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 

Monday, August 8, 2022

Stick a fork in this team: They're done.

 

This loss was about mental lapses and execution.

This team doesn't know how to win.  In what has become a common theme with this group of players over the last two years, there were multiple opportunities to put this game away, and on both sides of the ball, the team failed to execute.  From one of the team's biggest stars to their role players failing to fulfill their role, this loss is an epitome of what is wrong with this team: the roster.  While some bad luck definitely aided to this loss, the poor execution and mental lapses that happened throughout the second half cost the Houston Dynamo 3 points and, in essence, ended their season.  The mental lapses happened in all phases of the game and reared their ugly head most at the worst possible time. 

This was (on paper) a matchup of two fairly evenly matched teams, both of whom are struggling to find wins.  Vancouver, down 7 men to start the game and playing without Lucas Cavellini in the starting 11, was the most dangerous team from the early goings. Julian Gressel was a constant threat on from the wing, getting the ball deep in the attacking third and firing in dangerous crosses. After the first goal, Whitecaps coach Vanni Sartini changed up the defense, pressing the Dynamo back 4 when they were in possession.  While the Dynamo managed to dominate possession in the first half (63%), they did very little with it.  Managing only two shots on target, (both by Fafa Picault), the Dynamo were doing very little dangerously in the final third.  There were opportunities, Thor twice had the ball deep in the attacking third 1v1 with Tristan Blackmon, twice he was unable to do anything with it, and twice we came away with nothing. 

The Dynamo were in trouble despite the 1:0 scoreline.

The second half was a much different story.  Vancouver had us pinned back deep from the second-half kick.  Pressing our backline and man-marking our midfield, Vancouver was stifling any opportunities going forward.  The deep passes that were hitting in the first half weren't there in the second half, and for the first 5 minutes, the Dynamo managed only one touch on the opposition's half of the field. Vancouver dominated the run of play in the second half, creating most of the scoring opportunities (9 shots - 3) and big chances created (5-2).

At the 50th minute mark, the Dynamo got their first real chance.  It was an opportunity that should have been the game clincher, but instead, we got this:

These are plays that separate winning and losing.  These are the plays that separate playoff contenders from wooden spoons.  With a chance to go up 2-0 on the road, El Cientifico del Gol chooses a flying scissor kick a ball for no reason, whiffs at the chance, and cost his teammates a goal.  This isn't a rookie Thor we are talking about, it's a 34-year-old veteran in his 17th year as a professional.  These types of plays are inexcusable.  These types of plays HAVE to be made.  On top of that, this was Darwin's only shot opportunity of the entire game.  He has to capitalize.  

Thor also had a big chance (59:24) that just failed to go in.  While credit needs to go to Cody Copper for getting a touch on it, and credit to Thor for making a nice move in the box and putting a good shot on target, look at Fafa Picaut in the final frame.


This game should have been 2-0 at this point.  Fafa has to at least make a play on this ball. If you watch the body language by the guys on the field after this play, Fafa has his head down, Sebas turns around and is walking back, the only guy with any pep on screen is Thor.  The midfield (Hector Herrera especially) is jogging back.  And while the next possession turned into a cross that Tim Parker cleared, you could see frustration begin to take over this team.

This chance (note the time) turns into nothing:

The Downfall:

While I've seen criticism of Nagamura for his late-game substitutions in this game, I actually don't get it.  Up 1-0 in the 72nd minute, Paulo began to get all of his best defenders in squad into the game.  It was a conservative and smart tactic on the road.  
  • 72nd minute: Griffen Dorsey and Coco -> Sebas and DQ
  • 83rd minute: Ethan Bartlow and Zeca -> Thor and Zarek Valentine
Paulo parked the bus, sat deep, and packed it in in a 5-4-1 with his fastest and best defensive forward (Fafa) setting the high line. 
The lineup (Dorsey, Parker, Steres, Bartlow, Junqua on the back line, Zeca, Ceren, HH, Coco in the midfield) should have been able to lock down this game.  But they didn't.  While the first goal was a bit unfortunate, the second goal was a combination of mistakes and turned 3 points into 0. The first goal, given to Simon Becher an MLS veteran of 9 total minutes...(yes, you're reading that right), tapped one home in the 88th minute to make it 1-1. 

