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?
Friday, June 2, 2023
Roller Coaster Ride: Wins against Minnesota and Austin, disaster vs. Vancouver.
Wednesday, May 24, 2023
GOD MODE ACHIEVED: Houston Dynamo 4:0 Minnesota United
What a game! On short rest, playing a team they hadn't beaten in their last 8 matchups (going back to 2020), the Houston Dynamo exploded in an offensive display we haven't seen in quite some time. Led by Corey Baird's epic performance (3 goals + 1 assist), the Dynamo completely dismantled the Minnesota backline in a multitude of ways in order to advance to the quarter-finals of the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup. For once, we were on the other side of the red card, and benefitted from another penalty. Let's take a look at some interesting facts from last night's game.
Corey Baird:
- Bettered his goal total for his entire tenure in Houston during league play. (2 in 2,607 minutes played)
- Equaled his goal total for his entire Houston Dynamo tenure (3 in 2,834 minutes played).
- Had twice as many shots on target (4) as he's had in 900 MLS minutes played this year (2).
- Had a pen, a right-footed chipper, and a left-footed chipper on his three goals. Of Bairds 24 Career Goals, 18 of them have come off his right foot, 4 left footed, and 2 off his head. It was his first left-footed goal since 2021 (with LAFC). He hasn't had a headed goal since his rookie year.
- Produced the first Houston Dynamo Hat Trick since Cubo Torres on April 2nd, 2017.
- Has yet to concede a goal during regulation on the season. The only goal he's given up on the year was the one game he played for DynaDos: The first Pen attempt in the overtime shoot-out, he saved the next two to secure the win.
- Talen Maples added to the list of young Dynamo players making their debut in the USOC. Ben Olsen has done a good job weaving these guys in this year. Raines, Murana, and Micael, have all filled in nicely and gotten valuable experience in the opening rounds. Add to that Nelson Quinones getting a full 83 minutes, and Erik Sviatchenko making his Dynamo Debut and it was a very successful day for #ForeverOrange as a whole.
- On top of Corey Baird's performance, Ibrahim Aliyu opened his Dynamo account. Aliyu made two perfectly timed runs to get in behind The Loons' back line, and the through balls were perfectly timed and weighted. The first, on his goal:
Aliyu with his 𝐅𝐈𝐑𝐒𝐓 𝐆𝐎𝐀𝐋 𝐈𝐍 𝐎𝐑𝐀𝐍𝐆𝐄!🔥#HoldItDown pic.twitter.com/FKCjOoPpVa
— Houston Dynamo FC (@HoustonDynamo) May 24, 2023
- The second was on this assist:
Corey Baird with his 3rd of the night!🔥🎯#HoldItDown pic.twitter.com/auC1Z580GK
— Houston Dynamo FC (@HoustonDynamo) May 24, 2023
- Aliyu had a tremendous night. In 28 minutes he managed 14 touches, was 9/10 on passing, had a goal and an assist, and his runs completely opened up the game.
- Amine Bassi was also stellar evening. Playing more centrally than usual over his 73 minutes on the pitch, Bassi was 48/50 (96%) on passing and had a whopping 5 key passes. Had a bunch of nice weighted passes behind the defense to Nelson, Baird, and Aliyu. It was his best game from a shot creation standpoint to date.
- The Dynamo have 8 clean sheets in 15 games across all competitions. They've already bettered the number of clean sheets from last year (7) and have the same number as 2021 (5) & 2020 (3) combined.
Dancin’ into the quarterfinals🤘#HoldItDown #USOC2023 pic.twitter.com/w7xBOe2nOD
— Houston Dynamo FC (@HoustonDynamo) May 24, 2023
Sunday, May 21, 2023
This team is confusing: Houston 1:1 FC Dallas + A short season recap.
What are we even watching?
