This is what troubles me, too. I've seen nothing to make me believe either is going to suddenly explode into a star.neither scream untapped potential to me.
This is what troubles me, too. I've seen nothing to make me believe either is going to suddenly explode into a star.
I’d make the case that Fernandez has improved slightly and slowly, but not nearly enough to warrant his price tag. He has produced and actually had some of the most threatening moments in the game last night. Ojeda… for some reason I’ve always rated him higher than Fernandez, but as mgarbowski has pointed out, he’s not producing anything. My hot take is in the long run Ojeda will be a better player than Fernandez, but at that point neither player will be on this squad.No signs that either is about to make a big leap, but more disappointing to me is the lack of incremental development. We are 2 years in with these guys and niether has progressed at all. Not every player can be a breakout star, but they should be showing signs of devolopment by now.
Hard to argue with this. There certainly hasn't been a steady improvement in either player, just flashes here and there. Nothing consistent.Not every player can be a breakout star, but they should be showing signs of development by now.
I’d make the case that Fernandez has improved slightly and slowly, but not nearly enough to warrant his price tag. He has produced and actually had some of the most threatening moments in the game last night. Ojeda… for some reason I’ve always rated him higher than Fernandez, but as mgarbowski has pointed out, he’s not producing anything. My hot take is in the long run Ojeda will be a better player than Fernandez, but at that point neither player will be on this squad.
Am I becoming a Fernandez advocate? Maybe.i think the reason why most rate ojeda more than fernandez is ojeda seems to try to attack and take on players down to the end line. whereas fernandez just makes wrong decisions all the time. yes he has some goals and assists, but they aren't so plentiful that we forget the many, many more poor decisions on and off the ball.
Am I becoming a Fernandez advocate? Maybe.
Fernandez has better NYCFC lifetime G+A per minute numbers than (among others) Medina, Talles, and McNamara. They're not the club's biggest stars but few would say they didn't contribute at some meaningful level.
His 2025 G+A ranks 57th in the league among 288 players with 1200 minutes. Limit it to attackers and he's 50th out of 84. It's not stellar but he's in the mediocre middle third. I don't see how you dismiss contributions at that level in favor of dribbling down the end line but not scoring or assisting.
Per FBref, Ojeda has better per 90 dribbling and take on numbers than Fernandez which is consistent with what you see, but Fernandez outshines in passing (distance, progressive distance, assists and xA). He's also ahead in all major shooting metrics per 90 including xG, shots, shots on target and of course, goals. And yes, I see him get the ball and miss the right pass, or when he fails to make the good run. Yet he somehow makes more progressive passes and assists and goals than Ojeda.
On the other side, Ojeda has better defensive stats.
I think their overall respective values are pretty close to each other. But it's not fair to dismiss Fernandez's results because of poor decisions when he actually generates goals and assists while Ojeda does not. Maybe consistently taking people on at the end line is a bad decision when it consistently does not work.
ETA: I can agree Ojeda might have a higher potential and Fernandez seems not to be improving with his higher playing time. But Fernandez plays better to his current skills than Ojeda does.
I get where you're coming from. For me, the broader issue is that neither player looks like a viable regular starter for a team with serious ambitions, even after two years of development and significant transfer fees.
Specifically with Fernández, I don’t think his goals and assists tell the full story. He consistently kills attacking momentum with poor situational awareness. He’s late on most of his runs, and worse, he often plays a pass out wide and then just backpedals and stands still. It’s like watching an NBA player who can only play iso-ball once they give it up; they disappear until they get the ball back for another 1v1. The problem is, Fernández isn’t even effective in 1v1 situations.
In the second half, Charlotte overloaded Wolf and Martínez, daring us to play through the right side because they knew Ojeda and Fernández wouldn't punish them. The scouting report is out—teams are comfortable marking both with a fullback and living with the results. At that point, Fernández’s G+A doesn’t matter; his lack of awareness is actively hamstringing the entire attack.