Showing posts with label Ben Olsen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ben Olsen. Show all posts

Thursday, June 22, 2023

Get out of the Kitchen: Houston Dynamo 4:1 San Jose Earthquakes

 
Dear Houston,

You need to check this out.  Your Houston Dynamo are currently on a masterful run of form.  For the first time in a really long time, they are on a wi(shhhhhhhhhhhh, don't jinx)eak of 4 straight games, thoroughly dominating the opposition along the way to the tune of 13-2.  Winners in 4 of 6, they have navigated the Texas heatwave through June to climb up the table into 4th place in the conference.  They just thrashed the leaders, LAFC, both home and away, and just got done completely dominating San Jose to switch places with them in the standings.  Not only are they dominating, they are doing it because they have gotten better every single week.  They have depth, young exciting players, stars, and a couple of dudes that will be.  Neither rain nor 2-hour lightning delays, nor the blistering Texas heat can deter them from crushing their opponents.  It's time to get behind this team.

Shout out to our SG's

I can't tell you how happy seeing this makes me, and sad that I'm not there with them.  It's not the first time our SG's threw a party during a lightning delay, and it won't be the last.  Our supporters' are as resilient as our team, and this was a beautiful sight.

This game was over in 5 minutes:

 The play was simple.  Bassi had been reading this pass from early on in the game, and it must have been something that was picked up on film.  You could see Bassi cheating the pass between CB's just 20 seconds into the game.  San Jose was too flat, and the triangles between CB's and CM Judson far too acute.  
Bassi recognized it before the pass was even made, and positioned himself where only two steps were needed to snatch this pass.  He took one controlling touch and placed a left footer around keeper Daniel to break this game open after just 2:02 had accumulated on the clock.
The Dynamo press was killing San Jose from the get-go, and Luchi Gonzalez's side was sloppy, disorganized, and now down 1-0.  Bassi's goal celebration of an archer was appropriate because like Robin Hood he stole this and gave the fans a reason to believe.  It was on the next Dynamo possession that they scored again in a beautifully crafted goal built from the back.  Started by a tremendously weighted pass from Bassi to Baby Face Nelson on a full sprint, the goal was a wonderful team goal on many layers.
(1) Quiñones' left-footed cross was pinpoint and well timed.
(2) Baird actually broke off his original near post run when he saw Aliyu making the same run, and got back post.
(3) Aliyu's run took both CB's with him, leaving no one at the back post to cover Baird
(4) Credit to Biard for one-timing this into the back of the net.

It's what you get when you get unselfish and intelligent teamwork.  This goal was the result of everyone doing their job, doing it together, and doing it properly.  Each part, from Steres finding Bassi in the pocket until ending with Baird's finish was done exactly how it was needed to be done, no more and no less, and these types of goals are coming with a much higher amount of regularity than we've seen since we moved from the Rob.

The Dynamo weren't even done.  Despite a few meager attempts to get back into the game by San Jose, #ForeverOrange rocked the entirety of the first 45 minutes.  Erik Svaitchenko nearly got a third with his headed attempt (31st minute) which also was nearly banged home by Micael.  The Dynamo never let down, and even after Charles Akapo's goal to cut it 2-1, there was never really any question that #HellInTheShell was in full force.  Ibrahim Aliyu broke loose only moments after Akapo's goal, and just narrowly missed a left footer after a tremendous downfield pass by Daniel Steres.  At the half, not only were the Dynamo leading 2-1, but they were dominating the game in almost ever statistical category and San Jose was looking gassed. 

The second 45? We put the throttle down.

The second half began with the same as the first half.  As they broke for half, you could see Steve Clark rallying the guys.  I don't know what he said, but I know he was pointing at the crest and getting after it :)  Ben Olsen had his team sitting in a mid-block defending with 2 lines of 4.  Disrupting the midfield and forcing San Jose to attack down the wings, the Dynamo were looking to allow the Earthquake to hold possession in the back line and react quick off turnovers.  This was not a team content with two goals and looking to park the bus. 
There had to be concern, however, when the lightning delay hit in the 62nd minute.  Never knowing how this could disrupt things or rejuvenate a team that was down a goal.  With the stadium emptying out as fans didn't know when the action would return, coming in after a two hour delay with no fans in the stands and up only a goal was worrisome.  But those worries were quickly tossed aside as the Dynamo came directly after San Jose.  Bassi's attempt 66' in was as well crafted as the second goal of the game, with runs, one-touch passing, and a nearly perfect first-touch strike that would up in Daniel's lap.  

Thor: Endgame


I mean, who doesn't love a good Thor reference?  Thor's first goal (a left footed, far post curler) put the game out of reach.  His second one was for show in more ways then one.  With the three points, the Dynamo have now jumped to 4th in the standings, with a game in hand over Seattle (who the Dynamo play July 1st). They're two points off of second and could achieve that on Saturday.  This weekend's game against Green Tree F.C. is one of the biggest games for the Dynamo in years, and could mean an end to the curses of summer that we've seen for the better part of a decade.

Next Up 


Despite all the chest-thumping by the weirdo's in Austin, the Dynamo have won two games against Austin this year pretty convincingly.  The Dynamo should make this a third.

Until then,
Remember to always #HoldItDown and stay #ForeverOrange,
Brian

Friday, June 2, 2023

Roller Coaster Ride: Wins against Minnesota and Austin, disaster vs. Vancouver.

 

This season is going to be taxing.  For all the work Ben Olsen has done to transform PNC into a true Hell in the Shell, this team is still absolutely abysmal on the road.  We had the highs with the thrashing of Minnesota United in the Lamar Hunt USOC, beating Austin FC at home, and experienced the lows after getting dismantled against Vancouver on the road Wednesday night. Is this a season of highs and lows?  Will it be a year-long roller coaster home vs. away? Or, is this the beginning of what has become our annual pitfall into the abyss.  There are some signs this team is built differently than the ones we've seen over the last half decade, but to keep asking the question: is it better?

What we see at home:


Simply put, the Dynamo are the best Defensive team in the league at home.  They've given up a league-low 2 goals in 9 games, have outscored their opponents 13-2, and are 7-1-1 in the friendly confines of Shell Energy Stadium. Playing primarily in a mid-low block, taking very few risks going forward, the team is simply grinding out games consistently in front of #ForeverOrange fandom. One of their losses came with only 9 men on the field (1-0 vs. Seattle). They've made Shell more than a fortress, they are making teams not want to come to play here.......and it's not really summer.  We haven't had much to be cautiously optimistic about for a while, but this trend is a positive one. Recently, putting up 4 on Minnesota's stingy defense AND beating Broccoli F.C. felt good! While I can't foresee this team being this good at home for the entire year with all this travel and short weeks, they will remain good enough to stay in the playoff hunt.

Rough Times Ahead:

They've got one of the ingredients for making the playoffs down, but the rest of it is nowhere near ready.  Unfortunately, there's an entire load road games on short rest coming up, as The Dynamo have some brutal stretches in June and July. Only four of their next ten matches are in Houston.  Their next 6 MLS games are a meat grinder, with St. Louis (3rd best in the league @ 1.92 points/match), then back-to-back with LAFC (best in the Western Conference @ 2.08 points/match) over a 4-day stretch, and especially after a short rest with Chicago smashed in prior to it on June 6th.  There are soo many short rest weeks in June and July, before having a month off to start August.  Road games, short weeks, summer heating up, and we are about to really find out what this team is made of.

Why we shouldn't give up.....yet.

(1) Ibrahim Aliyu is good.  He's changing this attack in a positive way with his runs, his first touch, and his pace.  Opponents not only have to worry about his speed, but he also knows how to do something with it in pockets of space dropping back to the ball.  He's not only creating shots for himself and being aggressive, but he's opening up gaps for Bassi, Baird and HH as well.

(2) Corey Baird is starting to score.  There were a lot of people poo-pooing his hat trick against Minnesota, but he came back and scored a nice one against Vancouver before the wheels fell off. 

(3) This game was part of a scheduling nightmare by MLS.  To go from Houston to Vancouver on a short week is extremely harsh.  Play Saturday night -> fly 2,000 miles, play one of the best home teams in MLS ->  Vancouver is really good at home, we played terribly and looked like we had just traveled 2,000 miles on short rest.

(4) Steve Clark (minus Wednesday night) had been playing extremely well since the first two games of the year when I questioned whether or not he had anything left.   He was

Why the sky is falling.

