A preposterous four-goal outburst in less than eight minutes defined Minnesota United’s first win in Seattle.

Loons forward Tani Oluwaseyi scored the opening goal in the 51st minute, and the seal was ripped off on Sunday. Robin Lod made it 2-0 with a penalty kick in the 54th and Sounders’ Kalani Rienzi scored only seconds later to cut the lead to 2-1.

Then Oluwaseyi slotted in his second goal in the 58th during an eventual 3-2 win at Lumen Stadium.

With that outburst, MNUFC ended one of the most-lopsided series drought in MLS history: the Loons had zero points across nine total MLS games in Washington state before this weekend.

An own goal from Nico Romero in the 83rd minute damaged Minnesota’s lead to 3-2 and brought back nightmares of how MNUFC gave up a two-goal lead in a 3-2 loss in that building in the 2020 Western Conference final. But that history wouldn’t be repeated.

Here are three takeaways:

No big deal

Loons’ second-year head coach Eric Ramsay did not address the club’s nine-year struggles in Seattle with his players before the match.

Oluwaseyi pointed out how there are so many players who have little to no involvement in the “so-called drought.”

“In general, I don’t think we cared going into the game,” said Oluwaseyi, who added to his tally with a team-high eight goals. “You could see with the way we played, we didn’t really show them too much respect and we came out with the win.”

Captain Michael Boxall has been around since the beginning, but downplayed that bugaboo.

“I don’t go into these games with results from 2018, 2020 on my mind,” Boxall said. “It’s just every day is a fresh day, a fresh opportunity to keep building on what we are doing with Eric. Maybe I’m delusional. I go into every game thinking that we always have a chance.”

Mids were main men

Lod and Joaquin Pereyra were instrumental in setting up each goal. Lod’s ankle-breaking turn past Seattle’s Nouhou Tolo created the space for his assist on Oluwaseyi’s first goal.

“I played with Robin enough to know the turn was coming,” Oluwaseyi said with a laugh. “I was waiting for it to happen. He had a similar one actually last year for an assist for me, so once I see him in those positions, I’m on my toes for him to make his move. It worked out perfectly.”

Pereyra’s long dribble into the attacking third led to a cross to Bongi Hlongwane, who was fouled in the box for the PK Lod converted. Then Pereyra’s initial shot was stopped by Stefan Frei, but Oluwaseyi converted the rebound.

Four is fine

Minnesota held Vancouver without a home goal in a match for the first time this season during a scoreless draw on Wednesday and United handed Seattle its first home loss of the season on Sunday. That’s four combined points against the first-place Whitecaps and the fourth-place Sounders — both on the road.

“We’ve done incredibly well against two very good teams over the course of what has seemed like a very long trip for us,” Ramsay said.

This puts MNUFC (8-3-6, 30 points) in a second-place tie with San Diego heading into the international break. Those two teams will play next on June 14 in St. Paul.

Three tidbits

Owen Gene, 22, made his first MLS start Saturday. The French midfielder, who missed nearly two months with an ankle injury, had played only 139 minutes across seven matches this season. … The Loons signed 17-year-old attacker Darius Randell to a first-team contract and he will occupy an off-roster homegrown slot. He is the club’s fourth-ever homegrown player, joining Devin Padelford, Patrick Weah and Fred Emmings. … MNUFC has 10 players — including six regulars — called up to national teams: Dayne St. Clair and Oluwaseyi (Canada); Lod (Finland); Boxall (New Zealand); Joseph Rosales (Honduras); and Carlos Harvey (Panama).