While I say it was a bit unfortunate, it was also helped by a momentary lapse in concentration by Zeca, who lost his man (Ali Ahmed) and gave him a free run to the middle.  Tim Parkers deflection of Ahmed's pass wound up right at the foot of Becher, who managed to tap it home for the equalizer.  

Instead of grinding this game out for a draw, the Dynamo chased a second goal, opened themselves up, and gave up the winning goal less than 4 minutes later.   Lucas Cavellini's right-footed blast sealed the game.  Clark should have stopped it, didn't, and the Dynamo are no 3 points poorer because of a collective effort.


Despite the math, this team is done.

While playing the kids shouldn't be the goal at this point, moving on from guys that shouldn't be back should be.  There are a lot of players that are playing big roles that have yet to help us get over the line, and they need to stop seeing the field.   We need to figure out if guys like Bartlow can carry a week-in, week-out workload, so we can move on from more expensive options on the team (Steres, Parker).  We need to see if Beto Avila can help fill a role as part of the rotation next year.  It's time to give these guys extended looks.  And while I'm not a proponent of bringing the Dynamo Dos guys in, I'm not necessarily against it either.  Going to watch games at Aviva, and looking beyond the scoreline, I'm not sure how many of those guys help change results this year or next.  Other than Brooklyn Raines and possibly Xavier Valdez, I'm not sure any of those guys have a positive impact on the squad.  They're good, and much credit to them for what they've done this year, but I'm not throwing them in there just out of spite to guys that have been here.  They need to earn it.

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

Sunday, July 31, 2022

Dear Pat Onstad: Please bring us the change we deserve (Part II)


This is not a repost, it's a revival.  I wrote this originally on Jan. 2nd, and I'm re-aasking Pat to do the same thing I asked before the season even started.  There were some changes made to the roster, but they aren't good enough.  There are some things that are still the same, and some things that still need to change.  We are in a transfer window, and some small changes could occur, but it seems like The Dynamo as a whole are content with where we are.  I'm going to leave parts of this original post intact because it still rings true.  Now (8 months after the original posting), I'm going to expand on this concept.

On August 30th, 2021 new owner Ted Segal made the decision to move his new shiny toy on a new path with the firing of long-time GM Matt Jordan.  On November 1st, 2021, Pat Onstad was named the new Houston GM.  The message boards and Twitterverse since then have been been a mixed bag of hope, excitement, skepticism, and vitriol.  Both Segal and Onstad have brought a ton of excitement, hopefulness, and interest in the club, but the one thing we were all hoping they'd bring has been lacking: change.  Let's go back and look at the timeline on Pat, what was said, what's been done, and where we are currently at.

What Segal said:

“I don’t want to give away all of the elements of our search,” Segal said. “What I will say is that we certainly will be looking at candidates with MLS experience. MLS experience, given the unique rules of MLS and the unique style of play, certainly is an important thing and a factor we’re going to consider.” 
Segal seemed open to changing the front office structure of the club, stating: “It (creating both a GM and a Technical Director role) is certainly going to be a consideration. We’re making our evaluations right now. We’re in the early days of our search. We’re going to see what kind of candidates we’re able to field, and who expresses interest to be here. I do think it’s an appealing location and an appealing opportunity, both with respect to the quality city and the successful history of Houston. And hopefully some folks who are encouraged by new ownership.” 

I highlighted the second phrase because I think it was part of why Pat got the job.  Pat definitely wanted it, past players and even Glenn Davis seemed to be in favor of Pat, and even the fan base jumped on board.   Pat seemed to be a perfect fit: a Dynamo legend who won plenty of hardware on the pitch, had success as both an assistant coach, and helped oversee a quick turnaround and transition as the Technical Director of the Columbus Crew.  

What does Segal want his club to be?