(1) Micael has been trending downward for a couple of weeks, and played terribly on Wednesday night.  I understand why Ben Olsen is trying to get him in the lineup, because with Escobar, Bartlow, Sviatchenko, and Steres, there's not a left-footer in the lineup.  Micael at CB was even showing cracks against Austin, but he was able to make plays when needed.  Playing both Steres and Escobar at FB severely limits what you can do forward, and Escobar is better on the right side.  Micael has been getting a lot of time since Teenage got hurt, but it might be time for Sviatchenko to step in.

(2) The card situation is getting completely out of hand. While the Dynamo are actually improving in the Yellow Card situation over a year ago, the red accumulation of 4 (and don't forget about the one in the Open Cup) not only lead the league but would have been good for 3rd most in the league last year......for the entire season.  While two of them (HH's second yellow vs. Seattle & Nelson's from Saturday) were extremely petty, it's something they have to get under control. (rant about this later)

(3) The team, who had been fighting for 90 minutes in every game, flat-out quit on Wednesday night.  Not only did they quit, but to give up a goal in under 18 seconds to start BOTH halves is flat-out embarrassing.

(4) This team is winless on the road and has lost 5 of 7.  Winning on the road has been something this team simply can't do for more than a decade, and Ben Olsen has to find a way to start pulling at least 1 point from these games.

Final Thoughts:

It's a long season, there are 20+ games left, and we haven't even gotten into the heat of summer yet.  This team is set up defensively really well, and they are attacking better of late.  I think we saw some of that in the first half before they gave up a goal 18 seconds in the second half and threw things out of the window.  Wednesday night was a chaotic game where Vancouver banged the ball deep and it paid off.  Bartlow, Artur, and Escobar have logged a ton of minutes lately and were on short rest. The best thing for us, and for the team to do, is burn the Vancouver tape and never watch it again.  Let's just get ready for St. Louis on Saturday and figure out how to pull points on the road.

Final Rant:

Major League Soccer is the softest officiated league on the planet, and there is enormous inconsistency in Yellows, Reds, and sometimes even fouls.  Not only the quantity of reds given in this league are ridiculous, but the standard by which reds are given is soo low that it makes the league hard to watch.  Add to that the fact that calls are soo inconsistently given you don't even know what is a card or not.  Take Wednesday night for example.  Cordova, sitting on a yellow, toe pokes Steve Clark who had just fell on the ball.  Not only is there no card given, there's nothing given at all except a yellow to Clark who asked where the call was.  I'm not a "The Refs hate us" guy, but I am a "ProReferees are embarrassing this league and the standard of officiating has to dramatically improve" guy.  The refereeing makes games choppy, it's creating a league where diving is encouraged because of the ease in which cards are given.  While I am holding back on how all of our sports leagues have gotten ridiculously soft over the years, MLS has global standards by which to compare themselves and compete in.  I both of these areas they are currently fighting a losing battle.


Thanks again for reading,
Remember to always #HoldItDown and stay #ForeverOrange

Brian



Sunday, May 14, 2023

I...can't.....even......Houston Dynamo 0:1 Seattle Sounders

So, there's not to say about this one, so this will be probably the shortest post ever.  Last night was a game soo ridiculous, I.....just....can't....even.  It was 90 minutes of "Ugh", "WHAT?" "How in the world!" and "ARE YOU KIDDING ME??".  In the end, it was the Dynamo's first home loss of the season as well as Seattle being the first team to find the back of the net against a 9-man side with Head Referee Rubiel Vazquez playing steadily at their side.  To quote Krystopher Scroggins from Dynamo Faithful Podcast: "The story of this game was much like Galveston Bay.  You know...it's a distinctive Houston feature, but it just kinda stinks."

The Refereeing:

I really don't like complaining about officiating or blaming losses on Refs. In his post-game press conference, Ben Olsen said "I don't think it was his best night", but it's not the first time something like this has happened with Head Referee Rubiel Vazquez at the helm.  Remember the game last year against the Sounders (May 18th -> 1-0 Sounders win) when Coco got a soft yellow in the first 10 minutes of the game, then got a second soft yellow in the first ten minutes of the second half while the Dynamo were chasing a goal?  I'll give you a guess who was the head Referee in that game. Before either Vasquez ever read for his back pocket the first 18 minutes of the game was completely dominated by whistles and was unbearably choppy. 

I have no real problem with the Bassi red-card.  There was obviously no intent behind it by Amine, and it happened so fast that Vasquez didn't even catch it in real-time.  You can even see Nicolas Lodeiro sitting on the ground and saying "You're gonna look at it right? Are you gonna look at it?" and Vasquez shaking his head "no" right after it happened. Then you see his facial expression change as the call comes down, and him going to the screen.  If you really want to know if it was a red, check out Bassi's facial expression when Vasquez communicates that he's going to the screen.  Bassi knew it was the end of his night the second it went to V.A.R.  Just two guys going after the ball, and a poorly placed cleat by Bassi, but definitely not a malicious act.  The second red that put the Dynamo to 9 men?  That was a call that was given because HH had spent a little too much time arguing with the ref.  That's never a yellow, not even if he was sitting on one.  This is what it took for the Fortress of Solitude to be broken into.  Rubiel Vasquez found the enormous golden arrow leading to the door, which also happened to be the key, and sneaky Nicolas Lodeiro found his way in.  It wasn't just that we got two reds, and that one of them was ridiculously weak, it's the amount of stuff that Vasquez let go to begin with.  If you think about it, if VAR hadn't called down, Bassi wouldn't have even gotten a foul called against him.  Go from not calling a clear red, to calling a second yellow on HH (also a phantom call at midfield in the 40th minute), to calling NOTHING against a guy grabbing Corey Baird by the face and dragging him down and it was just an inconsistent mess of a performance, and it honestly cost the Dynamo points.  There are soo many things about this league and its structure that needs to improve for the United States to make a jump to a top Soccer destination World-Wide.  Adding to that consistent low level of officiating year after year, AND that those refs continue to make appearances year after year.  There needs to be major change in the way MLS holds referees accountable, trains referees, and promotes referees.  If they put together a system training referees the with the same fire that they put towards developing players, we could see some of these referees out of here and replaced by a better level of officiating.  Don Garber recently said that the USOC wasn't the level of product that MLS wanted, but at least the officiating didn't overshadow the game.  This is something that's killing his league, he needs to act on it.

Winning Ugly is fun, not winning makes it hard to watch.

Credit to Ben Olsen, this team defends like it means it.  This team represents all the clichés that you hear coaches and pundits speak.  They fight for the badge, they give 110%, and the have turned their home into a fortress.  But I'm not going to sit here and say it's pretty.  It's not.  In fact, at times this attack is a large dose of UGLY with a pinch of some decent attacking soccer.  Spending large chunks of time sitting in a low block of 4 and barely getting the ball across midfield?  It's not exactly Must-See-TV.  It's not even the WB.  It's basically a two-hour block of Bob Ross and Mr. Rogers on PBS.  I give them full credit, they played to the final whistle, but being two men down and against fresh legs was too much for them to handle on this night.  

I'm mad, I'm watching this game for a second time and I just...can't....even.   So, on this one, I'm done.  

Thanks again for reading,
Remember to always #HoldItDown and stay #ForeverOrange.

Brian

Sunday, April 16, 2023

We don't know how to feel: RBNY1 1:1 HDFC

 

If you take it at face value, it's something we should be excited about.  The ability to earn a point, ANY POINTS on the road is something that has been absent from the Houston Dynamo repertoire for nearly a decade.  To those who woke up this morning and looked at the box score, you might shrug your shoulders and think "Hey, Alright!". But to those who watched the game or were there?  There are so many ways you can look at this game and soo many takeaways, it's like one of my favorite quotes from George R.R. Martin: We all look up at the same stars, and see such different things.  

Positive Outlook (A.K.A. the Web Tilton):


We earned a point on the road without Hector Herrera.  To get in the playoffs you have to get whatever points you can away, and we were able to do that last night. Despite all the problems going forward, we defended like we meant it. The backline of Steres, Bartlow, Hadebe, and Escobar had another stellar outing, and Clark was on point for 99.9% of the night.  We also earned a point when we were vastly outplayed and SHOULD have won the game.  We actually created a goal in the run of play, our defense is shaping into one of the better defenses in the league, and we pulled down a point starting only 1 DP.

Debbie Downer Outlook:


We should have won the game.  We were up 1-0 and gave up the lead in the 89th minute.  RBNY is one of the worst teams in the league, and we need 3 points here no matter where we played.  

