Stefan Frei reached a milestone in his MLS career on Sunday night, becoming the second all-time in shutouts as he led the Seattle Sounders to a 2-0 victory over Sporting Kansas City at Lumen Field.
Frei’s clean sheet was his 113th regular-season shutout, moving him past Kevin Hartman and into sole possession of second place on the MLS all-time list. Nick Rimando remains the record-holder with 154 shutouts. Frei was called into action only once during the match, making a crucial diving save on Erik Thommy’s left-footed shot in the 35th minute.
The Sounders’ defense was solid throughout, and their offense provided the necessary support with first-half goals from Jackson Ragen and Paul Rothrock. Ragen scored in the 19th minute, capitalizing on a rebound from a header by Jordan Morris that was initially saved by Tim Melia. Rothrock doubled Seattle’s lead in the 40th minute, finishing off a pass from Morris after Cristian Roldan’s chipped ball into the box.
Seattle’s advantage could have been extended further, but a 24th-minute header by Cristian Roldan was ruled offside following a video review, and a penalty kick by Albert Rusnak was saved by Melia in the 44th minute.
With the win, the Sounders improved to 13-9-7 and moved up to fifth place in the Western Conference standings, with a strong record of 9-2-1 in their past 12 league matches. They are now just a game behind the fourth-seeded Las Vegas Aces in the playoff race.
Sporting Kansas City’s Peter Vermes, who reached his 500th regular-season match as a coach, became the third coach in league history to achieve this feat and the first to do so with only one club. However, SKC remains far behind in the playoff race, sitting in 11th place with 28 points, 11 points adrift of the final playoff spot.
Seattle’s win also underscored their defensive prowess and attacking efficiency, as they continue to build momentum heading into the final stretch of the regular season.
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PEQUOT LAKES — Dan Mudgett and the Pequot Lakes Patriots could have overlooked their Week Two opponent.
With a big Section 7-3A game against Two Harbors looming, Pequot could have gone through the motions Friday, Sept. 6.
That’s not what happened.
Pequot took its opening drive 72 yards on six plays and concluded with a 6-yard John Paul Elsenpeter touchdown run. It never relented and beat down the Pine City Dragons 60-0.
“We didn’t want to play down and we didn’t have the greatest week,” Pequot Lakes head coach Bill Magnuson said. “We really challenged them in pregame about not having any regrets and don’t ever look back and always give your best and that’s what a lot of them did tonight.”
The Patriots scored on almost every offensive possession and two of Pine City’s.
1/47: Pequot Lakes’ John Paul Elsenpeter scoops up a fumble before running it for a touchdown against Pine City on Friday, Sept. 6, 2024, at Pequot Lakes. Kelly Humphrey / Brainerd Dispatch
2/47: Pequot Lakes’ John Paul Elsenpeter runs a fumble back for a touchdown against Pine City on Friday, Sept. 6, 2024, at Pequot Lakes. Kelly Humphrey / Brainerd Dispatch
3/47: Pequot Lakes’ John Paul Elsenpeter scoops up a fumble before running it for a touchdown against Pine City on Friday, Sept. 6, 2024, at Pequot Lakes. Kelly Humphrey / Brainerd Dispatch
4/47: Pequot Lakes’ Landen Brill intercepts the ball against Pine City on Friday, Sept. 6, 2024, at Pequot Lakes. Kelly Humphrey / Brainerd Dispatch
5/47: Pequot Lakes’ John Paul Elsenpeter, left, and Aaron Clark celebrate a touchdown by Clark against Pine City on Friday, Sept. 6, 2024, at Pequot Lakes. Kelly Humphrey / Brainerd Dispatch
6/47: Pequot Lakes’ Tade Magnuson runs the ball against Pine City on Friday, Sept. 6, 2024, at Pequot Lakes. Kelly Humphrey / Brainerd Dispatch
7/47: Pequot Lakes’ Micah Loukota intercepts the ball against Pine City on Friday, Sept. 6, 2024, at Pequot Lakes. Kelly Humphrey / Brainerd Dispatch
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Elsenpeter corralled a Pine City fumble on their first possession and scored from 20 yards out.