While Segal has never come out and said it, he's come out and said it.
  "I'm not going to get into the specifics of our partnership agreement. What I will say is I'm the ultimate deciding authority and I will further add, the league wants to have one deciding authority and so you're talking to him." (The Striker)
  • "The picture in my mind was 22,000 seats filled with screaming fans, cheering on champions for both the Dynamo and the Dash, so that's what I picture and that's what I hope can happen for us and in the relatively near future." (The Striker)
  • "I think you can take pieces or best practices from from a variety of clubs across the league. I think the community enthusiasm in a place like Atlanta, when they can sell out a building as large as it is in a relatively new soccer city, is very impressive. I think if you read across the league, I think there's a lot of praise for the player development that's occurred in Philadelphia. I think if you look towards Portland, you have community events rallied both for the Timbers and the Thorns – which is great for somebody in my position who's now the new owner of the Dynamo and the Dash. You look at what Sporting KC has done in their evolution over time, both in terms of creating that fan enthusiasm, creating winning sides and how they develop players. So there's a lot of examples across the league and best practices where you can take pieces from from all those and hopefully synthesize into what we're trying to achieve." (The Striker)
  • “In addition (to shaving a proven track record and knowing MLS), success is a proven track record of developing the youth system, both from a perspective of channeling those players into the first team and potentially cultivating players that can perform for you or that you can sell on as well. So those are a few metrics." (MLS.com)
  • "Of course, we need people who have a deep-rooted passion for the game," Segal commented on future hires. "What I will say is it would be very nice to add additional Houstonians to our organization and in particular, what I'd like to highlight, and you, Glenn, as somebody who has been involved with the sport in this city since 1984, I'd like to welcome back a lot more of our players from the glory days." (MLS.com)
  • "I think, again, if we go back to your prior question, if we develop the right talent and we succeed on the field, we're going to have full stands and a talent development sporting element of our club that is the envy of the league." (The Striker).
  • “What we have in the Dynamo is a sleeping giant,” Segal said. “A club that has experienced success in the past. And with the adequate resources, which is what I’m here to do … we can reawaken that sleeping giant.” (The Houston Chronicle)
First and foremost, Segal says he wants to win.  Segal has talked all about fan involvement, developing youth, and increasing spending.  In almost every interview he's talked about how success on the pitch will lead to 22,000 screaming fans inside PNC (still seems weird).  He wants the club to be full of past greats, connecting us to our glory days. He wants us to have a passionate fanbase and community connection to Atlanta and Portland, and develop players and win like Sportin K.C.  All of those things sound amazing on paper, but to awaken this Sleeping Giant, and overcome a cynical fanbase, is a lot more work than I think anyone is willing to admit.

I feel that Segal has put his money where his mouth is.  He's ponied up the biggest transfers in the history of this franchise.  Hector Herrera, Sebastian Ferreira, and even Coco Carrasquilla weren't cheap.  While we can argue over whether they were the RIGHT moves is a different story, and doesn't fall on Segal's lap.  There have been changes all around P.N.C. Stadium as well.  Not just the new mesh seats, but there have been other subtle changes that have made the games a fun place to be.  The pre-game scene around P.N.C. is fun, the concerts and vendors, and even Ted showing up to tailgate with the SG's is great.  I know, I know, to all the disgruntled fans who don't care about this:  I'll get to the other part.  Ted has lived up to his word, now he needs start holding others accountable to theirs. 

Pat Onstad states the obvious:

On Glenn Davis' "Soccer Matters" (July 26th) Pat said the same thing several times: 
  • "Well, we're not where we want to be.....that's for sure" (opening quote)
  • "The thing is.....I would look in the mirror.....and first and foremost, we're to blame. We are what we are."
  • "We're not a playoff team at this point in time."
  • "Our record, I think, speaks volumes about where we are as a club and we've got a lot of work to do."
Thanks Pat, I appreciate it.  How about some signs of life over there in the front office.  We solve this by loaning in an 18-year-old Columbian who...according to you.....is not ready to help our team right now?  Thanks man.  Good talk!  Pat, you have a small, but very loyal fanbase that has it's patience wearing thin.  We have a roster full of USL players, and we are in a transfer window.  While we are in no way a playoff team, we are only 6 points off and actually could compete for the final spot with some help.  I'm not asking you to go full bore Jimmy Johnson with the 1989 Cowboys, but you've got to do something.  We could, with the contracts expiring, have a nice little offseason.  We can, with some extremely smart and gutsy moves, have a transformative one.  It's time for this team to be gutsy.

