NEW YORK CITY, USA — Hannes Wolf turned Yankee Stadium into his personal stage, completing a clinical hat-trick as New York City FC dismantled Columbus Crew 3-0 in a dominant home performance that had the crowd roaring from the opening exchanges. The Austrian forward struck twice inside the first 16 minutes to put the contest beyond doubt early, before adding a third in the 66th minute to cap a virtuoso individual display. NYCFC, sitting seventh in the Eastern Conference with 11 points, made a statement against a Columbus side mired in 12th place and struggling to find any consistent form.
Wolf wasted no time announcing his intentions. In the 12th minute, Agustín Ojeda threaded a perfectly weighted ball into the box, and Wolf met it with a composed right-footed finish, guiding the shot to the bottom left corner past a helpless Patrick Schulte. The stadium erupted, and barely four minutes later, the home faithful were on their feet again. This time it was Nicolás Fernández who played the provider, slipping a precise delivery to Wolf on the left side of the six-yard box, and the striker lifted a left-footed effort high into the centre of the goal to make it 2-0 by the 16th minute. Columbus were shell-shocked, and the game had already taken on the look of a long afternoon for the visitors.
The teams shared possession almost equally at 50%-50% throughout the contest, yet the scoreline told a very different story about clinical efficiency. NYCFC were ruthless in the final third, converting their chances with a sharpness that Columbus simply could not match. The Crew had their moments — Maxi Moralez delivered a dangerous cross that found Raul Gustavo in the box, but the header was smothered comfortably by Schulte. Columbus pushed for a foothold in the game, and André Gomes tested Matt Freese with a right-footed drive from the centre of the box, only for the NYCFC goalkeeper to hold firm. Freese was equal to everything thrown at him, his two saves proving vital in maintaining the clean sheet.
The tactical battle in midfield was fiercely contested, with Keaton Parks and the NYCFC engine room working hard to deny Columbus any rhythm. Taha Habroune's frustration boiled over in the 63rd minute when he was shown a yellow card for a bad foul, a moment that summed up the Crew's increasingly desperate afternoon. Columbus head coach responded with a triple substitution in the 68th minute, sending on Sékou Bangoura, Dániel Gazdag, and Mohamed Farsi in an attempt to inject fresh energy, but the game was already beyond saving. Rudy Camacho's header from a Diego Rossi cross was tipped away by Freese in the top centre of the goal — a save that underlined just how commanding the NYCFC stopper was on the night.
Wolf completed his hat-trick in the 66th minute, just three minutes after Habroune's booking had shifted the atmosphere further in NYCFC's favour. Fernández again played the architect, finding Wolf in the centre of the box, and the striker drilled a right-footed shot into the bottom right corner with the kind of cold-blooded precision that had defined his entire evening. The goal sent Yankee Stadium into full celebration, the crowd savouring every moment of a performance that felt like a turning point in NYCFC's season.
Columbus made further changes late on, introducing Amar Sejdic and Nariman Akhundzada in the 79th minute, but the contest was long decided. NYCFC rotated freely in the closing stages, with Malachi Jones, Jonathan Shore, and Arnau Farnós all entering the fray. Jones even tested Schulte with a left-footed effort from the centre of the box, saved comfortably, as NYCFC continued to press even with the result secured. The final whistle brought scenes of genuine joy around the stadium, the home supporters departing with the knowledge that their side had delivered one of their most complete performances of the campaign.
The scoreboard resets, but the table does not — NYCFC carry this confidence into a home clash with Charlotte FC on May 13, while Columbus must regroup quickly before hosting New York Red Bulls on the same date.