Eeyore Outlook:


We didn't even deserve the point we got.  We were completely dominated in every way and scored a lucky goal.  Giving up the goal in the 89th minute was the most "Dynamo" thing ever.  This team is terrible.  We haven't beaten anyone good, we can't win on the road, we can't score goals, and our DP striker is sitting on the bench.  If we can't score goals, we aren't winning anything this year.

The Truth:

It was an ugly, boring game.  The Red Bull press absolutely killed the Dynamo last night.  Without Hector Herrera helping control the midfield and with no real threat to score OR get behind the Red Bull back line, the Dynamo could barely get out of their own half.
This game actually looked soo much like the Post Alberth Elis Dynamo it was scary.  Almost, but not identical because they managed to grind out a point AND Hadebe, Bartlow, Escobar and Clark defended with intent. It's also true that (1) Raines is not ready to play attacking midfielder of any kind, especially out wide. (2) Bassi disappears during open play.  (3) Corey Baird's only value going forward is drawing fouls.  Anything that requires him to put the ball at his feet and make an actual play is not going to happen.  In fact, Corey Baird's stats on last might: 90 mins, 27 touches (0 inside the box), 0 shots, 0 key passes, 14 passes completed, 1 tackle that ended up in this:
2/3rds of this play are why Baird brings value to this team.  It's the end of that play that has a large part of this fanbase asking for something better. Baird is a smart, heads-up defender.  His work-rate is good and he plays hard.  He draws fouls in dangerous situations and has been beaten up pretty good doing just that this year.  But he can't play with the ball at his feet.  We all saw the assist against the Galaxy.  If you watched, you also noticed that the Galaxy made almost no attempt to actually guard him at all on the play.  It was drill work: playing against cones.  This isn't a call for Sebas necessarily, but there has to be a better option than this somewhere out there.  Pat's signed 4 LBs this year, he just went out and dropped over $1mil for an insurance policy at CB.   Surely there is some attacking talent out there that can defend like our current #9 and actually make a play.  At least Victor Araiza is out there asking the right questions:


So, should we be happy that we managed to pull a point out of that performance? Should we be excited about the defending of our back four and encouraged by Clark's performance? Should we be embarrassed that we played soo poorly, concerned that we handled the press so badly, and gave up a late goal to equalize?  Should we be angry that an attack performing soo anemically does so with the a guy who had 16 goal contributions last year sits on the bench, and that we may have not done enough to make the playoffs this year?  The answer to ALL of that is yes.  

Up Next:


Thanks again for reading,
Remember to always #HoldItDown and stay #ForeverOrange,
Brian





Sunday, April 2, 2023

Completely U.G.L.Y. - Dynamo 1 - Earthquake 2

 

U

G

L

Y

You Aint got no alibi

You Uglyyyyyyyyy....what what what.......you uglyyyyyyyyyy.

This Dynamo team, 5 games in, still has soo many questions that are nowhere near being answered.  Is it a team good enough to sneak into the playoffs?  What is going on with Sebastian Ferreira?  What formation are they even playing?  Can you win in this league without a #10, or a DP striker?  What does Ivan Franco put in his hair to make is so stinking amazing?  One thing that is absolutely certain though: they are going to play ugly.  It's turning many of us into absolute hypocrites (calm down, I'm mostly talking about myself) who love to win ugly but hate to lose that way.  This team threatens their opponent's goal about as much as my 7 lb pomeranian threatens everyone who dares to walk past my house.  They're aware that she's there, but no one is scared of her.  "NOBODY'S SCARED OF YOU BELLA" Is one of my most uttered phrases during the day.  And nobody is scared of our attack either.  When you decide who will start in your forward positions based on who can defend the best, there aren't going to be many goals scored.  This is a clock management, don't make mistakes, and hope your opponent doesn't score type of team.  They made that switch when they decided to start 3 CBs and a #9 who can press the way you want.  When it works, it's ugly and you pull points.  When it doesn't work, it's just ugly.  Either way, Ben Olsen has this team well-organized in defense and playing hard defensively.  What's missing is absolutely anything in the final third other than drawing a penalty. It's easy to point at the #9, but in reality, it's all three of them up top doing nothing to generate goals through the first five games.  It's easy to put the blame on Coco and HH as well, but in reality, they are playing the ball to guys who do nothing with it. When the ball leaves the feet of our two star midfielders, it usually goes into an albatross of turnovers.  Ben Olsen needs to find the right combination of players that can actually find the back of the net DURING the run of play.

This was a tough, physical game from the start.


It was ugly literally from the start.  Cade Cowells beautiful run and low cross nearly broke the game open before the clock even struck 2:00, but from the start, both teams were set on muddying up the opposition.  From the get-go, there were shoulders, grabs, heel kicks, slide tackles, and some good ol'fashioned shin guard checks.

Just look at the highlights of the first 20 minutes, they are all either tragic or fouls.

  • Carrasquilla's foul 3:56 into the game.  He just grabbed Moreno by the head for no real reason at all. 
  • Hadebe's Handball
  • San Jose's double takedown of Raines (8:43) just outside the box.
  • Espinosa's run in the box 14:10 (Hadebe's near pen #2)
  • Mensah's foul 16:55
  • Espinosa's cross that ended up 200 feet from where he wanted it @ 18:10.  


The only exciting plays in the first 30 minutes of the half came from San Jose, and the only thing the Dynamo could do to hold possession was to pass the ball between the back three.  The Dynamo could barely get the ball across midfield with any idea what to do with it, and when they did break the midfield line they could never break down San Jose's press.  The Earthquakes press was giving our back line a ton of problems, and if it wasn't for some tremendous play by Artur to just muscle the ball away from Espinosa and Ebobise inside the box, San Jose  might have broken through several times.  It wasn't until the 25 minute mark that HH began sitting between the lines of press and getting the ball at his feet that the Dynamo began to break through.  But time and time again, despite some nice back heels and through balls, Luchi González's defense was always there.

This game was physical.  31 combined fouls, 5 combined yellows, 3 PKs, 2 of which were for bad tackles in the box. Akapo's shoulder to Schmitt was an example (31st minute), and his yellow for taunting was a sign of what it meant to San Jose.  The Dynamo lost possession 134 times, a season high.  Led by Corey Baird's 16 on only 41 touches, the Dynamo simply could not end possessions with shots.  Too often they tried to do to much, get too cute, be too patient, when simply they needed to play direct and take guys on.  In the first half Ben Olsen's side managed just 2 shots from the run of play (0 on target).  

While we weren't helped by the final decision of a penalty (and the lack of Coco getting one at the end of the first half), the game should never come down for that.  The Dynamo never owned the moment, the attack lacked purpose and passion.  The runs up top never got in behind, when we put together a nice combo play the person in space was always looking for something that wasn't there instead of just taking someone on and beating his man.  This attack actually took a step back last night, and that's almost impossible to do.  Olsen has to find a way to jumpstart this attack before next Saturday, or there is a chance that the Dynamo are going to be over their head before May. Let's take a look at a few of the keys from last night's game.

The Striker Position


Baird was pesky.  He drew the penalty and applied pressure to San Jose's back line at times.  Offensively however Baird was terrible.  I understand that Baird runs hard and defends from the front, but his runs almost never end up with him being onside and behind the defense.  Baird's hold-up play is spotty, and he rarely wins position on deep balls allowing him to hold possession.  Baird does occasionally occupy a CB on some of his runs, allowing Coco and HH to occupy the space in behind, but the biggest problem with Baird is what happens when the ball actually touches his feet.  Currently, he's a poacher who can't poach.  He doesn't create or generate anything offensively, his runs are currently all meaningless, and when he finds the ball in front of an open net he can't put one home.  Last night Sebas checked on and did absolutely nothing.  You could see him gesturing in frustration the second he checked on.  His pressing was terrible, his energy was bad, and his runs were nonexistant.  His hold-up play was OK and he did complete 4/5 passes, but never posed a threat at all and didn't change the game for the better when he checked on.  This position is a void on the offensive side of the ball, but it isn't the only void going forward.

Bassi, Franco, Quinones, and Raines and Schmitt.