The process:


When I originally wrote this, it was about the process to hire Pat Onstad.  This time it will be about the process to turn this lackluster franchise into a winner.

Anybody who thought we were going to be a playoff team this year was setting themselves up for disappointment.  This year, despite bringing in some big-money players, was never about making the playoffs.  If it was, we wouldn't have hired Paulo Nagamura.  We would have gone and gotten a more seasoned coach that could right the ship.  Paulo wasn't a win-now hire.  Neither (by the way) was the guy before him.  There's a reason for it, and like it or not, if we fired Paulo tomorrow we would be stuck with a different version of Tab Ramos and Paulo Nagamura.  That's what they want here.  A guy that can build a system and develop a roster.  

That being said, Pat has done some things to help this roster, but he needs to do more and he needs to do so quickly.  There should be 5 players safe on this roster: Sebas, Coco, Thor, Hector Herrera, and Teenage. Even with those 4, if a good offer comes up, take it.  Literally every other player on this roster has had their chance to show they are up to the task, and none of them has truly succeeded.  Sure, there are a few decent players in the rest of the bunch.  Zeca?  An exciting player at times, but not good enough.  Lundy?  Solid LB, love the guy, his work ethic and his attitude, but he's not good enough.  Vera, Memo, Fafa, DQ?  All had their chance to shine and turn this thing around, and all of them failed.  Any one of them could be a good piece on a decent team, but the collective of them has led to "hot pile of garbage" status.  The entire rest of the squad?  Couldn't even break through on THIS team.  Thank you for your service, may Inter Miami or the USL serve you well.  

The Dynamo have a chance to clear some good money this offseason.  There are guys we HAVE to move on from.  If Pat stops with the guys coming out of contract or picks up several of the options that are available, we will be in the same situation next year.  We have to pick up at least 4 new starters next year, and need roughly 6. With the way Clark is fading down the stretch, I should probably make that 7.  Pat has to have the impact offseason this winter the fanbase dreamed of last winter.  He's got to make the right moves to get key guys in place around the 4 I mentioned, and he has to do it now.  That, and Paulo has to make a jump.

The Head Coach:


Glenn Davis first said it right after Tab Ramos and the Houston Dynamo parted ways: "The new head coach will come with a huge question mark......" and he was spot on. Bob Bradley, or anyone like him, was never coming here.  Not only do those guys probably not want to come here for a multitude of reasons, but it's also not what the Dynamo are looking for.  The list of candidates was notably underwhelming to say the list.  Not to say anything else about the other guys that were mentioned, but most of the potential candidates' lists were pretty much on par with the way we've done business here for the last decade.  When Jessie Marsch was let go, I thought we should go do whatever it takes to get him here, but it doesn't take long to realize that this team isn't interested in anyone on that level. 

Onstad has repeatedly stated that he wants a "collaborator".  What does this mean?  He wants someone to work with him.  "It's certainly difficult for us to have someone come in and say 'hey, I have nine staff members that need to come...'. That's certainly not the club that I want to lead. The club I want to lead is you still have people that work for the club." (Soccer Matters with Glenn Davis). "......those are the guys (Paul Rogers, Paul Caffrey, etc) that put the club first and foremost, and those are the guys that you need working for the club."  He stated (and I'm paraphrasing here) that he doesn't want the team to be sectional, that he doesn't want to be a guy that just gets players, and the coaches just coach.  He wants to rely on the coach's expertise and input but also wants a coach that relies on his.  He wants coaches and technical staff that are just as involved in recruiting players they want as he is.  "I'd like to say now I've been in this league since 2003, I have a pretty good idea what works in this league. So I also think my expertise to be isolated would be a waste...."  He's not looking for Bruce Arena or a Gregg Berhalter situation where they are both coach and sporting director/GM. Pat has his ideas on how to build this team, what he wants his team to look like, and what he wants his coach to be. That's a good thing because no high-level coach will ever come here if he can't pick his own assistants.