12 MLS games, 2 USOC wins, and a plethora of sheets soo clean they'd make both a mom and a drill sergeant happy. While there are still many things up in the air with first-year coach Ben Olsen and this rendition of the Houston Dynamo, what is certain is that this team is different. Offseason additions plus some tactical changes have the Houston Dynamo as one of the best defensive teams in the league, and better defensively organized than we've seen in quite some time. But does different mean better, or more importantly, Playoff Capable. How is this team soo good defensively, and yet so terrible in the attack? After nearly a decade of misery for the Dynamo Die-hards, there are some positive trends, some concerning trends, and some disastrous trends happening this year that we'll look into. So let's sit back, put on our bibs, and dig in as we look at FC Dallas, and some comparisons to the past three years. Note: This is a fairly long post as a heads up.
Last Night was a miserable joy:
The second half turned quickly.
Franco Escobar denies the FC Dallas goal. #HoldItDown
— Major League Soccer (@MLS) May 21, 2023
Watch the finish now on #MLSSeasonPass on @AppleTV: https://t.co/RhzeuHDQKC pic.twitter.com/42pGKt6McH
But this scenario is all too familiar for Dynamo fans. Let's take a brief look at this year's team vs. teams of the previous two years. How are we different? How are we similar? Will we be able to land in a playoff position for the first time since 2017?
3-Year Record:
It's somewhat mindblowing that for three straight years, we've landed with the exact same number of points over the first 12 games. While this version of the team is the best defensively that we've seen in a while, the offensive production has yet to be there in order to push the team forward. While there have been pleasant surprises and tremendously steady performances on the backline (Bartlow, Hadebe, Micael, Steres, Escobar, Tate Schmitt) and Artur has been the best pickup of the offseason, the front line has been overwhelmingly disappointing.
What's needed?
Ranking the offseason additions:
- Artur - A - Artur has been a rock in the midfield all season for the Dynamo. His defensive work rate combined with occasionally flashing some skill with the ball at his feet has been a huge reason why the Dynamo have improved their defense and possession game this year.
- Amine Bassi - B - While Bassi leads the team in goals (5), his 1 goal and 0 assists from open play in 668 minutes has to be better, especially when you consider that he has more touches (461) than any other attacker on the team. Bassi does have 15 key passes, which is tied for second on the team and has him top 50 in the league, but the results just arent there from his work as of now.
- Ivan Franco - C- - Ivan is a high-work-rate, high-energy defensive forward. His pressing has been key to the Dynamo defensive record this year, as he's pressing backlines and causing deep passes under pressure and making teams uncomfortable. The downside for Ivan, however, is in attack. Ivan has 36 touches inside the box, more than any other Dynamo player (Coco is second with 27). 0 Goals, 0 Assists, 13 shots, 7 on target, 7 key passes. Ivan has some tremendous flashes (like the overhead shot in Week 2), but also has a lot of runs that end up with him taking on 4 defenders, falling down, and losing the ball. Franco works really hard, but the Dynamo are overfilled with hard-working, low-producing forwards right now. He needs to unlock some of that magic into actual results.
- Franco Escobar - B- - Another hard-working defender that has spent a lot of time playing out of his natural position. Escobar is a key member to the defense, and one of the few wide players the Dynamo have. While he does get the ball wide, he's mostly not a threat to shoot or connect on a cross from there. Solid veteran pickup this offseason.
- Luis Caicedo - B - Luis has been exactly what he was brought in to be, a solid veteran replacement for HH and Coco. He's been steady, solid, but unspectacular. Caicedo was a really good veteran pickup late in the offseason.
- Brad Smith - D- - Not all Brad's fault as he recovers from knee surgery, but the veteran LB with pedigree should have been the reason it was ok to let Adam Lundqvist go to an in state rival. Brad hasn't played much, and when he has he's been extremely disappointing. He's nowhere near as fast running up and down the touchline as he used to be, and unable to go by anyone he can't find space to get crosses off either. While he's not a defensive liability, he hasn't been particularly good in defense either. Very disappointing pickup so far.
