Sunday, January 2, 2022

Dear Pat Onstad: Please bring us the change we deserve.


 
*To start, I'd like to say thank you to Tab Ramos.  I think (regardless of how you feel about him as a coach) we can all agree that he was a stand-up guy, and was in an impossible situation.  While you and I might not agree with all he did tactically, I think we can agree that he was trying to create a culture here, he was trying to lay foundations for things (like the academy). I hope he can find a better situation for himself.  Best of Luck. “I know he cares about his team a lot,” Onstad said. “He’s also a guy that is an insane worker so he puts in a lot of hours. Everything he’s done, he’s done for the team and tried to make this a better team." 


On another note, I've been writing this off and on since the season ended.  Every time I get started something new happens, and also nothing new happens.  Plus it's basketball season and I have a lot less free time on my hands these days. Anyway, on to today's post.*

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.  

The process:



On Friday, October 22nd, MLS.com reported that the front runners for the vacant Dynamo GM job were Dennis te Kloese and Pat Onstad.  This was a choice between polar opposites, with the high spending LAG vs. the win on a budget style of the Columbus Crew.  The signing of te Kloese would have most likely come with a total frameshift in the way business was done at 1001 Avenida de las Americas.  Onstad seemed a better fit for what this club had been about, but with new ownership and the promise of new investment, te Kloese seemed interesting.  

"As we went through the search process, Pat clearly showed himself to be the best person for the job based on his experience in a number of leadership roles, his track record of success at every stop and his understanding of our league, our club and our community,” Dynamo majority owner Ted Segal said in a statement. “His preparation and attention to detail during the interview process illustrated the qualities that I believe will make him successful as our general manager. I look forward to working with him to build the Dynamo into championship contenders once again.”

“To a person, Pat was recognized for the quality of his temperament and judgment and his readiness to take on this role. Pat knows what it takes to build a winning culture in Houston and he has the character to execute that objective." Through this, I wanted to see what the thinking was.  Segal is in a very difficult position for many reasons.  (1) There are not enough people in a Metroplex of almost 7,000,000 people that care about his team.  (2) There are too many of those that do care that have turned on his club. (3) The ones left desperately want change.  Segal isn't just trying to draw the casual fan, he needs to build a fanbase.  He's trying to revive a once-great team and build a passionate fan base from the dying embers of the small fire that once burned here.  Don't get me wrong, I think Onstad was a smart choice, and the right one to connect with this fanbase.  "I am honored and humbled to have the opportunity to lead the Dynamo as general manager,” Onstad said. “My family and I loved our time in Houston when I played for the club, and it has been a goal of mine since I retired to return one day and help this club compete for championships again. I’m looking forward to the challenge and I can’t wait to get to work.”  Onstad seems like the perfect fit from a "wanting to be here" standpoint, and from what everything Segal has said the ideology is shared between owner and GM.  

While I've always stated that I want a Seattle type of organization and not a flash in the pan, te Kloese would have signaled to me a seriousness about completely changing the way the Dynamo are run.  The Galaxy have routinely spent more on one guy than we have ever spent in a transfer window, and usually have one guy in squad that earns more than our entire roster.  Onstad's not foreign to being in the upper echelon of MLS spending himself, with Sporting having the 8th highest payroll in MLS last year.  Both have benefitted from having a high-quality striker in tow.  te Kloese benefitted from having arguably the greatest Striker in the history of MLS in Zlatan, then going out and finally bringing Chichirito into MLS.  While Gyasi Zardes is nowhere near that level, he's been a high-impact goal-scorer for one of the best teams in the league.  Onstad shrewdly put players around him, with the trade for Darlington Nagbe and the signing of Lucas Zelarayán for $8 million off the heals of the Zac Steffan transfer to Manchester City.  Pat then went out and got his Goal Keeper (Elroy Room) on a Free Transfer from PSV Eindhoven.  

Onstad should be able to connect with this situation in more ways than simply "he played here." Some of the struggles in Houston are the same that he faced in Columbus: (1)A small and dwindling fanbase. (2) Limited transfer budget. (3) A somewhat unproductive academy (4) A transition in ownership.  Onstad is equipped to deal with what this city and this league bring at him.  The concern, however, is that Onstad is being asked to do exactly what Matt Jordan did but be better at it.

The Head Coaching Search:


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 Onstad wants a team that is "proactive": "I know there are obviously things that you have to take into account when you play in a climate like this," added Onstad. "It’s hard to demand 90 minutes of full pressing soccer from your whole group. At the end of the day, I think you need to be proactive in the way you play the game. You can look around the world now at the teams that are really successful – the Bayern Munich's, the Liverpool's, whatnot. I think they are proactive teams, they get in the other team's face and make it uncomfortable for them to play, but at the same token when they get an opportunity they can control the tempo of the game and score with great goal-scoring opportunities."  When you're talking about Bayern Munich or Liverpool, you are talking about some of the greatest players in the world.  Style of play?  Press high and aggressive, take the ball away, control the ball and get good shot opportunities.  

Only 38 years of age, Paulo Nagumura has the resume that fits what Segal and Ostad have described: a guy who has had success in MLS at multiple levels, a guy who's had success at developing youth, and a guy that comes from one of the model franchises that Segal has discussed.  Sporting plays a style that fits the description Onstad laid out, and in his brief time as Sporting KC II's coach he had a hand in moving 15 homegrown players on to the next level.  Guys like Gianluca Busio, Jaylin Lindsey, Cameron Duke, and Daniel Salloi all came through while he was in charge.  I see some out there being critical of the hire based on record, to which I'll let Glenn Davis reply: "Now I see a lot of people out there pointing to his record of 31-60-25......Uhm......when you're a developmental team for a pro-club and a reserve team, I think it's more important how many players are being helped through the process to the first team."  Some teams want their MLS Next teams to win, some just want to get guys experience and move them on.  If you're a good developmental coach, you'll lose your best players every year.  Sporting K.C. has been one of the best at producing Home Grown talent over the last 10 years, and hopefully Nagumura can bring some of that with him.  

There is a chance that this ends up being the perfect melding of like-mindedness that finally turns the Houston Dynamo into a first-class organization. Even if this is the case, it will most likely be years before we see it.  If Nagumura isn't completely overwhelmed and tactically deficient, we could start to see results next year.  As it currently stands, however, even if Nagumura is a tactical genius 2022 will be very difficult to watch.

The Roster:  

When this list first came out on Twitter in November, it actually gave me hope.  This team is in desperate need of a roster overhaul.  Not really in terms of "just burn it down and get rid of everyone", but in terms of usable and functional parts.   I was surprised to see Zarek on this list after the year he had, and knew a couple of others would return due to contract situations, but I thought this would be a good foundation to lay with enough of a blank slate to really start to build something here.  What transpired since then was the bringing back of 24 players from last year's squad, with an upgrade at GK in the form of Steve Clark and a curious trade for a CB in Daniel Steres.  