This isn't a 4-3-3, and it's not a true 4-4-2.  While they are defending with 2 lines of four, the shift to a 3 man back line going forward is getting 6 guys in the box with regularity. It may be controversial to throw Bassi in here since he's scored 3 goals, however he hasn't done anything to generate a goal yet this year.  He didn't even draw the penalties (Biard, HH and Bartlow's header did), he simply scored them.  The formation switch has him tucking inside and playing centrally while Tate Schmitt gets down the wing.  Last night when Franco Escobar subbed on, they actually flipped the tactics and Bassi played more on the edge. Bassi only has 3 key passes on the year, and his Shot-Creating Actions/90 (2.02) is less than half of what we'd seen from him at Barnsley and Metz. (5.05 and 5.87).  On top of that, he's only taken 2 shots all year during open run.  He needs to be more assertive.  It's not that he's not being clinical, it's that he's not forcing action.  He needs to be one of the key offensive contributors in the attack and do something with the ball at his feet.

Raines looked lost for the most part on the wing last night.  Had one play early in the game where you saw the potential (when he got taken down, got up, ripped the ball away from a defender and kept going until the dragged him down just outside the box @ 8:43 in the game), but often had trouble just getting on the ball.  Cut inside once and missed HH on a perfect run to the outside, instead passing it directly to Michael Baldisimo.  He often had trouble simply getting the ball.  Franco looked no better upon checking on, giving the ball away roughly half (7/16) of the times he touched it.  Nelson Quinones has done nothing to show he can actually help this team in any way, and as much as I like Tate Schmitt his final play needs to be crisper.  His crosses are often just a tad misplaced, and his dribbles in the box often don't beat his man.  To be fair, there needs to be a better tip of the spear for any of these guys to succeed with the final ball.

Too much is being asked of the midfield.



HH, Coco, and Artur are doing their part.  While all three could be better, their job is to control the center of the field and play it up to guys who make plays.  Coco currently ranks 9th in the league in creating shots/90 (4.78), and HH is setting just behind him at 4.40.  Those actions are leading to actual shots or goals though, and that's not necessarily all their fault.  These two guys are box-box players, they aren't Thiago Almeda who stay forward, get forward, and use space around a striker to create for themselves.  They defend, get the ball at their feet, and progress it up to the forwards.  Because our forwards are struggling to do anything offensively, it's putting additional pressure on them to do create goals.  There's no doubt that HH and Coco can do more, but Bassi, Franco, Baird, Sebas, Quinones et all need to really step up.  

Next Up:

Until Then:

Thanks once again for reading.
Remember to always #HoldItDown and stay #ForeverOrange

Brian.


Sunday, March 26, 2023

Brought the Nasty: Houston 1:0 NYCFC

 

A night of contrast for the Houston Dynamo: beautiful stadium on a beautiful night with a team that managed to play stretches of beautiful soccer, but bring home an ugly 1:0 win.  On a night with no Coco Carrasquilla, no Ivan Franco, and against one of the stingiest defenses in MLS, the Dynamo managed the only chance that mattered and kept their second straight clean sheet at home.  Bringing the Nasty is rounding into form, as Ben Olsen has found a defensive unit and shape that is working at home

There are lots of things to celebrate from this game, as well as some major causes of concern. Let's take a look at the good, the bad, and the ugly of this game.

The Good:

Brooklyn Raines makes his first MLS start.

Brooklyn Raines is the first teenager to ever start a game for the Houston Dynamo in an MLS match.  In a much-anticipated appearance, Raines had a mostly quiet first half.  Highlighted by his miss on the one good chance the Dynamo had created during the half that really stung, Raines otherwise was mostly unnoticeable during the first 45.  He came to life in the second.  Had a really nice move and a crafty pass through defenders on the buildup that led to the Pen.  Drew a couple of key fouls, and despite only having 27 touches found ways to impact the game.  Brooklyn just mistimed a couple of runs, and his teammates had a little trouble finding him on some of those deep balls. Most importantly didn't do anything that cost the team the win.  Raines took over Coco's duty of applying high pressure and making runs between the left CB and LB.  High energy, was active, impacted winning.  Overall a solid 74 minutes, hopefully he starts to get a few more shifts as the season progresses.

Artur

Artur is the backbone of what has been a dominating midfield.  The midfield trident has been extremely good in 3/4 games so far this year (Cinci, Austin, NYCFC) and Artur has ben the rock at the back end of it.  Defensively he was outstanding last night.  While the tackle and interception numbers aren't staggering (1 tackle, 2 interceptions), he was always in the right spot and gobbled up 11 loose balls in the midfield.  Artur was also instrumental on applying pressure to Keaton Parks and Alfredo Morales, virtually taking them out of the game.  Artur has also been creeping further upfield in possession and looking to make plays.  Took a big left-footed blast right before Corey Baird hit the cross bar, and who can forget his nutmeg/run against Austin F.C. Owning the midfield was key to this matchup, and none was more active or more important than Artur.

The Defensive Back 3 of Teenage, Bartlow, and Steres

It's an unconventional way to get to a 3 in the back lineup, but that's essentially what it is.  4-4-2 in defense, but 3 CB's staying home and protecting when we go forward.  While Steres began to venture forward at spots, having these three set the back line allowed Tate Schmitt to get down the wing and wreak havoc.  The three weren't called on to do a lot, but were always there when they needed to be.  Largely responsible for holding NYCFC to five shots (1 on target) for the entire game.  NYCFC went over 30 minutes without a single shot of any kind (from the 57th minute - 91st minute).  Add to that the fact that NYCFC only had 5 touches inside the box for the first 90 minutes of the game.  While Steve Clark will get credit for his 52nd Career Clean Sheet, the bulk of the work went to the midfield and these guys in the back.

Honorable Mention:

Ben Olsen's defensive game planning, Amine Bassi, HH being HH, and, it sounds weird since we lost the possession numbers, but the possession game was there when we needed it.

The Bad

Corey Baird

Baird did some really good things defensively.  His pressure on the Center Backs combined with the midfield activity of Raines, HH, and Artur really disrupted NYCFC's attack.  However, going forward Baird poses almost no threat of helping the Dynamo score. When he makes a run AND is onside, his decision-making has been extremely poor.  Had a chance to bury NYCFC and make it 2-0 but missed a poacher's goal and hit the woodwork, his only shot of the game.  He's not getting chances, he's not creating chances, he's not really even taking guys on.  He did draw 4 fouls, but other than that his stats were very meager.  45 touches, 8 possessions lost, 0 key passes, 0 shots on target, 1 offsides, 0/1 in taking guys on.  For four straight games here the striker position has been virtually nonexistent in the attack.

The Attack

There was some really pretty combination play, and some quality plays from the midfield, but the Dynamo managed only 2 shots on target the entire game, and one was off a deflection on the back post.  The top three of Baird, Bassi and Quinones didn't combined for 1 shot, 1 key pass, and 2 passes completed into the penalty area.  Without Franco and Carrasquilla the attack lost a lot of punch and creative flair.  The top three have yet to create a goal in the run of play on the season.  

The Ugly

Steve Clark's one major gaffe

Luckily it didn't cost the Dynamo a goal, but right after Amine Bassi's pen Clark almost gave them one back.

Final Thoughts:

These are games the Dynamo usually don't win.  You can take both wins with a grain of salt (beating Austin F.C. on a short week and NYCFC after traveling across the country) but to post two straight clean sheets at home AND winning both hasn't been done in ten years.  This is a good stretch, and the Dynamo have a real chance to make it three in a row traveling to San Jose Earthquakes next weekend. Also, getting to listen to Glenn Davis on the call through Apple TV's new "Hometown Radio" feature was a game changer for me.  I now love this ap entirely.

Next Up:


Until then.....

Thanks again for reading.
Remember to always #HoldItDown and stay #ForeverOrange

Brian



Monday, March 6, 2023

Houston Dynamo vs. N.E. Revolution: Time for Massive Overreaction.

 




All offseason I tried to temper it.  I tried to tell myself that despite all the moves, the talent influx that we were looking for just wasn't there.  But with every move,  every player added, and every new department or front office position created it started to grow: Hope.  There wasn't a lot, just a flicker.  It wasn't even hope that we'd be one of the best teams in the conference, just hope that we'd be better.  Match Day 1 against Cincinnati actually helped build that hope, as though even though we failed on the scoreline we were clearly the better team for long periods of that game.  Saturday was the type of game that crushed every bit of hope that had been seeded its way into my psyche in a mere flash.  When Dylan Borreo raced in to track down a low cross and sneak one past Steve Clark 40 minutes into the game, it not only felt like the game was over, it felt like the entire season was over.  The game had been fairly uneventful at that point, but the Dynamo had a couple of decent chances that they put right on the keeper.  "Oh.....Come.....ON!!!!" Could probably be heard three blocks away as I pounded my fist into my poor little Ikea coffee table that has taken too much punishment over Dynamo games, PS5 renditions of FIFA and War Thunder, and is much more durable than my belief in my beloved club at this point.  It took me a good day to think about what I wanted to write because at first reaction it was all hellfire and brimstone.  This post will be full of answering some of my own overreactions but also setting appropriate expectations.