Landen Brill, who recovered a fumble minutes earlier, intercepted a pass and returned it 7 yards for a TD.
Pequot Lakes’ Landen Brill intercepts the ball against Pine City on Friday, Sept. 6, 2024, at Pequot Lakes.
Kelly Humphrey / Brainerd Dispatch
On the next play, Micah Loukota picked off a Pine City pass. On the next play, Mike Oseland found Aaron Clark for a 47-yard touchdown pass.
“It’s just fantastic,” Mudgett said about seeing the ball go in the end zone. “When you see a touchdown happen. It’s the best feeling in the world. The confidence level is high for the rest of the game. We were so high when we saw them going in, especially early like that.”
Pequot’s Connor Welle then recovered a fumble and three plays later Oseland hit Clark again for a 13-yard score.
Pequot Lakes’ Micah Loukota intercepts the ball against Pine City on Friday, Sept. 6, 2024, at Pequot Lakes.
Kelly Humphrey / Brainerd Dispatch
“It’s great to create turnovers, and your defense scores twice, but then you also get short fields and you execute,” Magnuson said. “You could see we focused on the pass game early. We wanted to get that going because it was a little raw last week. I thought he did a nice job. That was the focus to get that pass game going.”
Oseland finished 8-of-9 passing for 138 yards and the two scores in just one half of play. Clark hauled in four passes for 93 yards and Bryar Nordby caught four passes for 47 yards.
“It was very important to get the passing going,” Mudgett said. “Michael, first time starting a varsity game last week, he’s got it down now. We put good protection up for him. Now it’s just going to be up from here.”
Kamrin Hulke added a 7-yard touchdown run in the second quarter and Tade Magnuson scored from 10 yards out for a Pequot 47-0 halftime lead.
The Patriots’ defense, aside from its five turnovers, held Pine City to -11 yards of offense in the first half.
Pequot Lakes’ Tade Magnuson runs the ball against Pine City on Friday, Sept. 6, 2024, at Pequot Lakes.
Kelly Humphrey / Brainerd Dispatch
“When you put up stats like that the confidence for the entire week is high,” Mudget said. “Going into that next game we’re going to be up.”
The second half was a junior varsity battle. Because of running time and offensive efficiency, the Patriots ran just 10 offensive plays on two possessions. They scored on both. In the third quarter, Jobey Tvedt broke numerous tackles to score from 8 yards. In the fourth quarter, Griffen Hannah broke off the left side and sprinted 72 yards for the final score. Hannah finished with 100 yards on just five carries.
“We could have been balanced, but we wanted to focus on that pass game,” Magnuson said. “We ran the ball really well last week. We kept focusing on passing, but then we had to settle in and run the run game late.”
Pequot Lakes’ John Paul Elsenpeter runs a fumble back for a touchdown against Pine City on Friday, Sept. 6, 2024, at Pequot Lakes.
Kelly Humphrey / Brainerd Dispatch
Pequot finished with 377 yards of offense on just 33 plays and held Pine City to 59 total yards on 44 plays.
“It was important because we got a hard win last Thursday,” Mudgett said about not having a let-down performance. “It was a good win. We got a lot of reps in and we got the film. We put a lot of new stuff in for this game and so now we just know what to fix. It’s going to be a good game next week.”
Pequot Lakes 33 14 7 6 — 60
PL-John Paul Elsenpeter 6 run (Jerome Martin kick) 9:12
For the past month, New York City has been inviting teenagers to participate in one of the biggest experiments in the country aimed at helping struggling adolescents: a program offering free online therapy to all residents ages 13 to 17.
The city has entered a three-year, $26 million contract with Talkspace, one of the largest digital mental health care providers. After a parent or legal guardian signs a consent form, teenagers can exchange unlimited messages with an assigned therapist and receive one 30-minute virtual therapy session each month.
The rollout of the program, NYC Teenspace, on Nov. 15 took many in the city’s large mental health care community by surprise. In interviews, providers hailed the effort for having made mental health care available to teenagers who otherwise might not have had access.