Some of the trimmings were absolutely necessary.  I love Boniek Garcia, but he's 35 years old.  There is no reason on a team that is trying to build that you keep a 35 year old CDM/CM/CB/ whatever else you decide to play him at.  I love Maynor, but he's 38.  They shouldn't have been here last year, it was a good decision to move on. Maxi Urruti had a hot 7 game stretch but was worse than bad for much of the season because he dropped soo deep in defense he was never in scoring position.  Then when he was in scoring position, he couldn't finish.  Onstad made a terrific move, getting $100k from Inter Miami for Ariel Lassiter.  Lassiter showed very few flashes that he could actually play at this level and spent most of his time on the field not producing anything.  There were quite a few more I would have liked to see made.  With European transfer windows opening yesterday (Jan. 1st) we only have 4 spots to play with at the moment.  Even with one need already addressed (GK), there are still many holes left open.  

The Attack

The only striker on the team is Corey Baird.  Darwin Quintero was brought back, but presumably on a greatly reduced salary and (according to Glenn Davis and others, but he's still listed on MLS.com as a DP) with a greatly reduced role. These are both things that I agree with.  At 35 years old, Quintero still has enough left in the tank to spot start or come in off the bench late in games to give us a spark.  This leaves two huge questions: (1) Will he do it, or will we see the Quintero we saw off the bench for the first 1/3rd of the season? (2) WHO IS GOING TO START?  Baird has never been a legitimate goal scorer in this league and has actually seen his role, playing time, and production all take a hit.  You could make a really strong case that he's actually getting worse each and every year that he's played in this league.  He is highlighted by 8 goals and 5 assists that he had as a rookie playing for RSL, and he's never been close to being to able to attain that level of extremely mediocre production over the last three years.  Last year he managed 3 goals and 2 assists in over 1,000 minutes played.  He makes almost $400,00 in salary +incentives.  The return of Pasher and Picault is fine.  The two played fairly well together in the beginning parts of the season, but who's going to play in between them?  I like Griffen Dorsey.  He plays hard and is a nice piece to have on any team, and he's fairly cheap.  But the Dynamo could use another winger to push this group and desperately need both a #10 and a #9.  

The Midfield

The midfield was the second biggest problem on the team last year behind the striker. Unable to hold possession, unable to break lines, unable to produce goals, gave the ball back to the other team in horrible positions regularly, and was inconsistent (to put it nicely) in defense. Memo Rodriguez, Joe Corona, Derrick Jones, and Darwin Ceren, are all coming back. I can understand if you want to bring back Memo OR Derrick Jones, but not both.  I don't understand why Ceren or Corona are coming back at all.  Both are older (30,31), both are highly unproductive, neither really seem to do anything to help any team they've ever been on win games (and yes, I'm aware of Corona's 1,000 minutes he played for 1st place Tijuana).   Neither can really break lines with the pass or the dribble, and both are below average defensively.  Vera is a very solid, scrappy, and efficient player, but he's not a dynamic one.  He needs a stud next to him.  None of these guys are it.  Nico Lemoine got his contract picked back up, and as he is on roughly $70,000 a year, and qualifies for the U-23 Roster, is not a bad option for that role.  I could foresee Mateo Bajamich, Ian Hoffman, Daniel Rios, and Juan Castilla filling out that roster as well, and while I've read the MLS Next roster rules, I don't really know how the roster would work for guys that possibly bounce between Dynamo and Dynamo II.  I like all of these more if they don't count toward the 30 man limit.

The Defense

I have no problems with bringing back Lundqvist, Hadebe, and Parker.  I don't even mind bringing Zarek back as a spot starter/sub/locker room guy.  The guys on the team seem to love him.  Literally every interview I hear they all list him as one of their favorite guys.  He's too slow to play 2,000 minutes on a team that has serious aspirations, but on a team that's rebuilding and trying to sneak into the playoffs he can definitely play a role.  Not a full-time starter role, but a role.  With Fuenmayor and Figeroa both departing (and their combined $350,000 in salary), the team needed to add something.  I'm still curious about Ethan Bartlow.  He's very slight for an MLS level CB (I was really surprised at by his size at the "Meet the Player" night), and I wonder if he can hold up at that position against MLS level strikers and forwards. I think the move for Steres is intriguing.  The 31 year old has seen his playing time slashed over the last three years, from 2,600 minutes in 2019 to 1,100 minutes last year.  He should give us depth and flexibility if we go three at the back, and while he was a need there are much more pressing needs in front of this team.  The team still needs to add depth at RB, because currently Zarek is the only one we have.  Junqua still has a lot of room to grow, and the job should be Lundqvists without question.

Goal Keeper.

Without any question, Steve Clark is a nice addition.  Although he's aging, he's coming off one of his best seasons and is without question an upgrade over anyone on the roster from last year.  While I though Maric was an improving player, and there were things that I liked from Michael Nelson, both are not on this level.  Clark outpaced them in Save% by a long shot, and stopped more crosses (301) in his 2,096 minutes than all Dynamo keepers managed to stop in 3,060 (291).  He's better on goal kicks, he has a higher passing percentage, and literally beats both Maric and Nelson in every statistical category.  All of them.  This is a nice add, and something that should excite a fanbase.  The only reason why this wouldn't be a tremendous move is if we fail to add people in front of him.  For this move to work, we need to add a quality striker.


Closing thoughts:

Not that I'm arrogant enough to think that Ted Segal, Pat Onstad, or Glenn Davis read my blog, but just in case you are I have a message for you:

The fans that once cheered Pat on from the stands at Robertson Stadium, and that "wall of orange" that Onstad lovingly recalled during his initial press conference is a group that is on life support.  Burned by the previous regime, soured by years of hearing words that never came to fruition.  The #ForeverOrange crew is highly skeptical of everything you are saying because they've heard it all before.  Mr. Onstad, Matt Jordan also said he wanted a team that was full of energy and played an aggressive style.  He (and partially because of no support from previous ownership) constructively made this roster worse every single year.  Ted, you are saying all the right things.  So did Tab Ramos.  Even the most optimistic and starry-eyed fans like myself currently share a common bond with that group: we don't care about your words.  We need actions.  Currently, it seems like the Modus Operandi is to try to do the exact same thing the previous regime did but to actually be good at it.   About the only thing that was different to date this offseason is that instead of dropping 10 guys that couldn't play and no one wanted, we brought them back for next year.  While I understand that there are soo many holes to plug in this damn that you don't have enough plugs, you have to start building and you have to do it soon.  Last year we went into the season with two DP positions unfilled.  We are currently going into this season without a striker, and (depending on which website we read) without at least one DP spot filled.  You parted ways with Tab Ramos (something that many were calling for), then hired a guy with the same resume.  Right now, we see you as no different than the previous regime, only you're taking longer to come to the same conclusion.

This offseason isn't going to awaken a Sleeping Giant, and with the way you are approaching business that Giant is beginning to decompose.  Without a drastic change to the way this team has approached the last decade of MLS campaigns, the Giant is a dream that's quickly fading away.  You won't awaken any giants, but hopefully you can build a palace.....brick by brick.

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

Brian


Tuesday, November 2, 2021

One for the Road: One of Matt Jordan's final moves, and how it sums up Houston under him.