It's time to set our sights higher:

When Ted Segal came in, my biggest hope wasn't in fancy stadium renovations, brand changes, or anything like that.  My hope was that we would have an MLS Organization that was the best in the league.  This team had no real scouting department, they had no fancy analytics department, their youth development was trash, and so was the product on the field.   You could see just from their MLS Super Draft picks over the last decade that they had no idea what they were doing, and from the vast majority of whiffs they had on foreign transfers (especially the cheap ones).  This offseason Ted Segal attempted to fix all of that, and with that should come real expectations.  Pat Onstad and Asher Mendelsohn have every tool and resource available to their disposal.  Now it's time to put it together.  No more swapping mediocre players for other mediocre players.  No more having a team of mismatched parts that don't fit. It's time to do the things that make great MLS teams.  Go get stars, go find a few gems, and develop a few of your own.  At each position find guys that will outwork their man.  Build a tuff, gritty, blue collar team that fights for 90 minutes and represents our city and our fanbase.  The tools are at your disposal, it's time for you to prove if you can use them.

This is the same ol' Dynamo:

It is, but it isn't.  Despite all the work this offseason, this team still has gaping holes.  The back line isn't good enough.  While it's probable that Ethan Bartlow will grow into a solid MLS defender, right now he still has work to do.  It was his mark that  back heeled it to wide open space after he allowed a free run to the near post on the first goal Saturday.  On goal #2 he was stuck in limbo as a low cross went right in front of him to a streaking Bobby Wood.  Hadebe is getting beat far too often, and our backs are still attrocious at defending.  Our midfield can control the game, but we can't get them the ball, and they have no one to play it to.  Ivan Franco has been good but has yet to make a scoring impact, Tate Schmitt has shown some good things going forward but struggles in defense, and Corey Baird has mostly been a ghost through 136 minutes. Neither of our strikers has seen much space or the ball, which is a testament to both their play and their teammates.  Right now our best offense is getting the ball to Coco or HH and have them break three lines with the ball at their feet. Steve Clark has been terrible, and with a save percentage of 44% you have to wonder if he can do this job anymore.  He didn't even attempt at the third goal on Saturday, and hasn't been able to stop shots effectively this year at all.  The even worse news on that front is that Andrew Tarbell has historically been a below average MLS keeper (to put it nicely). We knew that going in, and when we are prayerful that we did enough to possibly sneak in to the 9th spot that tells you that we didn't really do a lot.  Ivan Franco has looked good.  He's aggressive, has good skill, and isn't afraid to take people on.  Tate Schmitt has looked good coming up the left wing, but the right side of the attack has been non-existant.  

What's exceptionally frustrating to me is this isn't an inexperienced Head Coach that we are working through this with.  Ben Olsen should have answers.  He's the most experienced Coach the Dynamo have ever hired (he's got 28 games on Owen Coyle coming in).  He should have answers.  We were completely exposed against New England, and the game plan wasn't that complicated.  Flood the midfield, hit us deep down the wings, fire a low cross across the box.  They beat us on it three times, and we had no answer for them going forward.  Ben not only found a way to cover this tactical weakness, he made no adjustments to get the ball to his goal scorers for two weeks.  We have yet to score a goal from open play, and in both games our Strikers got shut down.  I also don't understand why you already bring Sebas off the bench.  It seems to me like early in the year with a team trying to gel you sit your best goal scorer to start the game.  

This isn't about a "team needing to gel", it's just not good enough.

Good teams produce.  While I wholeheartedly agree that it will take time for Franco, Bassi, Thor, and Sebas to click (I don't add Baird, because I don't consider him offensively relevant), producers produce.  One of them should have lucked their way into a goal by now.  Franco has had chances, but has been unable to finish off a play.  Our strikers are absent, and it's almost as if we are playing with ten at this point.  Even if they gel, is it going to be a playoff caliber team?  I'm still doubtful.  Maybe that's the cynic in me, but I just don't see it.

We aren't even building for the future:

While Coco and HH are our best two players, Juan Castilla and Brooklyn Raines need to play.  They should be getting sub minutes at a minimum and rotational minutes on occasion. The fact that the two have combined for 1 minute played on the season is ridiculous.   We've seen Corey Baird, he's not going to help us win.  Amine Bassi and Nelson Quinones need to be playing minutes there.  Bartlow and Dorsey are younger type players, and both are being given an opportunity, but both need to be better.  I'd actually like to see Micael in the near future.  This is a team that's not good enough, not building, just stuck in mediocre limbo.  At least we have HD2 season around the corner. 

This game is forcing overreaction:

It was because of HOW BAD this game was.  It was sloppy, it was disorganized, and it just looked bad.  We can make excuses about it: it was cold, New England is good, Bruce Arena is a legend.  But at the end of the day the scoreline makes this game look closer than it actually was.  My buddy Wade has a good handle on it:

Next Up:




Until then,
Thanks again for reading.
Remember to always #HoldItDown and stay #ForeverOrange

Brian



Sunday, January 29, 2023

Houston Dynamo FC - 2023 Season Preview - It's time, for real.

 

Major League Soccer Season Preview (2022/2023) – Houston Dynamo



Basics: 


Full Name: Houston Dynamo F.C.
Nicknames: Orange Crush, El Naranja (The Orange)
Founded: December 15, 2005
Majority Owner: Ted Segal
General Manager: Pat Onstad
Stadium – Shell Energy Stadium 


Year Built: 2012
Capacity: 22,039
Attendance: 279,240 (16,426 per match; 21st in MLS) 
Trophies: MLS Cup - 2006,2007 MLS Cup (Runners Up) - 2011, 2012; U.S. Open Cup - 2018, North American Super-Liga (Runners Up) - 2008

Kits: 









Coach: Ben Olson

MLS Position: 13th in Western Conference (25th Overall)

U.S. Open Cup Result: Lost to Sporting K.C. 2-1 in the round of 16

Playoff Result: Did not qualify.

CONCACAF Champions League Result: Did not qualify.

Additions: Artur, Franco Escobar, Andrew Tarbell, Charles Auguste, Ifunanyachi Achara, Frantz Pierrot, Ivan Franco. Amine Bassi, Brad Smith, Tate Schmitt, Djevencio van der Kust
Losses: Tim Parker, Adam Lundqvist, Fafa Picault, Memo Rodriguez, Zeca, Zarek Valentin, Marcelo Palomino, Darwin Quintero, Darwin Ceren, Matias Vera, Sam Junqua, Thiaguinho
End of Loan: Joe Corona, Mateo Bajamich, Ian Hoffman

Before We Get Started:

Two bombs have hit Dynamo Media coverage this winter. First and foremost, I want to say thank you to the guys over at Dynamo Theory.  It's a harsh choice for SB Nation to drop their MLS coverage, an injustice to you guys, and a travesty to your fans.  You guys were part of my post-game routine, and I can't imagine you guys not being part of my Dynamo fandom.  Hopefully, you all find a way to renew and adjust, I know you have a ton of fans pulling for you.  Secondly, MLS to Apple TV will not have Glenn Davis on the broadcast for Dynamo games.  I'm hoping that Glenn will still do radio coverage for ESPN 97.5.  If so, the radio broadcasts are streamed online, and you can sync up the sound with your tv.  There should be no voice other than Glenn's covering the Dynamo.  He is the voice for this city, this fanbase, and #ForeverOrange.

2022 Overview: 

What a weird mixture of a year this was.  Before the season, we had exciting news in the biggest transfer in organization history, we had retained several veterans from years past, and hired a manager who had never been in charge of a professional organization but was known for developing young players.  The plan seemed convoluted from the start and somewhat schizophrenic in nature. It played out exactly as you would expect and the Dynamo found themselves in the exact same position they had been in when they fired Tab Ramos the year before.  In a season that brought amazing (Sebas' midfield goal vs. Austin F.C.), some young bright spots (Coco Carrasquila, Thor, Brooklyn Raines), there were simply too many unproductive holdovers from the Dynamo teams of the past.  While there were signs that this organization was changing, change had not come swiftly enough.

