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Soccer Timbers

Takeaways: Portland Timbers 3, Vancouver Whitecaps 1

After losing to the Whitecaps 0-1 in Vancouver in April, the Portland Timbers had revenge on their mind when they hosted one of their Cascadia rivals Saturday.

In the previous matchup, the Timbers were outmatched, overwhelmed, and shorthanded. But this time, Portland got their sweet revenge, with a 3-1 win in their most complete performance of the year.

Timbers head coach Gio Savarese was very pleased with his team’s performance.

“Very important win for many, many reasons,” said Savarese. “Three points. Cascadia Cup. Home game. Then we performed very well.”

Still, he said, “I think we can still progress, we can still get better. There’s areas that we have to continue to work, but I think the first 20 minutes and the entire second half, I thought we were very, very good.”

In the second minute, Franck Boli broke out of his scoring drought to put Portland on the board first.

The Timbers continued to create chances after the opening goal, with combination play between Juan David Mosquera, Santi Moreno, and Evander putting another one away in the 18th minute.

This was some of their finest work all year.

This team has been clicking offensively for weeks, and it showed off big time. Portland outshot and had more shots on target than Vancouver, putting up 13 and seven to the Whitecaps’ seven and four, respectively.

Unfortunately in the 24th minute, Zac McGraw went for a clearance that turned into an own goal.

In the 54th minute, Evander put on a insane move to freeze his defender and then ripped a shot for Portland’s third goal for the final score.

This was his best game as a Timber, and he has let the entire MLS know, too.

The Evander Show
Photo Credit: Kris Lattimore

After early struggles with form and injury, Evander has played his best ball the past few weeks. He is playing with tons of confidence, his decision making is so much quicker, and his passing has been very crisp. This is the exact player general manager Ned Grabavoy and  Savarese wanted to sign.

Evander is one of the most in form players in MLS right now, and the Timbers are steadily climbing the table thanks to his contributions.

The Portland Timbers are playing their best football of the season, which happens to coincide with his best run of play.

Is that a coincidence? Absolutely not.

“I was going for the hat trick,” said Evander. “Of course, not doing crazy things, but I wanted one more opportunity for a goal. I knew that nobody [on the Timbers] has scored a hat trick in an MLS competition, and I wanted to be the first, but I’ll have to wait till the next opportunity.

Still, he was pleased with his team’s performance. “I think this shows us how good we are” he said, “how good we are when we play together and as a team… When we play together, when we are compact and play soccer and enjoy the game, things become much easier. The win today gives us more confidence for the rest of the season.”

All You Gotta Do is BOLIeve
Photo Credit: Kris Lattimore

Boli scored his first goal for Portland in his Timbers debut. Since then, he has been hungry for his second.

His work rate and comfort level has been steadily climbing in the past couple weeks.

“I am a striker. I create goals. Last game I wanted to score so bad, I missed some goals and got angry,” said Boli. “But you’ve got to try again.

“I’m very happy to score today and also that the team won,” he said. “That’s even more important than my goal. As a striker, you want to score every time and I’m happy about that.”

Boli has continued to be get more comfortable with the team and league.

“He’s getting to understand the league,” said Savarese. “He’s getting to feel more chemistry, and he’s getting fitter as well.

“You saw his movements today,” Savarese said. “Now he knows how to move around the defenders because they’re physical here in MLS. He needs to understand how to find good areas in order to make sure to be in good places to get the ball. He created some very good moments, attacking-wise.”

Fun stats
  • xG: Portland 1.15, Vancouver 0.59
  • Evander led the team in shots, shots on goal, and goals.
  • Santiago Moreno paced the team in chances created, successful dribbles, and completed passes in the final third.
  • Juan David Mosquera had the most touches, crosses attempted, completed passes on the team.
  • Dario Zuparic was stout in defense with 10 recoveries and seven aerial duels won.
  • Diego Chará made his 350th MLS appearance.

 

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Soccer Timbers

U.S. Open Cup Takeaways: Timbers 3, RSL 4

The Portland Timbers hosted Real Salt Lake in the fourth round of the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup, with a spot in the final 16 up for grabs.

This game had end to end action, limited amounts of defending, and a bunch of fireworks.

In total, seven goals were scored, with RSL coming out on top 4-3 at Providence Park and eliminating Portland from the next round of the tournament.