Summer Transfer Window: 2021

A tale of two players and two teams moving in different directions.  Two teams, both in need of a striker, two players changing teams and situations, with one scoring big and the other struggling through the year.  This move saw one team steadily advancing towards the playoff line, the other trying to climb out of the cellar.  Two strikers of almost the exact same age (25), size (5'10" - 163 vs 5'10" 170), there is little there to distinguish the two. One of the players is setting the league on fire on a weekly basis, the other has yet to make an impact.  One move at the Summer Transfer window transformed another team in the Western Conference's season and has catapulted them to playoff contention.  The move for your Houston Dynamo has had absolutely no impact, and one could easily argue was a "negative impact" move.  These misses are what have plagued the Dynamo for nearly a decade, and this move was a microcosm of what has been an Achilles heel here for quite some time. In one of his last moves, Matt Jordan missed a golden opportunity. Which two players am I talking about and what has their impact been?  Let's take a closer look. 

Corey Baird: 

On Friday, July 30th the Dynamo announced the signing of Corey Baird from LAFC for $750,000 in GAM allocated over two years.  The deal cost the Dynamo $68,000 this year, and another $681,000 next year.  Baird, a one-time MLS Rookie of the year had seen his career come to a crossroads.  Managing just 7 goals and 5 assists over his last 51 appearances (40 starts, over 3,600 minutes played) Baird had been moved to LAFC in January of 2021 for $500,000 in GAM spread over 2 years.   Posting 3 goals and 2 assists in his first 7 appearances, the speedy striker was having a fairly solid start to the season.  Baird had earned 750 minutes through the first part of the season, appearing in 13 games and making 9 starts before losing his spot making only 1 start over his last 8 games with the team after the arrival of Christian Arrango.   “We are thrilled to welcome Corey to the Houston Dynamo,” Dynamo senior vice president and general manager Matt Jordan said in a statement to MLS.com. “He can play a variety of positions in the attacking third while adding important league and national team experience to our group. When you look at his age, character, and skillset, he is the type of player and person we want to be a part of our club moving forward.”  Baird has been plagued by two things since arriving (1) Injuries (2) Lack of finishing. Baird never found his footing, suffering first a "Lower Body Injury" which kept him out for most of August, and then suffering a season-ending knee injury on October 3rd against Sporting K.C.


Baird often makes terrific runs and has the ability to get by opponents with the ball at his feet.  A good passer, Baird can find teammates on the move in dangerous positions as well.  Baird also has been putting the ball on target this year, with 13 of his 24 shots on target (54%: good for 8th in the league), and 5 of his 9 shots in #ForeverOrange.  Baird's problem, however, is getting the ball past the keeper.  His career mark of 0.39 Goals/Shot on Target is mediocre by professional standards, and he hasn't netted more than 5 goals in a season since 2019 (7 goals, 5 assists in his last 3,988 minutes before coming to Houston).  Baird had seen a steep decline in production since his Rookie of the Year campaign, netting 8 goals and 5 assists in 2018, 5 and 3 in 2019, 2 and 2 in 2020, and 3 and 2 this year, none as a Dynamo player.  Along with his lack of production, the Dynamo managed to go 1-4-2 in his 7 appearances, going scoreless in 4 of them.  Managing only 5 points in 7 games, with 0 goals and 0 assists from a guy you paid $750,000 for in the Summer Window hurts, especially for a team with playoff aspirations, especially with the team searching for production from the Striker position.  With Maxi Urruti also struggling through the entire summer, the job was there for Baird to take.  While the injuries derailed his time here, Baird never seemed like the #9 for this team.  He often was just missed on his runs, and of his 5 shots on target, 4 of them were direct to the keeper.  While Baird's guaranteed salary of $396,031 is about 1/2 what the team was paying Christian Ramirez, the move seems puzzling based on what we paid for a declining player.  Tab Ramos had worked with Baird for the U.S. U-20 team, and it's possible the Front Office thought Tab could pull something out of him.  The move backfired, and the Dynamo are still on the hook.  While this move could pull off long-term (Baird is still under contract until 2023), the 25-year-old needs a complete career overhaul in order for this to work. 

Brian White (Vancouver Whitecaps)



White has been exactly what the White Caps needed, and they exactly what he needed.  Stuck in a logjam at NYRB, White was brought in for $400,000 in TAM (plus another $100,000 in performance incentives) on June 2nd, 2021. He had become the odd man out in a crowded Red Bulls front line, with Patryk Klimala, Fabio, and Caden Clark leading the attack.  White made an immediate impact, making a start and netting a 54th-minute goal in his first Whitecaps appearance.  Hitting the skids, White saw his production slip as he managed 0 goals and 1 assist over his next 10 appearances (8 starts, 650 minutes). White then caught absolute fire banging home 11 goals and dishing out 3 assists over his last 14 calls to action.  White is now the hottest striker in MLS and leads all American-born strikers in Goals scored.  Highlighted by a hat trick against San Jose on October 22nd, White's rise could come as a surprise.  If you look at his production over his complete body of work, however, it shouldn't. 
In just around 2,000 MLS minutes, White had posted 13 goals (7 appearances (27 starts).  White was by far the most productive and efficient NYRB attacker in the 2019 and 2020 campaigns, outpacing Daniel Royer, Kaku, and Tom Barlow in terms of Goals per Minute played, and he was their leading scorer (5 goals) in only 817 minutes played during 2020.  Hardly the first option, the scrappy White makes key runs and finds open space in front of the net with regularity, and manages to score the ball in a variety of ways.  Of his goals this year, 6 have come off his right foot, 2 off his left, and 4 off his head. He's scored 6 of his goals inside the 6 yard box, 6 inside the 18.  White is a dangerous player because he's smart and never gives up on a play.  Note his first goal against San Jose in the hat trick, White took the ball in front of a defender, one touched it perfectly to Ryan Gauld who fired a shot just to San Jose Keeper J.T. Marcinkowski's right.  Marcinkowski deflected it, and White was in the perfect position to tap it home for the goal.  

What's most frustrating about this move, is White cost far less ($400,000 - $750,000), has a much lower salary ($219,000), and has been much more productive.  The Whitecaps, after struggling initially after this move (going 0-3-2 in his first 5 appearances) and seeing a series of draws (5 straight from July 20- August 13), the Whitecaps have posted 9 wins in his last 14 appearances (9-2-3 over that span), 8 of those came with him in the starting lineup.  The Whitecaps jumped into playoff contention, and have a striker for the future.  This is a move that needs to be talked about here, when you look at what we paid/are paying for Maxi Urruti, what we paid/are paying for Corey Baird, these are complete misses from the most important position on the field.  What is mind-boggling about these moves, is White's came almost a month before Baird's, which should have set a market value for the position.  Having this kind of production from a non-DP level striker is the equivalent of having an NFL quarterback on a rookie contract.  Going forward, it's an enormous advantage.  Would it have vaulted the Dynamo into playoff contention this year?  Probably not, but it would have filled a much-needed hole going forward, and answered one roster question for next year.  In April, I wrote how Front Office creativity was a bigger problem than lack of funds.  This is an example of that.  Hopefully, Pat Onstat fixes this problem in a hurry.  I'm not part of that original fan-dom, I wasn't here when he played here and don't have that personal connection, but seeing the positive messages and a long-needed outpouring of hope and positivity from a struggling fanbase, I'm glad he's here.