In what seems to be a yearly tradition, the Dynamo started off the season giving the fanbase some hope.  Losing only 1 of their first 6 games (3 wins, 2 draws) the team was showing signs of change.  The defense was steady, and while the attack wasn't producing goals at a rate that scared anybody, the Dynamo were picking up points.  April hit, the rest of MLS figured out Paulo Nagamura's system, and the complete lack of creative attacking play (especially wide) dominated the rest of the season. While the Dynamo saw an improvement in terms of goals scored, (43-36) the defense managed to closely replicate that of the year before (56-54). Even with the addition of Hector Herrera, the midfield often bogged down as they had no wide threats to keep the defense honest.  There were newcomers that left fans hoping that better times as upon us. Sebastian Ferreira (13 goals, 3 assists, 2,300 minutes played) and Thor Ulfarsson (4 goals, 1 assist in his debut season) were bright spots in the attack.  Brief glimpses of Brooklyn Raines showed a youngster that could change our midfield and eventually be the guy our academy has been waiting for.  The biggest news came in March when Hector Herrera decided to leave Atletico Madrid for #LaNaranja.  The Mexican National and key player for a Champion's League side was the type of signing this fanbase had been clamoring about for years. The team never meshed with each other or with Paulo Nagamura's style of play, and after a very arduous summer, Paulo Nagamura was fired on Sept 4th. without completing his first year as a professional manager.  We (the fans) found ourselves in the exact same position as we have been in for several years: wondering where this club was headed and if they'd actually ever change.  Pat Onstadt and Asher Mendehlsohn went to work reshaping this club and this franchise in a flurry of moves over the winter, and while we all wait with optimistic pessimism, we should see some fruits of that labor this coming spring.
  

This Winter was a season of major changes on and off the field:

While last season brought about some massive and much-needed changes to the way business was done for #ForeverOrange, it didn't bring with it results on the field.  New owner, new GM, a huge name, the biggest transfer in the history of Houston Dynamo, the highest salary ever paid, and a massive jump up the ladder in Total Wages paid.  While the Dynamo fared 6 points better than in 2021, they landed in the exact same position as the year before.  

This offseason Pat basically gutted the roster.  The Dynamo offloaded basically every holdover from the 2020 campaign and the Matt Jordan era.  Of the guys traded, sold off, non-tendered, etc., The Dynamo slashed 14,901 minutes of playing time off the roster and every single fullback the team had outside of Griffen Dorsey.  Six of their top eleven in terms of minutes played (2,4,6,7,8 and 11) and most of their main contributors off the bench are now no longer members of Houston Dynamo F.C..  Vera, Lundkvist, Parker, Memo, Fafa, DQ, Zarek Valentin, Tyler Pasher, Zeca, Ceren, and Junqua, are all names that will no longer be on the backs of those sweet Bayou City kits.  Pat opened up a bunch of cap space by moving on from some high-paid, unproductive veterans and also landed a few fairly lucrative TAM/GAM deals by moving Adam Lundkvist (Austin F.C. - $500k), Tim Parker (St. Louis F.C. - $500k ) trading their first pick in the MLS Super Draft ($375k), Fafa (Nashville F.C. - $250k), and loaned out Matias Vera for an undisclosed amount.  All in all 16 players that stepped on the field at some point in the 2022 season are now gone.  While the roster changes were much needed, the players they brought in seem to be upgrades.  While there are still questions over formation and who will play LB during Brad Smith's absence, Pat Onstad seemed to have addressed the need to put younger players around Sebas who can both take pressure off of him AND give him service.  

Additionally, there were multiple organizational changes that we should be excited about.  SRC FTBL has its headquarters in downtown Houston and is led by the man who built Seattle's analytics department.  Scouting and Analytics have been an enormous hole in the Dynamo organization over the last decade.  In his interview with Glen Davis on Soccer Matters (1/24/2023), Asher Mendelsohn said their Scouting and Analytics department basically consisted of him, Pat, and Paulo last year.  They added new partners, in Shell Energy, Arca Continental Beverages, Bay Area Credit Union, and others.  They revamped the coaching staff, not just with Ben Olsen at head coach but by bringing Aurélien Collin, Tim Hanley and Adin Osmanbasic, and Branden Burke.  But mostly, for the first time in a long time the Front Office seems to have a plan to build a roster: (1) Put playmakers around Sebas to get him the ball. (2) Strengthen the midfield with two-way, box-to-box midfielders that can defend, make plays, and connect to the front line.  (3) Get younger.  Also, Segal gave the stadium a nice little facelift.  The new seats are a nice change from the "Turn your rear-end into Grilled Cheese" orange seats of before, now if we can just move all games to 2:00 in the afternoon so we can really take advantage of the Houston summer.  Also, hopefully, we actually fill them.  The Dynamo aren't standing firm in any part of their organization.  Literally, everything, from the front office to the stadium is being overturned.  It's only a matter of time before this becomes the first-class organization we've been waiting for.


2021/2022 Position Outlook:

Goalkeeper:



Steve Clark, Andrew Tarbell, Michael Nelson, Xavier Valdez

In one of his first moves, Pat Onstad brought in a veteran goalkeeper with playoff pedigree to help change the culture in the dressing room and solidify the position.  Plagued by erratic goalkeeping and distribution from Marco Meric, Onstad sought to bring a rock between the posts.  A goalkeeper that could lead the defense and provide a consistent and professional level of net minding.  While Clark's 2022 was most definitely a disappointing one, he was also obviously an upgrade at the position over to what we had before.  Clark ranked 9th in MLS amongst starters in Save% (72%), 5th in total saves (103) and  10th in minutes played (2,905).  While Clark was definitely an upgrade and played generally well, he often was 1 play away from pulling points in a game.  Part of that was him, and part of that was the defense in front of him.  Clark faced the 5th most Shots on Target and had the 8th highest XG-against out of anyone in the league.  The Dynamo defense allowed the second-most Shot Creating Actions in the league (888), and the second-most shots (493) and the average distance of shot (17m) was third worst in the league.  To put that in context, on an average day Clark faced 5 more dangerous plays than his counterparts in Austin, 4 more than in Dallas, and 7 more than his counterpart at LAFC.  Clark would have had to have been Super Human for the Dynamo to compete. 









While Clark was sometimes steady, he ranked in the bottom tier in the league in most goalkeeping categories.  Clark also seemed to fade down the stretch.  There were often times in the last two months of the season Clark simply didn't stop balls that he did at the beginning.  He seemed a step slow, a 1/2 second late, or failed to react to the ball at all.    This actually has me worried about Clark for two reasons: (1) At 36 years old, will he remain agile enough to be a ball stopper when needed? (2) The Dynamo lost a lot of depth on the back line, and didn't really provide an upgrade.  Dropping 1/2 of their back line from the last two years was needed, but they added no CB in front of him, a LB that's coming off a serious knee injury, and a RB that's talented but also undersized.  They did add valuable depth, signing Andrew Tarbell as the #2. “We talked about adding more quality and depth to our roster this offseason and Andrew’s signing aligns with that intention. Plus, his experience on three different MLS Playoff clubs will be invaluable as we restore a winning mentality at our club. We welcome Andrew and his family to the city of Houston.”  Michael Nelson and youngster Xavier Valdez complete the roster.  Valdez has a chance to be the #1 long-term, but will most likely spend this year with Dynamo 2.  

Central Defense:



 Teenage Hadebe, Daniel Steres, Ethan Bartlow, Micael dos Santos Silva

The biggest question for the Dynamo this year won't be in the productivity of the newly acquired attackers, it will be in the effectiveness of the back line.  Teenage Hadebe is a good MLS defender.  Teenage is sometimes spectacular and occasionally erratic, but he's a talented and athletic Center Back who (when he's on) will shut down opposing attacks quickly.  Hadebe is one of the most productive Centerbacks in the league, ranking in the top 1/2 of CB's in every category offensively, defensively and passing.  Even though he ranked low in Aerial Duels Won, his 65% conversion rate is in the top 1/3rd of the league.  Hadebe has a tendency to sometimes misread his partner, allowing balls through that he shouldn't, or missing a mark on a cross because he defers to a partner that isn't there.  He rarely gets beat 1v1.  He's really good with the ball at his feet, is a very accurate passer, and can hit the deep ball out of the back. 