Timbers head coach Gio Savarese was very honest with his post match thoughts. “We allowed them to score four goals at home,” he said, “which is not good. And the way we sometimes allow those moments to happen, we need to have a little bit more maturity.

But, he said, “It’s good for some of the players that don’t have that many minutes to be able to come and play. That makes them better, that makes them stronger, that makes them more available to be able to compete and ready to play. ”

Noel Caliskan – T2 Promotion to T1
Photo Credit: Kris Lattimore

Noel Caliskan was selected 15th overall in the 2023 MLS SuperDraft out of Loyola Marymount University.

He signed his first professional contract with Timbers 2 ahead of the 2023 season. In four appearances with T2, he has scored three goals.

After a strong performance in Portland’s 3-1 win over Orange County in the third round of the U.S. Open Cup, the Timbers rewarded Caliskan with a promotion to the senior team.

On April 28, the club announced that he signed a contract for the 2023 season with options in 2024 and 2025.

Caliskan moved from Germany to the United States to pursue his dreams of becoming a professional footballer.

“It’s obviously an honor,” Caliskan said. “I came to the US with a dream to pursue my career, be a pro and to finally make it and play with the like of [Sebastián Blanco], Eric [Miller], Diego [Chará], big names and MLS legends. It’s an honor to share the locker room with them and to share the field with every day.”

On Wednesday, he was one the bright spots in the team’s home loss. Caliskan recorded two assists and showed off his talent.

Gio Savarese gave Caliskan positive remarks for his performance.

“He was one of the mature guys on the field,” Savarese said. “He did really well. He managed things excellent and endured the match very well. With the ball he gave us what we needed.

“We saw how he pressed on top to create a moment for [Blanco] to score,” he said, “and how great of a moment it is for Seba to score, too.”

With the team shorthanded in midfield, Caliskan has a chance to make a difference for the Portland Timbers this season.

Sebastian Blanco scores his first goal since injury comeback
Photo Credit: Kris Lattimore

Seba made his second start since his return from injury and gave the Timbers the early lead with his goal.

Just having him back is a boost to the team. He continues to get better with each appearance. A healthy Blanco will be crucial to Portland’s playoff chances.

Defense?
Photo Credit: Kris Lattimore

“Losing this game at home, allowing four goals after we scored three is no good,” said Savarese. “We talked about it in the locker room and the guys take the responsibility and now we continue to work.” 

The backline of Pablo Bonilla, Larrys Mabiala, Tyler Clegg, and Justin Rasmussen had many positives from the game, but there were many moments they would like back.

Scoring three goals and not winning at home is a tough pill to swallow.

The Timbers can put together a good starting backline in Juan David Mosquera, Dario Zuparic, Zac McGraw, and Claudio Bravo. Beyond that, as Wednesday showed, it is a concern if any of them are unavailable for any reason.

The defense, especially the backline, will decide how this season goes.

Key Stats
  • Portland had the advantage over RSL for xG: 2.02 to 1.62
  • Marvin Loría led the team with 5 chances created, crosses attempted, and completed passes in final third.
  • Victor Griffith paced the Timbers with three shots
  • Noel Caliskan led Portland in assists and completed passes in the final third.
  • Tyler Clegg won the most tackles for the team
  • Larrys Mabiala had the most completed passes and recoveries
  • The Timbers statically dominated almost every category offensively against Real Salt Lake
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Soccer Timbers

Takeaways: Portland Timbers 2, Austin FC 2

The Timbers got a draw at home on Saturday night.

After winning on the road against St. Louis, it looked like Portland would be more than capable of getting another three points at home, but Austin came up from behind twice and got the equalizer in stoppage time.

The one that got away? Let’s analyze the game and see.

Some changes in the lineup

Timbers head coach Gio Savarese had to make changes in the starting XI after the game against St. Louis. David Ayala was among the absentees (ICYMI, Ayala’s season is over after tearing his ACL. The Rose City Review wishes him the best in his recovery process.)

Center-back Zac McGraw also missed the game due to an accumulation of yellow cards, and defender Eric Miller was out due to health and safety protocols.

Given these absences, Larrys Mabiala, Claudio Bravo, and Christian Paredes were on the field from the start. This match had two defenders scoring and Evander having another great game and distributing the ball from the midfield.

Timbers missing chances

It is safe to say that Franck Boli was the hero over a month ago, when he scored the equalizing goal against Dallas FC in the dying minutes of that game.