Until Next Time,

Remember to #HoldItDown and stay #ForeverOrange,

Brian





Sunday, October 17, 2021

Now Serving 3 points: Dynamo 2:1 Sounders

 

What started off as an amazing week ended with a tremendous night. Tuesday's meet the team night was really special, and getting to talk to many fans (including Wayne of the Scarf-Kilt clan and Web Tilton) and the guys was really awesome.  I got to tell Fafa I hope he can come back next year, speak German with Marco Maric, and say thanks to all the guys for being here and for the effort they give.  I even made Tim Parker laugh.  Wednesday was my birthday, fall weather set in, and I was really looking forward to Saturday night.  Wade and I decided to go a little early due to concerns that there would be no parking and traffic might be a nightmare due to the Astro's playoff game. It turned out to be a great decision to get there early and pre-game at Pitch 25.  Not only was Brian Ching's establishment hopping with a mixture of Astros and Dynamo fans, it was buzzing.  We had decided to grab a bite and split a bucket while we waited, and as there was no place to sit we posted up in a standing-room-only spot.  When a seat finally opened up, we noticed there was a young lady and an older gentleman in a Dynamo shirt sitting on the other side of the fire pit.  We asked if it was ok if we sit, they said sure, and Wade and I sat down and started talking about the state of the Dynamo.  The gentleman sitting next to us then slid over next to us and said "You guys look like fans, are you die-hards?  You've got the patches and stuff." We gave an affirmative.  "Let me ask, how long have you guys been fans."  We answered he sized us up, and I guess he figured we were ok dudes.  "OK, Trivia question:  Who's the only Canadian currently playing for the club?"  We both shouted back "Tyler Pasher!" and he answered, "Well, you're right, and he's my son, and this is his fiance and his mom."  We were like "WHAT?" Here we were having drinks with Tyler Pasher's family before the game.  We talked for about 30 minutes before he ran off to the Suite.  It was his first-ever Dynamo home game and he was super excited to be here.  I told Wade all week this was going to be a depressing game.  He kept telling me to have faith.  He was right, I was wrong and last night ended up being a blast.


An Interesting tactical switch to start:

I noticed right away that Tab had the guys lined up in an interesting way.  We lined up in a 5-2-3, with Zarek Valentine playing in the middle of the backline, flanked by Parker or his right and Hadebe on his left.  Griffen Dorsey was playing RB, with Junqua on the left.  Coco Carrasquilla and Mattias Vera were basically playing double pivots, playing with the goal of trying to bang the ball over the top to Fafa on the run.  Urruti and Quintero were finding space in behind him and on the wings as Fafa's speed was stretching out Seattle's back 3.  What was most intriguing is that our back 3 was basically man-marking Seattle's front line.  Rarely did you see Zarek further than a foot away from Will Bruin, regardless of where the ball was.  You'd have to say that it worked, as Bruin didn't get off a single shot the entire game.  Roldan and Freddy Montero were also having trouble just getting the ball in workable areas because Vera and Coco were doing a great job of pressuring them in the final third.  Between the three, they combined for only 2 shots on target in 253 minutes of play. Going forward, it lined up more like a 3-4-1-2 with Quintero playing a #10 and Fafa/Urruti making runs in front of him.  The plan was to play the ball deep and over the top and look to strike quick, and you could see this from the beginning.
Seattle was occasionally finding cracks in the Dynamo defense, and often time it came off of turnovers in the midfield.  A Darwin Quintero slip at midfield opened the door for the Sounder's first real chance of the game.  Joshua Atencio scooped up the ball and Seattle had a serious counter building with numbers (4v2).  Atencio cut inside and dropped the ball to Fredy Montero (who was under instant pressure from Tim Parker). Christian Roldan had slipped right in front of goal in the transition, and Montero found him and his heavy right foot with Michael Nelson dead to rights.  Nelson was cover near post, and the far post was wide open.  Coco managed to slide over in front and Roldan hit it wide right, but it was the first serious threat the Sounders had found in the game. 

Seattle was doing a great job circulating the ball and making timed runs in the early part of the game, but Vera, Coco, and the back 5 were really being disciplined and holding shape which allowed them to win second balls and pick off long passes.  Houston wasn't knocking, but not really threatening in the first 10 minutes, as Fafa could never really connect at the end of the deep balls being played, and crosses by Dorsey and Quintero kept finding Sounders defenders.  When Quintero won a free kick deep in Seattle's side at the 13:00 mark, they finally found the back of the net.  
It was perfectly set up, and it felt like Tab had this exact situation scouted out.  Urruti timed his run perfectly, Darwin put it on a dime, and Urruti was soo open Wade and I both thought he had to be offsides.  The angle was difficult, but Urruti volleyed it to the far post and past a diving Stefan Frei for a 1-0 lead.  It had to feel good for Urruti, who has been scoreless since June 26th.  It was a rare set-piece goal for the Dynamo as well as it was just their 5th on the season and their 3rd at home.  Houston ranked 24th in the league in set-piece goals coming into the game, ahead of only Inter Miami (1) and Austin FC (2).  It was a beautiful strike from Maxi as he looked over his shoulder and just got a perfect foot on it.  Seattle played for the next few minutes slowly building attacks and playing at a methodical pace looking to slip through the Dynamo defense.  Maxi Urruti drew a foul in the attacking third in the 18 minute mark, and while what happened next wasn't a direct result of the free kick, the foul helped us get possession in a workable area. 

If you haven't seen Darwin Quintero's 19th-minute goal, no picture will do it justice.   It's probable the most dynamic goal I've ever seen live, and was just an absolute beauty.  Darwin completely embarrassed 2 Seattle defenders and smashed a left-footer past Stefan Frei.  El Scientifco del gol reminded everyone who he is for the second time that game.  Up 2-0, you had to have a feeling we could pull it off, but there was still 70+ minutes left to play.  At the 40 minute mark, Seattle decided to add into the night of ridiculous goals with one of their own.  Coming off a corner, Jimmy Medranda found a deflected ball just outside the 18 and hit an absolute laser into the far post upper 90.  Houston pushed hard to find a third goal at the end of the half but just couldn't find their way through.

The game really opened up in the first 20 minutes of the second half.

