MONTREAL—Michael Salazar got to live out his dream in his first MLS start for the Montreal Impact.
Drawn into the lineup with superstar striker Didier Drogba sidelined by a leg injury, Salazar scored his first two goals in six league games for Montreal, which overcame a two-goal deficit for Saturday's 3-2 victory against the New England Revolution at Stade Saputo.
"Yeah, no pressure," said Impact coach Mauro Biello. "He knows it's about understanding your defensive responsibilities and expressing yourself offensively, play simple and get in the box. He scores in practice and I'm glad he was able to score tonight."
Salazar, selected in the second round of the 2016 MLS SuperDraft (No. 24 overall), scored his first goal 40 minutes in, cutting New England's lead to one after Revolution striker Kei Kamara's brace left the Impact trailing 2-0 in the 33rd minute.
"As a little kid this is always what I dreamed of, moments like these," Salazar said. "But the most important thing is to help the team win, and we got the win today."
The 23-year-old rookie's second goal of the game, in the 48th minute, tied it at 2-2.
"In training every single day, balls [are] getting served into the box, [I'm] chesting things down, [It's] just "Be strong," because I'm a big guy," Salazar said. "So I just try to be strong in there every single time and this is what I do every time in training and it paid off today."
Ignacio Piatti made the comeback complete when he scored his Impact-leading 10th goal on a penalty kick to make it 3-2 in the 54th minute.
"We've shown all year we never give up," Biello said. "We fight to the end. We've done that numerous times this year. I'm proud of that."
Replaced by Johan Venegas in the 85th , Salazar was given a standing ovation by the Stade Saputo crowd of 20,279 as he walked off the field.
"These fans are amazing," Salazar said. "They're behind us every single game when we're playing at home so for them to give me a standing ovation in my first start, it's a dream."