But many also worried about whether the limited treatment Teenspace offers will meet the needs of teenagers who have more complex issues. And some questioned why the city was partnering with a for-profit provider like Talkspace, which is the target of a class-action lawsuit filed by a former client.
“Conceptually, this could be a game changer,” said C. Vaile Wright, senior director of the Office of Health Care Innovation at the American Psychological Association. “This could absolutely revolutionize access to care.”
But, she added, the “devil is in the details.” It remains unclear whether digital providers can “realistically meet capacity,” and set appropriate expectations around response times and informed consent procedures, she said, “so there aren’t unintended consequences if someone is disappointed or even harmed by this model of care.”
Dr. Ashwin Vasan, New York City’s health commissioner, acknowledged in an interview that the city was “taking a risk here” by embracing teletherapy at this scale. But, he added, given the alarming levels of distress among teens, the “cost of inaction is much higher.”
In New York City public schools, there is one guidance counselor for every 272 students. In addition, a report released this month by the state attorney general’s office surveyed 13 health plans and found that 86 percent of the mental health providers listed as in-network were actually “ghosts,” meaning that they were unreachable, not in-network or not accepting new patients.
“What we wanted to do was create the easiest low barrier, democratized access to help that we could,” Dr. Vasan said. “This is free of charge. It’s in the palm of your hand. We’re very much empowering the young personto be comfortable asking for help, and to do that independently of any adult, other than the initial parental consent.”
So far, about 1,400 teenagers, or less than 1 percent of the more than 400,000 eligible adolescents, have signed up.
At a webinar on the program this month, city parents were shown head shots of the available therapists — an array of young, dynamic faces, some with dreadlocks or hijabs. Teenspace’s smartphone sign-up page also flashed on the screen: “You get free therapy through NYC Health department!”
Parents typed questions to a chat window.
“Is text therapy effective?”
“Can students remain anonymous?”
“Is this free or not?”
The arrival of Teenspace comes amid a wave of similar partnerships across the country. An analysis published this month by The Associated Press found that 16 of the largest U.S. public school districts are offering online therapy sessions.
In February, Los Angeles County signed a two-year, $24 million contract with Hazel Health, which offers virtual health care to more than 160 school districts nationwide. The Los Angeles partnership will deliver teletherapy services for up to 1.3 million public school students in grades K-12.
Few areas of the country have a larger mental health work force than New York City does, and some advocates questioned the city’s decision to partner with a for-profit company at a time when city agencies are being asked to slash their budgets.
“Choosing to privatize this while simultaneously forcing deep cuts across the social sector (and beyond) does not make any sense to me,” said Matt Kudish, chief executive of the National Alliance on Mental Illness of New York City.
Steven DiMarzo, president of the New York Mental Health Counselors Association, said digital platforms typically offer relatively low pay and push their employees to meet “unrealistic expectations.” He said he had heard nothing about Teenspace until a reporter contacted him, but was “concerned” about the quality of care it would provide.
Other experts questioned the level of treatment Teenspace offers adolescents.
Dr. Zachary Blumkin, senior clinical director of the Psychiatry Faculty Practice Organization at Columbia University Irving Medical Center, hailed the spirit behind the initiative as “pretty amazing.” But he said he had seen no evidence that a monthly therapy session and text exchanges would offer a substantial benefit for teens with mental illness.
“One concern is, this could be kind of a Band-Aid over a gushing wound, and that could make things worse,” he said. As a provider who treats adolescents, he said, “this is not a level of intervention that I would feel comfortable providing.”
As teletherapy has become more prevalent in recent years, digital providers like Talkspace and BetterHelp have sometimes been criticized for care that falls short of traditional psychotherapy.
“The whole point of these platforms is scale,” said Livia Garofalo, a researcher at the nonprofit research institute Data & Society, who studies telehealth. “That is their jam; we need to scale it up. And in the process there are compromises that both the therapist and the client have to accept.”