Opening the second half with the exact same tactical lineup, it didn't take long for the Dynamo to find another chance.  Quintero hit the post on an amazing bicycle attempt off a Fafa headed cross, Griffen Dorsey chased down the rebound and blasted a right-footer just wide.  The Dynamo just missed at the opportunity to go up 3-1 which most likely would have been the nail in the coffin.  5 minutes later, Sam Junqua just missed on a header off a corner, just nipping the crossbar.  The Dynamo were literally 3 inches from being up 4-1 in the opening 10 minutes of the half.  After Teenage Hadebe went down with an injury, the momentum began to shift.  Fredy Montero had a chance hit right at Michael Nelson (59th minute).  Dorsey found the post off a corner on the ensuing possession for the third Dynamo shot to be denied by the woodwork in the first 15 minutes of play.  Only minutes later Montero left a beautiful pass to Roldan who was all by himself inside the 18 again, only to blast it 20 feet high of the goal.  Literally 3 minutes later, Niclas Benezet's pass was picked off (after an absolute blast from Tim Parker's shoulder) by Darwin Ceren, and Ceren just managed to one-touch tap it to a racing Fafa down the left sideline.  Fafa was 1v1 with Shane O'Neil, cut inside, and left a terrific pass for a Maxi Urruti who had circled down the left-sideline.  Urruti hit a really nice back post bender, but that shot also hit the woodwork and the Dynamo were denied once again.

Second-half tactics changed.


Around the 70th minute, Tab began to change his formation.  Zarek moved back outside, with Parker and Maynor Figueroa (who had come on for Hadebe) posting as a CB pair.  It's when Tab brought on Joe Corona (76th minute) for Griffen Dorsey that he finally completely changed his formation.  Utilizing a deep-lying 4-3-3/4-4-2 mashup in order to keep 7-8 in the defending third at all times, Tab basically parked the bus and looked to counter.  Pasher came on for Maxi Urruti (76th minute) and Quintero was playing almost as a false 9 with Pasher and Fafa making runs off of him.  You have to say the tactical change worked, as Seattle was unable to get a single shot attempt off for the rest of regulation (not added time).  El Naranja was able to hold possession over the final 10 minutes, and managed to get off two more shot attempts (Pasher - 82nd-minute volley and Junqua's 83rd-minute header) but neither were particularly close. As we coasted into stoppage time, the Dynamo looked to be in total control of the game.  All it took whoever was one Maynor Figueroa trip of Christian Roldan just outside the 18 to almost change the fortune.  The ensuing free-kick was absolutely blasted by Jao Paolo.....and it also hit the woodwork.  Nouhou Tolo chased down the second ball and just couldn't get a clean header on it, Parker cleared it, and the fireworks and game were both essentially over.

Darwin Quintero was unbelievable last night:

1 unreal goal, 1 absolutely gorgeous assist, 7 key passes 11 shot-creating actions, 7/8 on dribbles, 45 carries, 12/14 on balls downfield to Fafa and Urruti, Darwin is in form.  While Darwin has gotten a knock for his defense, his 35.7% pressure rate (5/14) ranked best among midfielders and forwards.  Darwin was spraying beautiful passes all over the field, he made several Seattle defenders look helpless, and was doing what he does best: create havoc with the ball at his feet.  If we can remember back, Darwin was in really bad form to start the season. He didn't post a goal or assist in May, June, or July playing mostly off the bench.  People online dubbed him "El Scientifico del Turnover" and had a lot of negative things to say about him He's playing lights out at the moment, and the team is really gelling with him in the starting lineup.

Fafa's biggest impact didn't come from having the ball.

Fafa was making unbelievable runs behind the Seattle back-line, and opening up gaping holes for Quintero and Urruti.  There was literally no one on Seattle's team that could hope to keep up with him.  While Fafa made several nice plays (including the lay-off to Urruti), without his runs keeping Arreaga and Oneil honest I don't know the Dynamo win this game.

The Defense had a big game although not statistically.

Seattle held possession (58%-42%) but mostly with their backline and midfield.  While Parker, Hadebe and Zarek Valentine were really good last night, they only combined for 4 tackles, 2 interceptions, and 2 blocks.  They did manage 13 clearances and won 6/7 areal duels inside the box.  What's most important is that they were just always where they were supposed to be, and never let Will Bruin get a single shot off.  While Fredy Montero caused problems at times, and Christian Roldan had two really good scoring opportunities, those opportunities came from playing between lines and Coco and Vera made Roldan and Montero's life very difficult.  One thing Tab has done really well this year is shutting down opposing team's strikers, and last night was a great example of that.  Seattle came into the game 3rd in MLS in goals scored, averaging 4.41 Shots on Target/90 and 12.96 Shots/90.  They are the third most efficient team scoring the ball (.36 goals/shot on target), and to hold them to 3 shots on target and 1 goal took all 11 to accomplish.

Coco Carrasquilla may be the midfielder we've been looking for:

Not the creative midfielder, but the compliment to Mattias Vera.  While Vera was his usual workhorse self last night (12 recoveries, 2 interceptions, 2 blocks, 2 fouls drawn, 94.2% passer rating, and a team-high 43 carries), Carrasquilla had a really good night himself. Posting 1 Tackle, 3 interceptions, 5 recoveries, 1 block, and a huge defensive rotation that just threw Roldan off at the last second from about 8 yards out.  Carrasquilla also connected well in attack, both finding a way through Seattle's midfield with his feet and connecting the ball up to the next line.  When Coco came here, there was a lot of hope he would be what Darwin Quintero has been since he was re-inserted into the starting 11. Coco has looked better playing behind and linking up with the forward attackers.  I'd love to see him in this role for the rest of the year.  

Final Thoughts:

A win is a win is a win.  After this year, I'll take three points every time our Dynamo decide to serve them up.  I realize this Seattle team was playing without Raul Ruidiaz, but they've managed to win without him before.  Seattle has a really good and deep team, and I'll never turn down beating the first-place team in your conference.  Despite all that's gone on this year, there are good things happening here.  We have some younger guys (Junqua, Dorsey, Carrasquilla) who are really coming along, and while they may turn into solid MLS players. Dorsey picked up another assist last night and has been quietly getting better each week.   Nelson has done a solid but not spectacular job in goal.  Honestly, what sets Nelson apart from Marco Maric is his ability to distribute.  Nelson might not be a superstar, and may never be, but he's a solid and reliable keeper who doesn't make mistakes.  After getting pummeled 4:2 to Sporting KC, and a 0-0 draw to Vancouver, to play this game (it was seriously one of the most exciting games I've seen live) and beat this team feels good.  Let's celebrate it and see if we can pick up another on Wednesday night.  Glen Davis however, said it best:

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

Brian

Monday, October 11, 2021

A little about me: As we have a little break, let me take some time to introduce myself.

So, I realized that I've been writing this for some time now and have yet to introduce myself.  I know many of you out there are thinking "Who the F*&$ does this guy think he is?" so I thought I'd write just a bit to let you guys know a little about me.  So who am I?  Nobody.  I'm just a regular guy who decided to write this blog as a distraction from a divorce I was going through. I've been blog writing for years, I've written about my experiences as a small college basketball player, I have a blog about Eintracht Frankfurt in the Bundesliga, I've written for The Bundesliga Fanatic, and I've written about U.S. Soccer and things I think could make soccer better in America. Looking around, there wasn't a ton of Dynamo content out there.  There's blurbs in the Houston Chronicle, you can sometimes find things about us on MLS.com, and ESPN almost never has anything to say about us.  You hardly ever hear about the Dynamo or Soccer on Sports Talk Radio around here, and so I thought I'd create some Dynamo specific content.

