Wednesday, February 23, 2022

Houston Dynamo Season Preview: 2022-2023

Major League Soccer Season Preview (2021/2022) – 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 – P.N.C. Stadium


Year Built: 2012
Capacity: 22,039
Attendance: 207.732 (12,220 per match; 18th 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: Paulo Nagamura

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

U.S. Open Cup Result: Cancelled

Playoff Result: Did not qualify.

CONCACAF Champions League Result: Did not qualify.

Additions: Steve Clark, Sebastián Ferreira, Zeca, Brooklyn Raines, Thor Úlfarsson, Daniel Steres, Arturo Ordóñez, Paulo Lima
Losses: Jose Bizama, Kyle Morton, Joe Corona, Ariel Lassiter, Maxi Urruti, Marko Maric, Alejandro Fuenmayor, Erik McCue, Boniek Garcia, Mateo Bajamich, Maynor Figueroa,

2020/2021 Overview: 

In a season that started off with some promise, then quickly went in the tank, there was little to cheer for.  Starting off the season going 3-2-2 with wins over San Jose (2-1, Week 1), Sporting K.C. (1-0, Week 5), and Vancouver (2-1, Week 7), things turned disastrous fairly quickly for Tab Ramos and the entire organization.  Going winless from May 29th - Sept. 3rd (0-8-8), the team dropped from 4th to last and ended the season with 4 straight losses.  While the results on the field left the dwindling fanbase with little to be excited about, major shakeups have brought hope that changes are about to take place.  Ted Segal bought a majority ownership stake of the Dynamo and Dash for $400 million, Matt Jordan was fired and replaced by Pat Onstad, and Tab Ramos' contract was not renewed. 
  

This Winter was a season of major changes:

One of the things that should perk all of our ears up is how the Dynamo made some major structural changes organizationally this winter.  Not only did we change out the GM, but the dividing up of duties with the hiring of a Technical Director, and hiring the Dash their own club President will help lessen the load of GM Pat Onstad.  The most exciting change to me, however, is the formation of the MLS Next-Pro unit, fully staffed, and on-site.  Having your 2nd team line up in the same building, on the same training fields, every single day as your 1st team should solve most of the developmental issues we've seen here over the last decade.  Hopefully, this fully functional and clear pathway from Academy to 1st team should interest more Houston area prospects into joining the Dynamo, and hopefully, we don't lose the Christian Cappis' of the world to F.C. Frisco and Europe in the future.  Another encouraging development this summer is the success of Alberth Elis in France's League 1.  Seeing a player who came here as a 20-year-old, was sold on, and is now succeeding in one of Europe's bigger leagues should be welcoming to young players wanting to come here and develop.  Finding a way to add young players with a high ceiling to some real DP-level talent and a couple of key veterans is one way to begin to turn this roster and this organization around.



2021/2022 Position Outlook:

Goalkeeper:


Steve Clark, Michael Nelson

In one of his first moves as GM, Pat Onstad went out and got himself a keeper.  Last years' combo of Maric (22 starts), Michael Nelson (11 starts), and Nelson (1 start) ranked in the bottom third in the league in Save % (67.3%, 8th worst in MLS), Goals Against (54, tied for 5th worst in MLS), and didn't save a Penalty Kick against the entire year (0-4).  Clark is an experienced vet who is (at least on paper) an obvious upgrade over last year's crew.  Clark's 78% save percentage was good for second in the league despite seeing 110 Shots on Target against in 24 games.  Clark ranked 10th in MLS in number of saves, despite only starting 24 games.   Clark is a winner (36 wins over the last three years), has been part of playoff teams in every MLS season except 1 (2017 D.C. United) and has been a playoff goalkeeper every year as a starter.  While Houston doesn't have the quality of defenders in the back 6 that Portland does, Clark is a quality addition and a step in the right direction towards getting the Dynamo back in playoff contention.


Central Defense:


Tim Parker, Teenage Hadebe, Daniel Steres, Ethan Bartlow, Derrick Jones, Sam Junqua

While the additions of Teenage Hadebe and Tim Paker built a solid backline, the proof didn't show up in results.  Houston's 54 goals against (51 conceded, 3 own goals) was tied for 5th worst in the league. While we did see an uptick in Goals against from 2020 (1.79-1.59) and Shot Creating Actions Against/90 (23.09 - 20.59).  The arrival of Hadebe in June didn't make much of an impact in terms of wins/losses, but all you have to do is watch the guy play.  He's a top-level MLS defender with range and deep ball passing ability.  He goes after the ball with tenacity and  His 4.3 Clearances/90 and his 1.8 interceptions/90 led the team.  Parker wore the captain's armband for much of the year and helped settle a tumultuous backline from the year before.  Both Parker (75.9%) and Hadebe (70.6%) won over 70% of their aerial duels. Bigger expectations are placed on these two, and although they started off great (3 clean sheets in their first 3 games together) and improved XGa (1.68-1.18 through October 20th), the expectation was that these two would help carry the Dynamo into one of the best defenses in the league.  While stopping the ball from going in the net is the responsibility of more than two people, these two have to be better.  I find it interesting that Hadebe gets a lot of blame, and there are people out there saying he's not very good, but Parker gets (for the most part) a pass.  Just compare the two's productivity/90 minutes.  It heavily favors Hadebe in virtually every category.