Pat thinks they have that man in Paulo.  That's the #1 reason why Paulo will be back next year.  While Paulo has actually done some good things this year, he also does things that are mind-numbingly irritating to the fanbase.  The constant shuffling of the starting 11, the complete inability to field a starting 11 with his best 11 players, his undying devotion to the 4-3-3 when we don't have the guys to play it, subbing in CB's when the Dynamo are losing (twice).  I was absolutely fired up watching Paulo in the post locker room conferences early in the year when we were winning.  I was thinking: "This is my kind of guy".  But teams have us figured out, and Paulo is CONSTANTLY fielding starting 11's without at least two of his best 11.  Other than simply putting his best 11 on the field to start a game (and for the record, that's: Clark, Hadebe, Parker, Zeca, Lundy, Vera, Coco, HH, Fafa, Sebas, and DQ.) he has yet to show any creativity in getting those players on the field together with tactical or formation switches.  There have been slight changes like dropping Sebas deeper, pushing DQ higher, etc.  But the overall scheme is relatively rigid.  Paulo is a young coach, he's also learning this new role.  But he needs to take a jump this year.  He's got to get better. I don't think it's all bad, there are times we are in a position to make a play, and simply won't or can't make them.  How many times have we seen guys simply not shoot the ball in position to shoot?  How many 1v1's have we seen from Fafa, Thor, and Pasher on the wings, only to come away with nothing? How many times has DQ turned the ball over in the attacking third when teammates are wide open? How many crosses have you seen sail to nobody outside of the box?  Those aren't tactical problems, those are personnel/skillset problems.  

This team is boring to watch.  We occasionally have nice combo play, and we occasionally hit a counter, but the majority of the game is spent passing sideways and backward and not posing much of a threat.  The Dynamo rank 20th in goals/90, and 17th in xG despite being in the top 1/2 of the league in shots and shots on target.  We have spent a good part of the season without DQ, Sebas, or Fafa in the starting 11 (Sometimes 2/3). The tactic of attacking wide with Zeca, only to have him cross a ball into 1 guy with nobody covering the back post doesn't work.  Our spacing is bad, guys cover each other up, there's poor communication in the front line and the back, and the midfield has no chemistry.  Paulo has to fix these things and find a tactical style that fits what we have. Next year, no one is going to want to hear that we don't have the guys to play this style.  Adjust or get out.  If Paulo can't take the step up, Pat needs to stay committed to "leaving no stone unturned" to improve this roster.

The Roster:  

This section will be short and sweet.  We actually need to make any change we can, now.  I'm not deep diving into this, but with teams looking to make a playoff push, much like in MLB, any player that can be offloaded now needs the trigger pulled.  A USL team calls and makes us an offer that we're going to take a bath on?  Make it happen.  We need to set ourselves up for this offseason, and if we can find any relief now we need to do so.  

Credit to Pat for owning up and being transparent on Thiago, but no more Thiago's.  Nelson Quinones is our Summer signing, and he needs to be able to help this roster.  We need wings, he's a wing, he needs to be a hit.

Closing thoughts:

While this is clearly not the Matt Jordan/Ownership group of years past, and things off the field and around PNC have changed drastically, things on the field haven't changed all that much.
After 23 games the last two years:

Hector Herrera and Sebas were a lot of money for a +3 goal differential, a +3 in points, and a +2 in table position.  While admittedly, this could change, the realist in me says it won't.  The schedule isn't exactly a cupcake for the rest of the year.

So, one last plea, Pat.....Please bring us the change we deserve. And if you can find a way to #BringBackElis, I'd be forever grateful. 

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

Brian




Sunday, July 24, 2022

Paulo, you have some answering to do.