"Allow me re-intro-duce myself my name is" ........Brian.  Pronounced with an A-N. I'm an average 44-year-old Biology teacher, and I also coach the freshman basketball team at my school.  I love teaching, I love coaching, and yes I'm weird enough to love teaching and coaching freshmen because they're nuts and make everyday fun. I was once upon a lifetime ago a college basketball player at a tiny little NAIA school in Nebraska.  I wasn't any good, but I managed to be a 4-year scholarship player.  I grew up in between Ft. Worth and Dallas in North Richland Hills,Tx. but in the time I grew up it was a much different place.  There was a lot more grass and a lot less concrete. I started playing soccer in 1st grade and played until middle school when soccer wasn't offered and football, basketball, track and cross country were. 

I never stopped going to soccer games. I went to as many guys and girls soccer games as I could in high school, as it wasn't until spring of my Senior year in 1996 when MLS started.  I watched the first FC Dallas game on a fuzzy old television I had in my bedroom, on a UHF channel with rabbit ears (How many of us remember what UHF was?).  I went to a tiny college in the middle of a tiny town in Nebraska (York College), and it was the perfect situation to watch soccer.  (1) There wasn't much to do (2) We didn't have football the fall, we had futball. We didn't even have a football team. Homecoming was during a soccer game, our games and stadium (it served as the High School Football Stadium, and our baseball stadium too) were smack dab in the middle of our campus, and it was about a 200-yard walk from the dorm.  We went to games in the beautiful fall weather, in the freezing Nebraska cold, and we traveled all over Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri, and Iowa watching our guys and girls play.  York was a really tight nit community, and we showed up to support our friends.  It wasn't uncommon to have a pretty decent crowd at Soccer, Basketball, and Baseball games alike.  

How I became a Dynamo Fan:

I was late to the game.  I didn't move to Houston until 2009 and didn't really follow MLS at all at the time.  To be honest, I tried to get into it the first couple of years when it was in it's inception, and thought it was.....well......kinda boring.  FC Dallas didn't have any players I knew, and I just couldn't get into it.  In 2013 I got married, she had two kids, and her brother was a youth soccer coach in Germany.  I started following Eintracht and International Soccer so we would have something to talk about, and just really fell in love with it.  Looking for a way to connect with my stepson, we started going to Dynamo games soon after.  At first it was 4-5 games a year, then it became 10-15, but I've been going to almost every home game for the last three years.  I don't have season tickets, but my best friend does, and we go to every game this year together.  

Demarcus Beasley won me over, but Alberth Elis sucked me in.  He was just different.  You could see on the field he was just on a different plane athletically than anyone that matched up with him.  It's hard for me to follow a team if there's no players I care about on it, and Beasley and Elis made me care about this team.  I missed the championships, I never attended a game at Robertson Stadium.  I never saw the great teams of the early 2000's, and I've never really known what it was like for the Dynamo to be good.  I was around in 2017 for the run that we made.  That was awesome.  I hear all talk downplaying it, but I could care less.  It was the only time since I've been following the Dynamo that they made the playoffs and it was pretty special.

What would I like to see from the Dynamo.

I don't want to be the (current) LA Galaxy.  Now, before you cast me off as an idiot, hear me out.  I have a high level of appreciation for what the Galaxy bring to the MLS table.  If it weren't for them, some of the biggest stars in MLS history would have never set foot in America.  However, I don't want to be a team soo poorly constructed that you can have one of the greatest players of our generation (Zlatan), and not make the playoffs. I don't want to be soo poorly put together that the second he leaves, you're one of the worst teams in the league.  Who would I want to be?  Seattle.  A team that is always good, with a front office that is one of the smartest in the league (if not the smartest), and a team that gets players from literally every tool available in MLS.  They have homegrowns, they draft well, they make really smart trades, they sign key free agents, and they drop a good amount of money on the right guys.  If you're giving me the choice of making a 1 off playoff run with a huge name player or being the class of the league for almost a decade, I'll take the latter.  I want an organization that makes this city proud, year in year out.  

Why are you so high on Tab Ramos?

Because honestly, I think given enough time and enough resources, Tab can help us become that Seattle type of organization.  Because of this belief, I'm a little more patient than most people.  I don't want to be a flash in the pan, I want to build an empre.  I want a Seattle Sounders, New England Patriot type of team here.  I'd love being more Astros, or Tampa Bay Rays, and less Pittsburg Pirates.  Why do I think Tab can do it?  I honestly don't know, it's mostly just an ideal.  I'm just not ready to give up this plan yet, because I feel like it's barely started.  Hire a GM first, keep putting this roster together, let Tab help hire talent evaluators, skill development coaches, and scouts, and then make a decision on Tab. Give Tab a functional academy and some draft picks, upgrade the facilities, and then figure out if Tab can get us to where we want to go. When last year ended I felt like it would be three years before we could compete again, and I stand by that.  Does Tab do things that drive me crazy?  Absolutely?  Am I ever standing in PNC screaming "TAB! MAKE A SUB ALREADY!" without a doubt.  Don Nelson did that too with the Mavs.  I hated his system, I didn't like the players he was bringing in, and he turned out not to be the guy.  I've seen Jimmy Johnson take one of the worst teams I've ever seen to a 3 time Super Bowl winner through simply being smarter than everyone else.  I literally have no idea where Tab lies on that Spectrum, but I'm willing to give him more of a chance.

OK, but I don't agree with most of your opinions.

Great. Full disclosure, sometimes I don't know if I believe them. I often write stuff to present another point of view, and sometimes just to make people think.  I welcome anyone who disagrees with me, I love hearing all points of view, that's how I evolve.  I think we all agree that the biggest problem with the organization over the last decade has been a completely negligent ownership group.  Glenn Davis says that on his show all the time, in not so direct words.  It's why I'm not as harsh on Matt Jordan as other people, even though I think he completely failed in multiple areas.  I don't claim to be an expert, my thoughts are my own.  I am extremely grateful to everyone for reading this.  I honestly think it's crazy anyone reads anything I write, and hope you guys enjoy it.

See you all on Saturday, and thanks again for reading.
Remember to #HoldItDown and stay #ForeverOrange

Brian






Saturday, October 2, 2021

No matter which side of the Tab argument you choose, you're right: A look.

 

There's no question about it, this has been a tuff season to take.  Lots of disappointment, very little to cheer about, and one big change.  #Brener'sOut (kind of), #Jordan'sOut, and now, we have one last target to be addressed.  Just being upfront, I like Tab and want to see him stay at least one more year.  I also understand that this team has been terrible during his tenure.  This post is about looking at both sides, addressing some of the arguments, and looking at things from the big picture.  