The two need to stay healthy because behind them there are extremely limited options.  Daniel Steres is a declining MLS player, who has shown little in the offseason to give confidence he could improve the squad, Sam Junqua made strides towards being a solid MLS level player last year, but still makes bad reads on balls and reacts late to runs at times.  Junqua actually led the team in taking on opposing attackers (60% in tackles vs. Dribblers) and his 43 blocks were 2nd on the team, but he also got lost off the ball at times and it led to goals.  Bartlow, last year's 1st round pick in the MLS Super Draft comes with some pedigree of success, and Jones has the size and range to be a quality defender, but neither has played a single MLS minute at the position.  

Full Backs:


Adam Lundkvist, Sam Junqua, Zarek Valentin, Griffen Dorsey, Zeca

Adam Lundkvist is a solid player.  He defends well, has a high work rate, is good with the ball at his feet, and is the team's best crosser from outside the box.  To date, the team is still searching for the compliment on the other side of the field.  We all know Valentin's limitations and that a new RB is needed.  Dorsey has been the answer for most of the pre-season, and you have seen both Austin F.C. and Dallas go directly after him.  Newly acquired José Carlos Cracco Neto (Zeca) will take over one of these spots, the only thing left to figure out is which one. The 5'7" right-footer has played both sides at all stops during his career, including Santos in the Brazillian Serie-A.  At 27 years old and a veteran of both the Brazillian league and national team play, he brings along with him over 10,000 minutes played at high levels of competition.  

Junqua made strides defensively last year and is a solid player going forward, but he lacks the ability to execute in the final third and makes horrendous mistakes off the ball at times, leading to goals.  He has seen almost no time in the pre-season, and I imagine with the arrival of Zeca he and Zarek will be odd-men looking out.  Many are waiting impatiently to see what Zeca brings to the table for the Dynamo. If he can get the ball forward and connect to the players up top, make plays into the box, and defend, we have a piece to add to this group.  If he turns out to be Bizama, who never really fit and never really got a chance, then we are back to square 1 and this is Griffen Dorsey's job to lose.  This group needs to take it to the next level for this team to have any chance of making a jump, both defensively and in the attack.  



Central Midfield: 


Matias Vera, Darwin Ceren, Darrick Jones, Ian Hoffman, Juan Castilla, Coco Carrasquilla, Memo Rodriguez, Marcelo Palomino, Daniel Rios, Darwin Quintero,

The most important part of this team, and the one paid the least attention to in the offseason, the Dynamo will go as far as this group can carry them.  Currently, its a group that doesn't really fit together, doesn't fit any particular style of play and was the downfall (for the most part) of last season.  The problem with this group, as a group, is that they don't do anything particularly well.  They don't protect the backline very well, they don't move the ball downfield very well, they don't break lines with passes very well, they aren't very creative, and they don't play the possession game very well.  Their one-touch passing is sub-par, and their first touch is poor.  Looking at them individually there are guys that can be solid pieces, but together they just don't work.  Mattias Vera is a solid 6, he plays hard,  chases down balls, and is an extremely accurate passer.  Partnered with the right guy in a double pivot formation, he'd be a solid piece.  In a single pivot formation, Vera lacks the range and size to protect the backline.   
This group has a knack for giving the ball away in terrible positions, leading to quick counter-attacking chances by the other team.  As a group, they aren't the fleetest of foot and will lose footraces to most MLS attackers.  The biggest overhaul going forward needs to be in the midfield.  Memo Rodriguez was highly disappointing last year.  After starting for much of the first half of the season, he did little to show he could be a productive everyday midfielder at the MLS level.  While I still believe that Memo can be an important guy on the team, he's not THE guy on the team.  Tab hedged his bets on this belief, and it really came back to bite him.  Coco Carrasquilla shows some flashes but lacks consistency on both sides of the ball.  Too much of the attack has been placed at Darwin Quintero creating for everyone, and the aging #10 wasn't up to the task for much of the year last year.  Darwin was sometimes spectacular for the last 10 games of the season, but for much of the year couldn't find teammates in space or find the back of the net.  For a team that desperately needed goals, he couldn't find them often enough.  

Look for the younger contingent (Castilla, Rios, Hoffman) to spend some time developing with Dynamo II.  I believe we may see some Palomino in the lineup this year.  Palomino had a solid first year as a pro with Charlotte in the USL last year, posting 6 goals and 1 assist in 2,100 minutes played.  He probably needs another full year at that level to truly develop into a productive attacking midfielder, but may get his chance to develop with the first team this year.

