We’re going to call two wins a streak

Yeah, yeah.  It’s been a while, and I’m a horrible blogger.  Luckily for you, my absence has coincided with a run of results that can’t help but make you feel happy inside.  Additionally, I got a lot of mileage from DC being horrible, so them winning kind of sapped my creative impulse.  But it appears this team has decided to be watchable now, so I must find the wherewithal to go on.

Tonight, at 10 freakin 30 EST, DC takes on the impressive San Jose Earthquakes.  DC flies into this buzzsaw with one true centerback, having to cobble together the remaining backline from Chris Korb, Robbie Russell, and Perry Kitchen.  For the first time this year, the injury to Ethan White has hurt this team, as this would have been the perfect opportunity for White to deputize.  Additionally, Conor Shanosky would have been another CB to fill in, but he is on loan to the Ft. Lauderdale Strikers and getting major minutes for the NASL side.

Hopefully, Dwayne De Rosario continues his dominance of his former teams, and DC can outscore the proficient San Jose offense, while scrambling at the back to try to keep the team’s head above water.  Ben Olsen will probably roll with the same lineup (aside from injuries) tonight, although he may look to give Bill Hamid another hack at the starting job.

My prediction:

Hamid-Woolard, McDonald, Kitchen, Russell- Najar, Saragosa, DeRosario, DeLeon- Santos, Pontius.

DC 3- SJ 2 (Pontius, De Rosario, DeLeon)

Recap: DC United 0, Seattle Sounders 0

6 Word Novel Recap: “ZZZ ZZZ ZZZ, Off the post!”

The thing that came to mind as I watched this game from my new favorite section of 303 was that Sigi had turned on Team Pressing on high, and moved them to the very defensive setting on Fifa.  United players had 0.5 second on the ball before they were attacked with flying arms and legs, and the United players would usually oblige and give up the ball.

Luckily for DC, Seattle looked about as lost as they did in the final third.  The game was basically, “Long ball, interception, short pass, foul, free kick, interception, bad pass, throw in.”  At one point, there was a scrum in front of Seattle’s goal and my wife said that it looked like a youth soccer pack.  It really did.

The post was probably Inanimate Object of the Match, with two saves.  Hamdi Salihi, who I’m really gonna need to start scoring because I like him so much, had a square ball from Nick DeLeon to put in, but rung the top of the crossbar.  If I’m picking nits, the ball was a little behind him, but if you’re a goal scorer, that’s gotta be in the net.

Mr. Marc Burch, who was booed emphatically when he entered the game at the end, almost played the villain to a tee, when his header smacked the bar.  That would have been the most bitter pill imaginable, so lucky for us all, that’s not the narrative this AM.

PLAYER RATINGS

Joe Willis: 6

Wasn’t called on too often, but did a good job at stopping crosses and directing his defense.  He finally got a little rowdy on the field, which it a good thing to see.

Daniel Woolard: 6

He got called out, and for the most part, he met the challenge.  Although in Woolard’s case, meeting the challenge is not making any giant mistakes.

Dejan Jakovic: 7

Man of the match for me, Jakovic shut down Freddy Montero, received the silliest yellow card I’ve seen so far this season for a tackle, and made me forget about Brandon McDonald for 90 minutes.  As an aside, after the silliness of McDonalds suspension for a yellow card last week, I’m wondering if Jakovic can get his yellow overturned for what was clearly a ball first tackle?

Emiliano Dudar: 6

The thing I still get from Dudar is that he’s tall, and he likes to go up for corners.  I’m always afraid that he’s going to kick someone in the box, but he hasn’t validated that fear.  Yet.

Robbie Russell: 5

Yeah, this is getting to be a problem.  Russell, who I assumed was going to be a massive upgrade to the defense has looked really, really old and out of his depth at time.  He came off with a knock in the second half, replaced by Chris Korb, so it remains to be seen what his outlook is for next week.  However, Korb is not really an upgrade.  Aside from our centerbacks, our outside back options look like what happens when you spend all your money on forwards in MLS Fantasy.

Perry Kitchen: 4

I thought Perry had an awful game passing the ball.  His pass completion had to be around 50% (Edit: 31 passes completed, 19 intercepted.  Not great) and he looked off the pace a bit.  Perry needs a rest.

Dwayne De Rosario: 4

Part of this was a function of Alonso’s defense, but De Ro looked baaaaad last night.  Wasn’t on the same page with his teammates, wasn’t creating his own chances.  Just looked completely neutralized.

Danny Cruz: 6

I could watch this guy play every week.  100 MPH all the time, and he also has some skill.  Imagine if Andy had his engine….