- Tate Schmitt - B - Tate was the width to the Dynamo attack until a shoulder-to-shoulder challenge ended his season. A very pleasant surprise picked up on a free, was a left-footed left back. While he struggled in finding his marks at times, and wasn't the greatest 1v1 defender, Tate looked good going forward.
- Chase Gasper - D- - Gasper has been extremely frustrating on the field. Picked up a red in the USOC for getting beat, and has been beaten consistently in defense. Offers almost nothing going forward. In need of a left-footed LB, Gasper wasn't the one.
- Erik Sviatchenko - INC - Sviatchenko was a late addition and has yet to make an appearance in #ForeverOrange.
- Andrew Tarbell - B - Tarbell gets a B because of his play in the USOC. Did his duty and picked up two wins and two clean sheets along the way.
- Djevencio van der Kust - D- - The grade is not necessarily his fault, but the team desperately needs a LB and he's yet to make a first-team appearance. He's young (22) and is on loan with a very reasonable buy option, could still pan out with time, but the Dynamo needed to hit on this one badly.
Next Up:
Remember to always #HoldItDown and stay #ForeverOrange
Sunday, May 14, 2023
I...can't.....even......Houston Dynamo 0:1 Seattle Sounders
The Refereeing:
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.
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):
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:
Ben Olsen is tired of getting asked why @HoustonDynamo DP striker Sebastian Ferreira is not getting meaningful minutes. #HoldItDown
— Victor Araiza (@victoraraiza) April 16, 2023
📹 @MLS @NewYorkRedBulls pic.twitter.com/XIyFxoUtE4
Sunday, April 9, 2023
Fortress of Solitude: Dynamo 3:0 LA Galaxy
Can we all just take a second and enjoy being 3-0 at home? Not just 3-0, but a dominating 3-0 at home. The Houston Dynamo are one of two Western Conference teams who have won every game at home, and one of two teams in the entire league who have yet to concede a goal in their own stadium. It's not always pretty, and it's not always the most fun to watch, but if you can't enjoy winning our first 3 at home against the teams we've won them against......I've got nothing for you. Although it's early and it's been a small sample size, Benny Ball is currently working (at home). The road is an entirely different story, but last night wasn't a road game. Let's sit back, soak this one in, and enjoy a 3-0 win at home.
The first 45 minutes.
Defensively, Arur was dropping down ontop of Jovelic, and with both Bassi and Franco dropping back to help gum up the wings, the Galaxy were overcommitting both Raheem Edwards and Caligeri forward trying to break down the Dynamo defense, which in turn was leaving gaping holes behind him for Baird to run into. As Baird's run caught the Galaxy defense's attention, the midfield opened up quickly as the back line of the Galaxy defense began to stretch. The Galaxy did find their way through a few times in the first 20 minutes of the game.
- Jovelic's first shot (6th minute) was blocked by Hadebe.
- Caligeri cut inside to hit a left footer from 25 yards out (14:26) that was also blocked by Hadebe.
- Memo found Jovelic in the box, which was broken up by a streaking Clark. The ball landed back in Memo's lap (Penalty overturned by VAR).
The strike was absolutely inch-perfect and was a no-doubt goal as Ivan Franco was also wide open and covering the back post. It was not only completely misplayed by the Galaxy goalkeeper, but by their defense as well. Hector had been putting in very dangerous corners the entire half, and decided just to go ahead and put this one away himself. The strike seemed to wake the Galaxy up. Memo was being super aggressive hear the middle of the pitch. Puig and Delgado were penetrating the Dynamo back line and getting into the box. The half ended when Gastón Brugman blasted a free kick into the Dynamo wall after Memo had won a free kick in a battle with Artur. The first half was fairly even, and the Dynamo were somewhat fortunate to be up 1-0, but it was a fairly uneventful half compared to what was coming in the second.
The Galaxy came out aggressive.