Forwards: 


Sebastian Ferreira, Thor Úlfarsson, Fafa Picault, Tyler Pasher, Corey Baird, Griffen Dorsey

Last year before the year even started I asked where the goals would come from.  The Dynamo had their worst goal output in the Franchise's history and were last in MLS with 36 goals scored.  In answer, the front office stepped up and landed the largest transfer in Dynamo history with Sebastian Ferreira, then drafted one of the most productive goal-scorers in the NCAA in Thor Úlfarsson.  Fafa Picault showed he could still be a productive everyday winger last year, with his 11 goals and 4 assists.  Tyler Pasher jumped off to a fabulous start, before losing almost a month playing for the Canadian National Team and injuries cost him more of the season upon return.  Pasher was never the same after his hot start to the first 10 games of the season.  Corey Baird was landed for a large sum of TAM and GAM before also being lost for the end of the season, without scoring a single goal or producing a single assist.  Baird has seen the lion's share of time at RW in the preseason and notched his first goal of the year with a header vs. FC Dallas in the final preseason matchup. Baird is a high-energy player who makes good runs but has shown a declining ability to put the ball in the net over the last few years.  

Sebas can do one thing we sorely lacked last year: finish.  He finds good space in front of the net and can put the ball past the keeper in a variety of ways.  He's shown scoring ability in Liga Mx, and in Paraguay's Primera Division, and should be a major upgrade over Maxi Urruti from a year ago.  My biggest question: Who gives Sebas the service he needs?   Between Fafa and Baird, the ability to stretch the defense and open wholes for Sebas and Quintero should be there.  But can they get him the ball with precision and timing so he can finish off chances?  Of the wing players, I think Tyler Pasher has the best ability to play with Sebas, but he's been mostly off the bench this preseason. 


Head Coach:

Paulo was hired to do two things: (1) Help the Dynamo install a developmental system and mindset at PNC (2) Install a "proactive" approach to play. Pat, Paulo, and Ascher have all referenced this style of approach in press conferences. What does this mean? Attack when the opportunity presents itself, possess when the opportunity exists, and counter when you can.  My question about the hiring is this:  How patient is this fanbase, and (more importantly) the new owner and GM going to be?  We have a young, inexperienced coach and a collection of players who are mismatched to the style we want.  I'm intrigued to see how the team responds to him and to see exactly how he's going to put this collection of players together.  In the preseason, he seems fixed on a 4-3-3 formation, but we've seen multiple variations of it.  Against Austin and Dallas, it was more of a deep-lying 4-3-3 with two of the three midfielders (or at times all three) playing super deep in their defending third.  The plan seemed obvious to play out of the back, build up through quick combo play and timed runs.  It was a disaster on that cold night at PNC, as we couldn't connect more than two or three passes together at a time and couldn't find Quintero in space in the attacking third, and Sebas couldn't find any service inside the penalty box at all.  We saw almost this same style play out last year, as Tab instituted a 4-3-3 with Vera, Jones, and Memo early in the season.  The problems were similar vs. Frisco in the last tune-up game, and the questions remain as to whether Nagamura will continue to try to develop this system, whether the Dynamo can succeed playing this way this year, or will Nagumura try to change tactics in order build some wins.


Paulo Nagamura

Synopsis: 

Pat Onstad and others have all talked about a "Proactive" approach to soccer inside PNC, and I found it interesting the number of articles I dug up from the glory days referencing this exact same mantra. In the early goings of the preseason, it's looked ugly against MLS-level opponents.  While the record isn't terrible, the games against Austin F.C., Toronto F.C.,  and F.C. Frisco were tuff to watch.  The ball movement hasn't been crisp, the off-ball movement hasn't been timed well, and the first touch and possession game has been really poor.

While being "proactive" can be the focus and mindset, the Dynamo don't have the midfield to do it.  I'm not even sure they have the wings to do it, although I think this style of play fits Fafa if we can get the ball to him on the run the way Bayern gets the ball to Leroy Sane and Serge Gnabry in space.  While Lundqvist somewhat fits this style, Zarek Valentine can't go forward well enough, and Griffen Dorsey doesn't defend well enough.  Even if Zeca is the answer they are looking for, the midfield is still a problem. They simply don't have the personnel that fits this style of play.  Last year's team was one of the worst passing teams in MLS, one of the worst possession teams in MLS, and it wasn't simply because of Coaching decisions and style of play.  It was because of the personnel on the field.   The midfield (at least at the time of this writing) hasn't seen a new addition this offseason. This year is going to be an installation year, and one where you should see the team progress as the year goes along.  Hopefully, a change in the style of play will lead to a better product on the field, but I don't see it leading to a better place in the standings, at least not for this year.

Prediction:

If the Dynamo truly try to install a "proactive" approach with this squad, it's going to be a long season.  The squad simply doesn't fulfill this style and doesn't have the horses to do it.  We don't have the midfield to do it, outside backs to do it, and our wingers lack the ball skills and passing ability to be successful.  The midfield is slow, lacks touch, and doesn't connect well up top.  Quintero's creativity isn't going to carry us to a playoff birth and despite the addition of Clark and Sebas, this team isn't equipped to initiate this style of play or contend in the West.  Look for the Dynamo to finish 11th in the West this season.

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