Nick DeLeon: 5

A step down from last week, as I think Seattle game planned for him better than Dallas did.  Wasn’t awful, just not impactful.

Hamdi Salihi: 5

As mentioned before, I need Hamdi to score.  He didn’t, again.

Maicon Santos: 5

He was always going to have this game after he exploded in Dallas.  He held the ball up excellently, though.  So, good job Maicon!

SUBS

Branko Boskovic: 5

I thought he did better this time than he has in his previous substitute appearances.  I say that because you were actually aware of his presence last night, and that can’t always be said.  One thing I do not understand is that once he starts the attack, he will just stand near the center circle, with no effort to get into the attack.  Not a fan.

Chris Pontius: Meh

Chris Korb: Meh

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McDonald gets suspended for a yellow card…

I was fired up to write about this, but the Chest Rockwell beat me to it, and made my points.

 

The quick and dirty of it all is McDonald got a yellow card for a slightly “vigorous” tackle in last week’s game against Chivas.  The referee saw the foul, and judged it to be just a yellow card offense.  MLS has decided that regardless of what the guy (who’s job it is to make these decisions) says, McDonald needs additional punishment.

Conspiratorially, I think that has more to do with punishing McDonald for the swearing at the referee on a nationally televised game.  Same for Danny Cruz’s fine, which was said to be for simulation.  He was yelling at the linesman all game.  So, I think that has more to do with MLS saying, “Hey, stop sullying our image on the national stage.”  What do you think about my theory?

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Reaction: DC United 0, Vancouver Whitecaps 0

Six Word Novel Recap: “Not good, not bad, but better.”

 

DC United went to BC Place with one goal in mind (probably).  Don’t lose.

After starting the season 0-2, albeit to very strong competition, United was facing the undefeated Whitecaps at home, who had yet to concede a goal so far this year.  Well, they still haven’t, but at least United destroyed the bagel in the points column.

No one watching would confuse this game with beautiful soccer.  Between the still gelling United team, and the seemingly bumped turf at BC Place, this game seem poised to offer goals only in transition or set pieces and not in slow build up.  The chances that came were just that, and DC looked eminently beatable on the counter (as noted by Fullback Files).  United must work harder to get back when they lose possession in the attacking third or else it could be a long season.

Ben Olsen made a few changes again, still looking for his magic formula for victory.  Woolard took over for the ineffectual Korb, and did an excellent job.  Still no Boskovic, with Olsen preferring the rookie Nick DeLeon to start on the left side.  Boskovic came on as a sub in the second half and had some nice passes and some bad passes.  As I said to someone else, you can see Boskovic is rusty and not match fit, but you’re paying him a lot and the only way to become match fit is to play full matches.

Player Ratings:

Willis 6:  Hard to rate someone who doesn’t have to face any shots on goal.  He gets a point for almost concussing himself but staying in the game.

Woolard 8:  Probably his best game for United.  Was all over the field, shutting stuff down.  Seeing Woolard in the midfield making tackles in stoppage time might have been THE definitive BEN OLSEN TEAM MOMENT.

McDonald 6: Solid, did his thing.

Dudar 7: I love this giant Argentine.  Astute pickup by the brain trust, as he is winning headers and stealing the ball off of forward’s feet.  He needs to be a little less Bambi-on-ice in the attacking box though.

Russell 5:  I really thought this guy would be awesome for United.  And he really hasn’t been, at least to my eyes.  He also has no one REALLY challenging him for time.

Saragosa 5:  Bite, etc.

DeLeon 6:  Moments of skill, moments of excessive skill leading to suboptimal outcomes.  Will be a good player for United, not ready to start IMO.

Cruz 5:  He ran around a lot.  He committed some fouls.

DeRosario 6:  Aside from Salihi’s header, DeRo had the lion’s share of DCU scoring opportunties, and by that, I mean he had two scoring opportunities.  Still not MVPDERO yet.

Santos 4:  NO MAS SANTOS.  NO MAS.

Salihi 5:  Hard to rate someone who doesn’t get service, but he had two chances, one of them stopped only by quasi divine intervention.  Starting to think that maybe United shouldn’t buy forwards that don’t create their own chances.

SUBS

Boskovic 5:  You know that I love Boskovic, for whatever reason.  But he needs lots of game time to be effective, and right now, he is neither effective or playing a lot.  Olsen appears to not have the patience to let Branko get his feet wet, so Bosko will have to bear down in training.  Either that, or he’ll be free to return to Austria in July.

Wolff NA:  Well, we know he’s still on the team.

Pontius 5:  Did the same as Cruz, wasn’t very noticeable.

Thoughts?

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