Greg Vanney made several changes to both personnel and formation that really caused the Dynamo problems in the early goings of the second half. Not only bringing on Preston Judd for Memo, but also bringing in Center Back Chris Mavinga for Tyler Boyd and switching from a 4-1-4-1 to a 3-5-2 formation. The attention that both Judd and Jovelic were getting was opening up a lot of space behind them for Puig, Brugman, and Delgado. Puig had two very dangerous shots in the opening minutes, and Judd found a way in behind Hadebe to put a really good shot on Steve Clark (The Hadebe accidental back pass play). When Chichirito came on (54:43) and LA. Galaxy dominating the run of play, all of the Dynamo Faithful had to be a little nervous. But it's then that things actually began to turn in the Dynamo favor. Ivan Franco got in behind and put a nice left-footed attempt on goal, the DYnamo defense adjusted and the midfield began to dominate meaningful possession. When Coco got fouled in the box at the 65-minute mark, it began one of the zaniest 30 minutes of soccer I believe I've ever witnessed.
- The Galaxy picked up 3 yellows in just under 5 minutes. The first was for Raheem Edwards for losing his temper for being subbed off. The second (Martín Cáceres) was one of the most bone-headed plays I've ever seen by a guy on a yellow and put the Galaxy a man down. The third (Gastón Brugman) was for arguing the penalty and the card that his teammate got.
- Bassi scores his 4th PK in 4 games, setting a MLS record.
4 - @HoustonDynamo's Amine Bassi is the first player in MLS history to score a penalty in four consecutive matches. Poise. pic.twitter.com/x2FJwMtSmS
— OptaJack⚽️ (@OptaJack) April 9, 2023
- The Galaxy drop off and leave the Dynamo soo much space they can do virtually whatever they want with the ball. This wasn't a team digging in their heels down a man, this was a team that was done. While the Dynamo were dominated in Possession (37%) in the first half, they turned the tables in the second.
- Bassi scores the second run-of-play goal for the Dynamo all year. After a corner was lost, great pressure from HH, Thor, and Baird, HH disposes Chichirito and the Galaxy literally don't guard Baird at all. Baird finds a wide open Bassi just at the edge of the box. Bassi has time to take a good touch, test the wind, eat a Trill Burger, drink a shake, and blast it in the back of the net.
- Judd has a tremendous left-footed shot in the box, Bartlow heads it away.
- Herrera gets his second yellow and picks up a red coming late across the back of Chichirito's legs.
- Raines bosses Douglas Costa, Costa gets mad about it and slams Rains down on the ground for no real reason. If you want to know how this team is changing, watch Dorsey, Teenage, and Steres go after Costa and stick up for the teenager Raines.
- The ref, recognizing that tempers are flaring AND that this game had turned into a flaming pile of garbage, calls the game.
Tid Bits.
Ethan Bartlow: was really good. Bartlow got in the way of 4 shots, had a big break up of a pass to Preston Judd early in the second half, and was a huge reason why Jovelic and Chichirito couldn't get a clean look at the goal. Teenage had one of his better games this year as well, but Bartlow was tremendous last night.
HH doing HH things: Forget the goal for just a second, he was far and away the best midfielder in the game. He was just in total control the entire 90 and affected every phase of the game. He's completely legitimized our set pieces, he's solid in defense, and he picks other teams apart with his passing. The second yellow was a really poor decision, and the game against RBNY will be almost really tough without him.
Corey Baird: His pressure caused LAG some real problems at time. He was constantly marking away one of the CB's and causing LAG to play down their left side. Was responsible for setting up 2 of the goals, and despite only having 1 shot and several really bad passes into the final third he really impacted this game on multiple levels.
Franco Escobar: One of the forgotten offseason signings. Escobar had some huge plays last night including the play that stopped Memo in the box. It was a perfectly timed and executed tackle that got the Dynamo the ball back and shut down a Galaxy attack.
Bringing the Nasty: I thought Dorsey, Baird, and Thor really ramped it up over the last 15 minutes of the game. The Dynamo also committed 10 fouls and picked up 5 yellows defending their clean sheet.
Next Up:
Final, Final Thoughts:
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.
- 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.