season suspended and with games postponed or canceled, Lod has found what he calls both "rhythm" and "comfort" on the field. He has done so particularly when played on the right wing, where his dominant left foot is nearer balls played through the middle.
"It has been tough for everybody," Lod said. "Living day by day, mentally preparing for every game. I'm happy that still, with all these circumstances, I've been performing well."
Lod, 27, scored his first Minnesota United goal in this season's second game, following up teammate Luis Amarilla's blocked penalty kick way back in March.