In March, a school administrator, Naomi Weizman, filed a class-action lawsuit against Talkspace in a federal court in California, charging that the company “creates the false impression that Talkspace has a large enough network of therapists to meet demand,” and then unilaterally enrolls clients in automatically renewing payment plans.
A motion by Talkspace to dismiss the class claims in the lawsuit was denied last week. The judge in the case, P. Casey Pitts, dismissed two elements of Ms. Weizman’s claims, including a request for an injunction that would halt the platform’s subscription plan.
John Reilly, the chief legal officer of Talkspace, said on Monday that the allegations in the claim were not accurate. “We work to connect members with providers as quickly as possible, and they are typically connected to a therapist within one to two days,” he added.
Dr. Vasan said the city “went through a long and quite detailed due diligence” as it considered digital providers, and opted for Talkspace in part because of its size and focus on New York.
Dr. Jon R. Cohen, the chief executive of Talkspace, said the company stood out because it is based in New York City and could match teenagers with a therapist “within hours.” Talkspace is also “an incredibly inexpensive, affordable platform,” he added.
Dr. Vasan said the health department expected to analyze and update the service as it grows, adding therapists if necessary and streamlining referrals for teens who need more intensive services.
“We can make those adjustments over time,” Dr. Vasan said. “And this is going to be some rigorous learning that we’re going to be undergoing. And I just want to reiterate that last point — I wish I knew all the answers in advance, but I think the cost of inaction is greater.”
After teenagers verify that they are between the ages of 13 and 17, they must provide a parent’s email address, and, except in rare exceptions, their parents or guardians must sign and return a consent form. After signing up, they can use the platform’s self-guided exercises, or opt for therapy.
The teens share their presenting problem and preference for a provider’s gender, and will then be matched with one of Talkspace’s New York State-licensed therapists, which number about 500.
Right now, only 40 percent identify as specialists in adolescent care, but a company spokesperson said the training in the specialty, led by a Talkspace clinician, is being offered to any therapist who is part of the Teenspace program.
In addition to the monthly video session, clients can send an unlimited number of text, audio or video messages to their therapist, but the response will not be immediate. Typically, providers communicate at least once or twice daily during their working hours, “depending on the cadence and preference of the teen,” a Talkspace spokesperson said.
The providers cannot prescribe medicine. “The guts of this program is therapy,” Dr. Cohen said. He declined to disclose the metrics outlined in the NYC Teenspace contract, but said “one of the benchmarks is to get teens to use it.”
Teenagers who are in crisis are directed to call 988 or another help line instead of using the app. As an added precaution, the company uses artificial intelligence to scan text conversations for indications that a client is at risk for self-harm and then alerts the therapist, who decides what to do next.
Talkspace struggled financially after going public in 2021, but its business-to-business revenue, which is derived from partnerships with cities as well as companies, has been a bright spot in its financial reports.
In 2020, Hillary Schieve, the mayor of Reno, Nev., announced a $1.3 million, one-year contract with Talkspace to provide care free of charge for citizens. Usage was relatively low — around 3,100 of the city’s roughly 250,000 residents used the service — and the city did not renew the contract.
In an interview, Ms. Schieve said she was satisfied with the mental health services provided to individuals, but disappointed by the company’s efforts at promoting the service.
“They failed there pretty miserably,” she said, adding that she would advise cities partnering with digital providers to pay platforms based on the number of clients served.
“I don’t think they will get their money’s worth, though I hope they do,” said Ms. Schieve, who, as president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, has made mental health an area of focus. “I want cities to be cautious when working in this space.”
When asked about the promotion in Reno, Dr. Cohen, the Talkspace chief executive, responded that “we all would have liked to see better utilization.” He added that in New York City, “we are concentrating a significant amount of our efforts right now to get the word out.”
Dr. Garofalo, the telehealth researcher, said the quality of the experience on Teenspace is particularly crucial because it will, in many cases, be a young person’s first encounter with mental health care.
“This is your chance to maybe convince someone they need help, or would benefit from talking to someone,” she said. “What if there is case management that needs to be involved? It’s a monumental task they have set for themselves.”