 
So, I've tried to be patient with our first-year head coach this year.  There have been some signs that this team is improving.  There have been some times when we do things I really like.  But there have been some things recently with this team that just makes me ask: "WHAT ARE WE DOING?"  After last night's 2-1 loss to Minnesota United at home, Paulo Nagamura made a few more decisions that have left me.....well....flabbergasted.  Forget about tactics for a minute, forget about formations.  Let's just focus on the basic player selection and substitutions for a second a let forth a furnace blast of heat.  With the signings we've made this year, we shouldn't be in a place where we have 1 win in our last 6, and 4 wins since April 16th (4-10-2 over that span).  We shouldn't rank 20th in the league in Points Per Game at PNC.  We've picked up 4 out of 15 points at home in our last 5 games in the Bayou City.  There are some good things happening this year (like somewhat figuring out how to pick up wins on the road) but not even being competitive for a playoff spot needs to be accounted for.  


I've said from the very beginning we don't have what it takes to make the playoffs.  I've said all year long that we aren't going to make the playoffs.  But I thought we'd at least be competitive.  My belief is based off this team's ability, but questions are arising around basic desire.  Today, however, we'll solely point the blame squarely on Paulo's shoulders, and ask what in the world we are doing.

Why can't we put all 11 of our best players in the starting lineup?

Does anyone know what's going on with Sebas?  Is anyone asking: Why is the second biggest signing in the history of this franchise and this winter's poster child for change sitting on the bench?  I read Paulo's quote, it told me nothing.  If Paulo can't figure out how to get Darwin Quintero, Sebas, Hector Herrera, Coco, Teenage, Zeca, Adam Lundkvist, and Fafa all on the field together, how is he a professional coach?  All year long we've been one of those short in the starting lineup.  The first several games of the year, it was Teenage and DQ.  Then, it was Parker and Fafa, and now it's Sebas who can't find the starting 11 anymore.  WHAT ARE WE DOING?  He's the team's leading scorer, he's second on the team in assists, and he barely ever gets the ball.  He has fewer touches inside the box than Fafa (80-75) and is seventh on the team with touches inside the attacking 3rd.  Memo, Lundy, Zeca, and Coco all have more touches in the attacking third than him, and DQ has 257 more touches in the attacking third than Sebas, with the same amount of goals and 1 less assist.  We just got a guy that can break lines and get him the ball, and we decide we aren't going to start him anymore.  

The last two games Paulo has rolled out a starting lineup without Zeca and Sebas, and we are supposed to be trying to make a playoff push.  Since the beginning of the season, we have never posted a starting lineup that included this: Sebas, DQ, Fafa, Coco, Zeka, Parker, Hadebe, Lundy, Clark. Not one time. That doesn't include two spots, which you could go a couple of different routes with.  Add HH in to that mix and you have 10 of your starting 11.  We need a wing?  Put DQ at RW and let him duck inside while Zeca overlaps the right side, then attack the right every chance you get.  Put Thor at the other wing, or start Fafa and Thor and play DQ at the 10.  It's crazy to think that over 24 games, we can't get those 9 together in the starting 11 a single time.  Every game there's a couple of them rotated.  Enough with the rotation.  Settle in and get your best 11 on the field.   There's not a mid-week game until the end of August, there's no reason for heavy squad rotation at this point.  We're at the bottom of the table and need to play some catch-up.  

Hey Paulo, your fanbase likes winning.  We aren't really into this whole......experiment and tinker thing at the moment.  Enough with switching up 1/2 of your back line every game.  Our playoff hopes are basically gone with 12 games left in the season, and our team has been pretty embarrassing for 3 months. When you're losing to Austin F.C., and you don't even play our DP striker, you need to answer for that.  When we are two points shy of a playoff spot and you don't start our DP striker at home against one of the best defenses in the league, you need to answer for that.  When you pull Sebas at 57 minutes against F.C. Frisco, then basically bench him for the last 3 games, WHAT ARE YOU DOING? I get it, Sebas doesn't always run hard, he pouts at times, and sometimes gives up on plays early.  But.......when you get him the ball in the box he puts shots on target.  Plain and simple. 

Pat, you weren't hired to help fix these sorts of things, but you talked about it being a collaborative environment all winter.  Help Paulo figure it out.  I don't know if you've noticed, but the second Sebas stepped on the field the last two games, the games changed. You know why?  Because he's pretty good.  Just once.....ONCE....we would like to see our best 11 players on the field together to start the game.  It needs to happen now.
Last night AFTER Sebas checked in.......

What is with the subs?