Why Tab should go (factual):

I'll put this first because it's short, sweet, and to the point:
  • He has the lowest PPG (1.08) of any coach in the history of the Dynamo.  It's simple and upfront.  Currently, he is the worst statistical coach in Dynamo history.
  • The team has averaged 1.22 GPG (worst run of any in Dynamo History) and given up 1.61 GPG during (also worst in Dynamo History).  
  • Tab often has some curious substitution patterns or doesn't use his subs at all. 
So, yes, from a results standpoint I can absolutely understand the point of letting him go.  I'd understand if Ted Segal and the new owner would want to go a new direction this offseason.  And if the only thing left that will get the fanbase back involved with this team is giving Tab the ax, then it needs to be done.  But it's incredibly short-sighted.

Opinions on why Tab should be let go (with commentary)

  1. He's not a professional coach:  Uh......actually.......he is currently a professional coach.  
  2. You can't give Tab credit for what he did for USMNT-U20, because those players were given to him: That's basically what MLS Coaches do, coach players that are given to them.
  3. He hasn't developed anyone from the academy: It is unreasonable to expect anyone could overhaul a team's youth development in a year and a half.  If he started last year, you won't see any fruits of this labor until 2024 at the earliest.  You aren't going to transform 16-year-olds in one year.  Sorry man.
  4. No one's gotten better under Tab: Griffen Dorsey (22), Sam Junqua (24) Mattias Vera (25), Marko Maric (25), Michael Nelson (26), and Derrick Jones (25) are younger-type guys that have gotten better under Tab.  Fafa Picault (30) is arguably having his best MLS season.  Tyler Pasher and Coco Carrasquilla still have time to grow and improve.  Adam Lundkvist was playing the best LB I've seen him play before he got hurt.  There's 1 player you can actually say regressed this year (Memo) that isn't over the age of 30.

  5. Tab just does the same thing over and over: we've used 5 different starting formations (4-3-3, 4-2-3-1, 4-1-4-1, 4-5-1, 3-4-1-2, 3-5-2). We've used 7 different guys at the #6 (sometimes as a double #6), he's used Memo as a #6, #8, #10, RW and LW.  He's played 2 guys at LB, and started with Boniek Garcia at CB.  Tab's played 5 guys at the #9 (Urruti, Baird, Fafa, Lassiter, Bajamich, and had used Christian Ramirez there before he was sold).  He picked up Griffen Dorsey off the street and threw him in the starting 11, and put Carrasquilla in the lineup before he'd even practiced with the team.  He's tried lots of things.
  6. Tab's constantly changing things:  That's because he's trying to find something that actually wins games.
  7. This roster is has Tab's fingerprints all over it, and we are terrible: Really?  You think, when given the option of attacking players to replace Elis and Manotas, Tab was like: "You know who's bringing the Cup back to Houston?? Maxi Urruti.  Go get him." or "Fafa Picault and Zarek Valentine are the best players at their position in the league.  They are must-haves." I don't, not for a second.  I think Tab probably felt like I did when I was standing at the clearance rack of Old-Navy: Outlet shopping for school clothes.  Well, this stuff is cheap, I only have $20 and I need clothes, so I'll take what I can get.  I was excited when I found something that wasn't overly embarrassing to wear, which wasn't easy because I was 6'4" in the 9th grade (I asked my mom please and she still said no, you go to school to learn not for a fashion show!).  I'm fairly certain there are a few guys (Hadebe, Parker, Jones maybe Carrasquilla) which he pushed Jordan to go after.  The rest was just him trying to find something that worked in the bargain bin.  
  8. (Finally) Tab's in over his head:  That's because this roster isn't going to win anything, regardless of who the coach is.

Why Tab should stay (IMHO):

When Tab was first hired, I actually thought this could be a really good team.  I actually thought with a little luck we could be a playoff team.  I had questions about Keeper, but I thought up top this would be a completely explosive offense.  It actually started off that way.  For those with short memory, the team only lost 3 of Tab's first 12 games.  We won back to back to back against Sporting KC (5:2 on 8/25/2020), Minnesota United (3:0 on 9/02) and Sporting KC again (2:0 on 9/5) before Elis was sold. Since Elis was sold, we haven't been able to replicate anywhere near that level.  We all know the difference-maker Alberth was here, and it's inexcusable that the team sold him with no backup plan.  Elis and Manotas had both made their intentions to leave public before the season started.  


There are 14 players left from last year's 30 (Maric, Lundqvist, Vera, Quintero, Memo, Figueroa, Valentin, Ceren, Lassiter, Boniek, Fuenmayor, Junqua, Lemoin, and Nelson.) 4 of those have been full-time starters this year (Maric, Lundqvist, Vera, Valentin).  In MLS, you can't just go out and buy 26 new guys.  Truthfully, we could have tried to upgrade every single position other than Quintero, which is a nearly impossible task to do.  The "We need to tear it down and start over" squad isn't paying attention.  WE JUST DID THAT.  WE ARE STILL DOING THAT.  Tab may have been a win-now hire, but the "now" situation quickly changed right after he got here.  Regardless, Tab is a guy that you build a culture with, Tab is a guy that you build systematic processes with, and Tab is a guy that can help lead organizational change.  Those things take time.  No coach, and I mean NO COACH on the planet was making the playoffs with this roster.  Maxi Urruti hasn't registered a goal or assist in 3 months, and he's had plenty of opportunities. In fact, over that span, he's had 35 shot attempts, only 8 of which were on target.  What's worse is that once Baird and Pasher went down, the only other options available were Lassiter and Mateo Bajamich.  Lassiter scored a brace in his first game but has 1 goal and 1 assist in his last 41 appearances (covering 1,378 minutes).  Bajamich looks decent at times but also looks completely lost at others.  

Tab has done some head-scratching things with substitutions at times but also has a head-scratching bench.  He has two clones of each other (Corona and Ceren) in the midfield, and neither are going to win a game for you.  Jones has the most upside of anyone there but also makes game-killing mistakes at times.  You want to know why he waits until the 80th minute to sub sometimes?  Because he doesn't trust his bench.  You want to know why he only uses 2/5 subs?  Because he doesn't trust his bench.  And rightfully so.  With Quintero in the starting 11 now, there's not a difference-maker over there unless Pasher is healthy.  I can't find the stat, but I don't believe we've had a substitute come on and score a goal the entire year.  I can't find one.  We've scored 3 goals after the 60th minute the entire year, all of which have come from a person who started the game. Memo isn't a difference-maker, Jones, Corona, Ceren, Lassiter, Bajamich, Boniek, and the rest aren't winning games for you consistently, much less a game.

Instead of tearing down and rebuilding (again), what we need to do is build off this roster.  There are pieces here you can win with.  Hadebe, Parker, Lundqvist, Quintero, Dorsey, Fafa, Pasher, Vera can all be starters on a playoff-caliber team.  Believe it or not, you can make the playoffs with Zarek Valentine starting on your backline, Portland managed to 3 times.  The defense actually improved this year with Zarek starting and playing 2,000+ minutes. BTW, want to know why Zarek plays soo many minutes? Because the only other person on the roster capable of playing RB is currently starting at RW (Dorsey) because there are no legitimate outside options on the right side (especially when Lassiter is playing for Costa Rica or injured).  