The problem though is who will play next to him.  Steres is a fairly low-priced veteran who will bring stability to the position.  While Steres is an excellent passer, he's not a very active defender.  Steres isn't a great tackler is space, he doesn't really attack opposing ball handlers, he's not fast or quick and he doesn't win balls in the air.  At 31 years old, he is what he is, and is one of the positions the Dynamo actually got OLDER at.  While he is at the level of MLS starter, is he enough to bring this team out of the basement?  I feel like this is one position that was downgraded this offseason, but one they desperately need.  Bartlow came a long way last year.  He was solid for HD2 all year, and the Dyanmo actually performed well in his 15 appearances.  Going 6-2-7 (3-1-5 with him in the starting 11), Bartlow's performances were highlighted by his twice posting 9 clearances (2-1 win vs. LAFC, 0-0 draw vs Sporting K.C.) and his 4 block, 4 clearance performance in a 3-1 win vs. Inter Miami.  Bartlow has a chance to be a starting-level player in MLS, and moving on from Tim Parker should help him see more minutes in 2023.  Bartlow has to be more active on the back end, but he isn't afraid to go into challenges and is usually where he needs to be when he needs to be there.  While he isn't a Dynamic CB, he can be a good compliment to Hadebe and looks like another MLS Super Draft Pick that will pan out. If the Dynamo can add an obvious upgrade here at a reasonable price, you would assume they would have to take it.  Other than that look for Steres and Bartlow to split time opposite Hadebe and occasionally share the CB duties together.  The outlier is Micael, who played mostly for DynaDos last year.  He did make one appearance for the first team, in a 3-2 loss to CF Montreal.  The score was tied 2-2 when Micael came on the field at half-time for Memo Rodriguez, and he showed signs of being a capable first-team member.  Most notably, the ability to connect on passes at all levels.  Micael was 23-27 passing in the second half hitting 10-11 short, 11-13 from fifteen to twenty yards, and 2-3 on balls over 30 yards.  He's solid with the ball at his feet, big (6'3" 190 lbs) and athletic.  He's one to definitely keep an eye on moving forward, but may continue to get minutes with HD2 as the season goes on.

Full Backs:



Griffen Dorsey, Brad Smith, Franco Escobar, Djevencio van der Kust, Tate Schmitt

In an offseason of change, Pat Onstad moved on from one of the most steady presences in the Dynamo Lineup over the last 5 years.   Adam Lundkvist played 9,927 minutes and made 111 starts over the last 5 seasons, and while moving on from players of this generation was much needed, Lundkvist is one I actually am sad to see go.  Adam brought all he had every game, never complained or pointed fingers, and was generally a good human.  You'd love to have a guy like that in your locker room long-term, but both he and the club felt the need to move on and Pat got a decent chunk of cash for him.  It's unfortunate that he moved on to Austin F.C. for Dynamo fans, but was still a no-brainer of a move.  Zeca? Zarek Valentine? Same Junqua? All gone.  It was one of the many positions that got a much needed makeover, and basically got wiped clean for a fresh start.

Griffen Dorsey, the one holdover, quietly turned himself into a steady MLS back and presence in the starting 11.  Making 19 starts and playing over 1600 minutes played, Dorsey is a workhorse RB who plays up and down the touchline.  Dorsey is a decent passer, who was second behind only Darwin Quintero in Goal Creating actions/90.  Dorsey completed 19 passes into the opponents' penalty box, and while he needs to get better on the defensive side of the ball he made huge strides in terms of positioning and going into challenges.  Every single defensive ratio was vastly improved from 2021, including Ground Duels won, Tackle %, and tackles + interceptions/90.  His passing rate also climbed from 72%-78% over the year.  I would assume that the intention is to start the year with he and Franco Escobar at fullback entering the season, as Brad Smith recovers from ACL repair. Tate Schmitt who was brought in as a trialist during the preseason did enough to earn a contract with the Dynamo this year. The former Real Salt Lake player actually came through as a striker, but is now playing defender after making the switch there playing for Real Monarchs in the USL. The left-footer has decent size and speed, and is fairly versatile considering his lack of MLS minutes.  He did post 860 minutes in 14 appearances (10 starts) for RSL last year, and should be a decent depth piece for the Dynamo this year. Djevencio van der Kust comes from FC Utrecht as what has to be seen as a developmental project.  “We are excited to welcome Djevencio to Houston and look forward to his continued development after earning competitive minutes in one of the top leagues in the world,” Dynamo general manager Pat Onstad said in a release. “He is a promising young player that we believe can make an impact this season. He was very clear about why he wanted to join the club and we’re excited to welcome him."


Onstad brought in two solid veterans with winning pedigrees to fill out the squad in Franco Escobar and Brad Smith.  Escobar is a very underrated MLS back, and has been one of the more productive RB's in MLS over the last 4 years. He's very good going into challenges, scoops up a ton of loose balls (223 combined in his 2 years in Atlanta), “Franco is a winner in our league. Since coming to MLS in 2018, he has won every major domestic trophy available, including two MLS Cups, a Supporters’ Shield, Campeones Cup, and the US Open Cup,” Dynamo general manager Pat Onstad said in a press release.“He will strengthen our backline and provide valuable experience to our locker room. We are thrilled that Franco chose Houston in the next step in his career.”  Escobar works at a similar rate to Adam Lundkvist on the defensive end, is very good bringing the ball forward, and is a very accurate passer.

Central Midfield: 



 Coco Carrasquilla, Hector Herrera, Artur, Amine Bassi, Juan Castilla, Brooklyn Raines, Daniel Rios, Charles Auguste,
 
In a series of moves, Pat Onstad brought down the hatchet on an underperforming, often overpriced midfield that has been one of the Achilles heels on the team for half a decade.  What's here now are three very good veterans and a flurry of young talent off the bench.  Coco, HH, and Artur are an interesting trio in the midfield, as they don't have a true creator in the bunch.  The three fit a flexible 4-3-3, as long as there is creative play from the edges.  Artur is more of a traditional 6, a deep-lying defensive midfielder that can get the ball back in multiple ways and get it downfield.  Replacing Matias Vera, Artur is a different kind of player.  He's bigger, better with the ball at his feet, and can break lines with the dribble and the pass.  Vera was always a ball hound in the middle, and one of the highest accuracy passers in MLS year in and year out. But he did little to get the ball forward and really struggled against high-pressing teams.  While he completed a ton of passes, they were mostly sideways and backward.  Artur, winner of the 2020 MLS cup with the Columbus Crew, will help protect the backline and can play the ball up to the players in front of him.  He's a bigger, stronger version of Vera who can play progressively, and at the same age as Vera (27) is a great addition to the midfield.

The pairing of HH and Coco should mean we'll see a drastic shift in the way the Dynamo go forward.  There is no more Darwin Quintero, meaning there is no #10 to play the ball through.  Coco really came on last year, especially as a progressive midfielder.  There weren't many better at taking defenders on regularly the way Coco was last year.  His 53 successful dribbles were 16th best in MLS, and his 69.7% success rate was second behind only Thiago Almada (71.2%) of players that attempted at least 34 dribbles.  His 170 passes completed into the final 1/3rd was 12th best in MLS, and his 128 progressive passes ranked 28th.  Coco has problems making that final play, but improved in every attacking ratio (GCA/90, key passes, passing %, dribble rate) last year, and at the age of 23 you can expect him to continue to uptick.  Coco is a true box-to-box midfielder, and partnered with HH will demand a lot from the players in front of him.  

While the results didn't trend with Hector Herrera, he was statistically brilliant for the Dynamo last year.  Hector Herrera brought something the midfield was desperately missing: A guy who can burn you with any pass at any time.  Herrera is a deadly accurate passer, especially downfield to players on the run. (Like this beauty to Sebas vs. Montreal). Herrera, at 32, has lost a step and has trouble keeping up with pacier MLS attackers, but he's extremely smart and knows how to position himself well.  He was successful at 70% of the tackles he attempted last year, and he turned those into passes sprayed all over the place.  Herrera was extremely poised on the ball and seemed completely unbothered by his opposing mark most of the time.  He was an instant impact from the second he stepped on the field, but many times the person on the other end of his passes wasn't up to the task.  Was he worth the price Ted Segal paid?  If you look at the results: no.  Is he a cornerstone piece that the Dynamo can build off of? Hopefully.  He needs playmakers and players around him.  He's not going to win you games by himself, but can definitely win you games.  His success will depend on the wing players added this winter panning out, and the defenders behind him shutting down attacks.  Regardless of the results, he's one of the better central midfielders in MLS.  Statistically, there are few even on his level.