Not only is it confusing to not start your leading scorer constantly over the last 3 games, but what is going on with Paulo's substitutions over that span?  Let's go back to Austin F.C.  Granted, they had just played 3 nights before, but some of this I still don't understand.  Down a goal at half (2-1), Paulo subs off Coco who had gone full-blown beast mode in the early parts of the game.  If it wasn't for the fact that Hector Herrera was the one who came on, this would be even worse, but....can I ask why we didn't sub off Mattias Vera or Darwin Ceren instead?  Urruti scored to put Austin up 2 goals, Paulo makes 2 very predictable (DQ-Ver; 65th minute, Junqua+Dorsey - Lundy+Zeca; 78th minute) and bland subs, but you still have Sebas and Tyler Pasher on the bench, and you're down 2 goals.  Then, in the 85th minute, you sub in Steres for Parker?  WE'RE DOWN TWO GOALS, and you're freshening up your back line?  What are we doing?  At least put on the face like we're trying to win?  

The same thing happened last night.  Down a goal, Sebas for Vera was a good move.  But then you put in Steres for Parker in the 59th minute?  We're down a goal Paulo, and you have Tyler Pasher just sitting there.  This isn't the time to freshen up your back line.  Parker's a big boy, he can handle the workload.  Unless Steres is pushing up to get his head on the ball, there's literally no reason to make this change.  Noted, Parker got roasted on the first goal, but he had settled in and was playing just fine.  This team has no continuity, and now we are making substitutions that make no tactical sense.   We need someone asking him these questions, he needs to answer for it.  

Dynamo Fans, it's time to apply some healthy pressure.

I'm going to just put this out there.  Healthy pressure doesn't come from empty seats.  Healthy pressure would come from a packed stadium voicing their displeasure over what was going on with the team.  Not bags over our heads in the supporters section, not empty seats.  This team is pretty much immune to empty seats.  It's so immune to empty seats, we see a stadium that's 2/3rds full as "a terrific atmosphere".  20,000 fans voicing their displeasure in an appropriate way (with words/signs, and boos, not throwing things on the field or wearing bags over our heads) shows a fanbase that actually cares.  Empty seats shows a fanbase that doesn't.  If you're unhappy with what's going on, show up, make a statement, and let it be heard.  Call in the Glenn Davis on soccer matters, and let them hear it over the radio.  I'm not saying it's time to fire Asher, Pat and Paulo, but they all need to feel some pressure.  What's happening here is not good enough.  Even those of us who predicted this was coming expected a better effort to get there.

What are we trying to be?

I've had an interesting conversation over on Big Soccer this week about an Asher Mendlesohn quote.

So, just to settle some of the debate, let me tell you what a team representing the great city of Houston should look like:

  1. The hardest working, blue collar team in MLS.  A tuff and gritty team that will outwork every opponent we see.  Add in a sprinkling of highly paid, super talented exec types and you've got a start.
  2. The most innovative team in MLS.  A team that can turn nothing into something, like making the worlds one of the worlds lagest ports out of a couple of swampy Bayous. A team that is leading in it's industry like Houston is in Oil, Gas, energy and medicine.  A front office of hyper smart people that are on the leading edge of their field.  
  3. A team that first and foremost has each other's backs like we did in....well....every Hurricane.  A team that is going to bind together to rebuild this dynasty like we banded together to help tear down and rebuild each others homes after Harvey.  
  4. A team full of vibrant life, culture, and joy, regardless of background or where you came from.
  5. A team with pride.  Not just pride in the #ForeverOrange, but personal pride in what they do, who they are, and what they represent.  

Next Up:

I keep saying how this schedule is about to get brutal, here's one of the most brutal games.

Saturday, July 30th - 6:30
Philedelphia is undefeated at home this year (6-0-5) and have outscored their opponents 20:6.  Their 6 Goals Against at home is best in the league.  They are one of only 4 teams to allow single digits in goals at home this year.  

The Dynamo are 3-7-0 on the road this year, and after winning their last road game against sit 17th in the league in road points.  They've been outscored 12-17 in 10 road games, and their -5 Goal Differential is tied for 14th.

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