Lastly, I've read multiple times from a multitude of people: "We need to finish the job and fire Tab". That's not finishing the job.  Finishing the job would be building a competitive roster.  I would hope we do that before we decide Tab can't coach.  It's been two awful years, it's also been two years of improving the roster from absolute garbage.  16 new players are in tow.  We still need about 6-10 more. The new GM could easily upgrade RB, RW, LW, DM, GK, LB, Striker and 2-3 bench spots.  Tab might not come back next year, but if the new regime decides to give him a chance, I hope they give him a real one.  I love stories where a team grinds their way back to the top.  I'm cautiously pulling for our beloved #ForeverOrange to do it, and I'm still pulling for Tab.

Thanks again for reading, 
#HoldItDown and stay #ForeverOrange

Brian



Sunday, September 26, 2021

After an encouraging run, the Dynamo hit a snag. What does it mean?

 

Two big defensive mistakes, and the inability to put the ball past the keeper.  That's the story of this game.  :54 seconds into the game, our backline fell completely asleep and allowed Robin Lod to run directly behind both of them and chip one past Michael Nelson to go up 1:0.  It wasn't a particularly nice through ball from Franco Fragapane, it wasn't a particularly nice run by Lod.  What allowed Minnesota to break through this early in the game was a lack of pressure on the ball, lack of communication and chemistry by Parker and Hadebe, and a somewhat nice finish by Lod.  Neither of our CB's reacted to the ball, Lod didn't try to do too much with it and placed a perfect left-footed chipper past a sprawling Michael Nelson.  This play somewhat sums up the entire season for the Dynamo.  Other teams do things we apparently can't, and took advantage of a situation that should have never been.  If either Parker or Hadebe reacts, this play never materializes.  If this were Maxi Urruti chipping this shot, the ball ends up in the supporters' section.  This game reflected what has plagued us all season:  the inability to execute.

Goal #2 was a mistake that can't be made.

Parker won the initial ball, then lost it off his back heal leaving it in perfect position for Ethan Finlay to spin and hit into the goal.  Nelson miraculously got a hand on it, and almost kept it out, but Parker has to either control or clear that ball into the stands.  This goal is a perfect example of why we need Goal Line Cameras in MLS.  The ball apparently went over, but there was no angle to conclusively tell whether it completely cleared the line before Zarek punched it out.  It was a tremendous effort by Nelson just to get a hand on it, but a terrible mistake by Parker gifted Minnesota a goal.

There were plenty of opportunities for The Dynamo to equalize:

It took 32 minutes for the Dynamo to finally get a shot on Target.  After Zarek Valentine's left-footer was blocked, he found Quintero all alone on the right side from 15 yards out.  Darwin hit it right at Goal Keeper Tyler Miller who knocked it down and corralled it.  Not to take anything away from Miller, who played really well last night, but his toughest save came on a shot from his own player. It was far from the lone opportunity missed on the night, however, as The Dynamo had 7 chances inside the 18-yard box over the last 30 minutes of play. While none of them were tap-ins, they were all opportunities good teams capitalize on.  What's most frustrating is that two of those came from Darwin Quintero.  Darwin hit them both directly at Miller, who posted 7 saves on the night but never had to move or dive for any of them. Corey Baird and Maxi Urruti had multiple chances last night, and couldn't find the net on any of their opportunities.  While this team is goal efficient this year, what they really are is striker deficient. 

Once Tab threw in extra attackers and switched to 3 in the back, the opportunities came often.  The Dynamo managed the last 9 shots of the game, all except Memo's 30-yard blast coming from within 15 yards.  Fafa and Urruti both had shots from inside 8 yards that failed to get through.  Minnesota has been the best in MLS at keeping balls out of the net at home.  The Loons have only allowed 7 goals at home all season, but this game wasn't about them keeping it out, it was about the Dynamo failure to find the net.  While at times it seemed like there were 25 Powder blue unis out there, and Minnesota is as quick to the ball as any defense in the league, the Dynamo had plenty of opportunities and actually generated more shots than Minnesota on the game (15-12) and more Shots on Target (7-6).  They just never made Tyler Miller work for his saves.

Did we learn anything from this game?

In short, no.  This game showed us what we've known all season long.  With or without Darwin Quintero, this game simply isn't built to beat quality opponents.  This is the worst goal-scoring team in the history of this franchise, and Darwin needs someone reliable at the point of attack that can capitalize on the chances he creates.  The most pressing need moving forward is a striker who can time runs and finish.  It's more vital than upgrading RB, it's more pivotal than finding an upgrade at the defensive midfield, and it's as important as playing Quintero 2,000 minutes or more next year.  If Fafa, Pasher, and Dorsey all return, there are pieces up top that can legitimately play at the MLS level.  The Center Back pairing of Parker and Hadebe is good enough to make the playoffs with.  Adam Lundkvist is a quality MLS left-back, and Mattias Vera is a constant worker and an extremely smart player.  If we are to ever make it out of the MLS doldrums, we have to find a decent striker, and we have to figure out how to pick up points on the road.  

Inside the numbers:

  • Houston currently ranks 2nd worst in MLS in goals/Shot on Target (0.24). Only the Chicago Fire (0.22) are worse.
  • After inserting Darwin Quintero into the lineup, the Dynamo have jumped 3 spots in passing percentage.  They have been second-worst in the league almost all year, slightly ahead of NY Red Bulls.   They currently have a passing percentage of 76.6%, which ranks 4th from the bottom.
  • The Dynamo have also pulled out of last place in possession %.  They have ranked at the bottom of MLS for most of the season, but recently have climbed slightly to 43.6% on the season, ranking them ahead of Nashville SC.
  • After racking up 2,367 minutes on 30 appearances (26 starts) for Yeni Mal'spor, Teenage Hadebe has made 14 starts and played 1,251 minutes for the Dynamo this season.  Hadebe literally didn't have an offseason and after playing a full season came to Houston to play in the brutal heat of the summer.   The season has to be wearing on him, but he's played exceptionally well leading the Dynamo in Areal duels % (72.9%) and ranks 3rd on the Dynamo in Areal Duels won (35) despite playing half as many games as the two in front of him (Tim Parker - 55 in 27 games and Fafa Picalut - 65 in 25 games).  

Next Up:

Houston takes on Vancouver Whitecaps this Wednesday at home (I don't even know what to call our stadium these days.)  Vancouver is one of the worst road teams in MLS, posting a 1-4-7 record on the road. The only MLS team with fewer road wins than Vancouver (1) is Your Houston Dynamo FC (0).  After posting back-to-back home wins last week, Houston is now 5-3-5 at home posting 1.54 PPG in the friendly confines of faded Orange seats.  This is also a 7-1-3 night, so show up and get your $1 dollar dogs at every stand that isn't labeled "Hot Dogs" and your $3 beer from places that aren't labeled beer stands.  The weather is supposed to be nice, and an 8:00 kickoff could be an awesome break to your workweek. Just a heads up, the Astros play Tampa bay at 7:10 as well, so you might want to get there a little early and be ready to fight a little traffic after the game.

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

Brian