What's really telling about the future of this midfield and the direction that they are heading is that they dropped Darwin Quintero, Memo Rodriguez, Mattias Vera, and Darwin Ceren and only brought in Artur as a replacement.  This should speak volumes about what they think of their two most intriguing academy products: Brooklyn Raines and Juan Castilla.  Both of these guys are hyperactive, tenacious defenders who will get the ball back and get it forward quickly.  Raines is a blur who flies all over the field, gets the ball at his feet, and wants to take people on. While he's young and still has a lot to learn, you could tell from his few first-team appearances in the USOC that he's a player, and he's not scared of MLS-level defenders or attackers. When Castilla is on, he's a wrecking ball of a ball winner in the midfield.  If you watched DynaDos this year, Castilla always caught your attention from the way he went after the ball. There has been a lot of conversation lately about the plan for Castilla, who put on a tremendous show for Columbia's U20 team this past week.  As of now, these two are the ONLY options off the bench for Ben Olsen, and along with Charles Auguste make up the midfield bench for the Dynamo (as of today) in 2023.  In my opinion, this is an awesome mix of featured midfielders with the ability to get Castilla and Raines on the field in order to develop.  It shouldn't be surprising for both of them to get between 700-1000 MLS minutes and make a combined 10-15 starts.  I would think that as Training camp goes on the Dynamo would look at a couple of things: (1) Utilizing Bassi in DQ's role from a year ago (2) A veteran midfielder to add depth, just in case.....(3) which formation is the best use of this collective group.  This isn't a sexy midfield, but it should be a very effective one.

Forwards: 



Sebastian Ferreira, Thor Úlfarsson, Baird, Ivan Franco, Amine Bassi, Nelson Quiñones, Beto Avila, Ifunanyachi Achara

Sebastian Ferreira was worth every penny.  The biggest transfer fee in Dynmao history, DP slot, $1.2 million dollar salary, all of it was worth the show that he put on over the 2022 campaign.  We all know the midfield strike against Austin F.C., and the touch and control in the above goal vs. Montreal, but add to that his brace vs. San Jose (Match Day 6), his 1 goal - 2 assist evisceration of LA Galaxy (Match Day 12), the poise and calm in front of net in both goals of a brace against Nashville, all while never getting the service he needed to be a truly dominant force in this league.  Ferreira only managed 65 shots for the year (26th in the league). Ferreira can be a 20-goal scorer in MLS.  There should be no doubt about that, the only thing that will stop him from doing that is the guys he plays with.  And the guys that he's been surrounded by are a big question for next year.  Iván Franco comes to Houston from Libertad in Paraguay.  The former teammate of Sebastian Ferreira, Franco once showed enormous promise scoring 11 goals and notching 5 assists in 40 total starts at the age of 18.  In the last three seasons, between various nagging injuries and a knee sprain, he saw a sharp drop in minutes played.  He does rack up assists at a high rate, notching 5 in 900 minutes played last year.  He plays nice through balls, he strikes the ball well, he can put it in the back of the net, but is opportunistic, and he plays mostly left wing (which the Dynamo are in desperate need of). What might be the most vital is that he's played with Sebastian Ferreira before, serving 2 seasons (2020, 2021) at Libertad with the Dynamo feature attacker.  The opposite wing will be occupied by either Corey Baird, Amine Bassi, or Nelson Quiñones.  Baird came on strong at the end of last year, posting 2 goals and 4 assists over his last 8 appearances (all starts).  He's a high-energy worker and might have found his niche playing on Ferreira's right side.  Newcomer Bassi is a solid technical player who has played the bulk of his career in the French 2nd Division.  He hasn't factored much for Metz the last two years and hasn't registered a goal or assist since 2020 when he played for Barnsley in the Championship.  The 24-year-old has played the bulk of his minutes as an attacking midfielder (FC Nancy-Lorraine) and has registered 28 goals and 23 assists in 145 appearances.  The honest report here is none of us should know what to expect from Bassi.  There's competition at RW, and he's never been an overly productive player.  He could be a perfect fit, or he could be another disappointing International Slot player.  The most intriguing may be the youngster Quiñones.  The 20-year-old is a burner, plays direct, has the chance to be a Dynamic winger in this league.  While he has a long way to go to, he could be the RW compliment this team needs. We could also see Thor at RW, or in a 2 strikers system (4-4-2) like Olsen used early in his DC United days.  Thor will definitely be in the mix in some way, after scoring 4 goals and 1 assist in his debut season.

Head Coach:


When Ben Olsen was hired as Coach, I read a lot of posts on Twitter, Reddit, and Big Soccer with a common theme: "Same old Dynamo." The pragmatic in me completely disagrees with this take.  Ben Olsen is not a guy with no professional head coaching experience known mostly for his ability to take youth teamers to the first team.  Olsen has 378 games under his belt as manager of DC United, and has the 9th most wins of any Coach in MLS history. He's had the best record in the Western Conference twice, and also had the worst record in the conference twice.  Is he a sexy hire?  Absolutely not.  What he IS is more qualified than anyone we've seen on the touchline in Houston in a very long time.  "Ben is an experienced MLS head coach with a strong track record of building playoff teams and developing young players,” Pat Onstad said in the press release “Ben is the right leader for our club as we begin making significant changes to field a more proactive, younger and competitive team in the coming years. We are excited to welcome Ben and his family to the city of Houston and we are already hard at work on the 2023 season.”

The only thing Dynamo fans want to know is "will he make the playoffs?" With a shaky backline, an aging goalkeeper, and many new attackers that need to adjust to the style of play in MLS, the answer is unlikely.  "Can the Dynamo make the playoffs with Olsen?" Absolutely.  He's proven he can do it, when the talent is there.  "Can he win the Cup?" That has yet to be seen.

Olsen was known in the early days of his D.C. United tenure for a 4-4-2, and a hybrid 4-2-3-1.  Recently he had bounced between a fluid 4-3-3 and a 3-4-3.  His teams are normally solid defensively, and have always had the ability to strike quickly when needed.  Mostly, his teams have had a quality striker paired with a solid midfield.  While Pat said that Paulo Nagamura was also the right hire, and I'm not sure Ben Olsen is THE answer, I do believe he's an obvious upgrade tactically and with his experience over Paulo, Tab, and Wilmer Cabrera.  

Synopsis: 

Pat Onstad routinely talks about a  "Proactive" approach to soccer.  After a year of watching it, I still have no idea what he means by it.  What can be absolutely sure is that he, Asher Mendehlsohn, and Ted Segal are 100% committed to making this not only a better team, but a better organization.  The new players will need time to gel, and adjust to the physicality of MLS.  As we saw with Sebastian Ferreira last year (who didn't score his first five games), the pace, speed, and physicality of MLS can take time to get used to, especially when playing in lower-tier leagues like Paraguay and 2. Ligue.  Finding the space and timing on the wings to be on the other end of a HH pass will take time on the training pitch.  Connecting the back line and knowing "who" and "when" Hadebe and Steres are marking will take time for the additions at FB and Artur.  This (on paper) should be a better team, but are they playoff capable is the question?

The Dynamo will have to answer the bell early as the first half of their schedule is extremely challenging. Cincinnati, New England, Austin, NYFC, San Jose, LA Galaxy, Seattle, NYRB and others, there's not a night off, especially with the first two on the road.  This team has lost a lot of goal scoring and playmaking in DQ and Fafa, they lost a key CB in Tim Parker who the neither replaced nor upgraded.  There are still lots of questions as to who will play, how they will play, and whether some of the new players can play at this level.  There are questions around whether Ben Olsen is the guy who won the Western Conference in the regular season, the coach who got bounced in the first round of the playoffs, or the guy who won the wooden spoon.  There are soo many questions that can't be answered until we actually see this team on the field, the only thing we know is that it will be very different from the one we saw last year.

Prediction:

With the league expanding to 18 playoff teams this year, there is a decent chance the Dynamo sneak into the playoffs.  Olsen will have them more organized, despite the uncertainty around the back line they will concede under 50 goals for the first time since 2017.  Sebastian Ferreira will be one of the most productive strikers in MLS, and the Dynamo will finish 9th in the Western Conference.  They will make a run to the round of 16 in the U.S. Open Cup, and will benefit from the additional playoff slots.  If they do get in, an early exit will be anticipated.

Thanks again for reading, 
Remember to always #HoldItDown and stay #ForeverOrange

Brian