Boli got the start in this match, but despite a number of the clear chances, he couldn’t put any in the back of the net.

Nonetheless, despite Boli’s misses, the most clear chance of the first half happened in the ninth minute. This chance, which Juan David Mosquera missed, had the highest xG of all of Portland’s shots—12.54%, according to Opta. Props to him for pressing high to recover the ball in the first place and then stay engaged in the play, nonetheless.

In the absence of McGraw

McGraw has cemented his spot in the Timbers’ starting XI, and his absence was felt. And although it is true that Mabiala was the one marking Will Bruin and ergo, let him head that ball to tie the game in stoppage time, there wasn’t much more Mabiala could’ve done.

If we look at the video below, the problem is actually before the cross. Diego Chará lets Ethan Finlay turn, and Finlay passes the ball to Owen Wolff, who ended up serving that ball to the far post. These kinds of dangerous crosses have a high probability of putting a team in trouble when they defend in a high zone like the Timbers did in the last minutes of the match.

“It was too many crosses in the last 15-20 minutes,” Timbers center-back Dario Župarić said. “It’s not easy to play one-v-one inside the box. The guy who scored [Bruin], he’s really good with his head, and he always scores goals like that. It wasn’t easy to mark him.

“First, we need to prevent that cross,” Župarić said, “and then I think Larrys [Mabiala] stayed with him. It was a perfect ball and he scored the goal. If I was in Larrys’ position, I think I would stay the same as he stayed. For me, he marked [Bruin] good.”

Still, Mabiala’s stats for this game are pretty good. He was first in duels and aerial duels won, as well as in clearances and interceptions. And he was third in passing accuracy after Župarić and D. Chará.

Larrys Mabiala's heat map. Source: Opta
Larrys Mabiala’s heat map. Source: Opta
Evander keeps making an impact

After being included in the Week 10 MLS’ Best XI, Evander showed once again why he’s one of the players to watch in Portland.

 “I think we can all concur in the fact that every game he is getting better,” Savarese said. “We’ve seen that he’s getting more comfortable, he’s getting better, he’s looking more for the ball, he’s looking to be the person that is dictating the ball and that is managing the situations a little bit better. We see that he’s adapting to the league. We saw a couple of moments where he found good spaces toward the end in order to hurt them and increase opportunities.

“I think we see every game something better from him,” Savarese said, “so it’s good.”

Evander might have not had shots on goal against Austin, but he created three chances in the match—the same amount as the rest of the team—and two of those were the assists that led to Župarić and Claudio Bravo’s goals. The Brazilian also registered three successful crosses.

All that made him worthy of being included in the MLS Team of the Matchday Bench for Matchday 11.

 

Župarić scores his second goal in three years

The opening goal of this match was great. Evander’s ball was exquisite, and the header by the Croatian was great. Nonetheless, what he said in the post game press conference was equally good.

“I didn’t know how to celebrate,” Župarić said. “That’s for sure. I’m happy, but unlucky we conceded that goal at the end. I don’t care about my goal. I don’t like scoring goals. I like to keep zero [goals conceded]. I just closed my eyes and scored the goal. I don’t do that often, but it happened. I don’t like to score goals. For me, it’s important to win the game and we need to think about that to win games.”

Župarić also got a knock from an opponent’s knee, and everyone was concerned about him. He was the opposite. “I like that,” said about the knock. “I like to be a fighter and get some kicks on my head. When I see blood on my arms and on my shirt, I was happy.”

What can we say? The guy is certainly a warrior.

The verdict

Coach Savarese shared some very interesting thoughts after the game. One of those things was that they left the game “lingering at the end.” The Timbers couldn’t close the game. They didn’t play smart defensively and kept letting Austin cross balls until they found the one that Bruin headed.

It was a true shame that made feel this draw like a loss. That’s also why the coach also said that they need to be more pragmatic and manage moments a little better.

After winning against Seattle and St. Louis, it was expected for them to get three points at home against a team that is at the bottom of the table.

Of course, Portland had their good moments and we could say that in way they overperformed (they had a xG= 0.78 and scored two goals nonetheless) but still. The Timbers cenrtainly let this one got away.

Despite the Timbers playing better than before, they’re still wasting opportunities and letting points slip away due to a lack of concentration.

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Soccer Timbers

Takeaways: Portland Timbers 2, St. Louis 1

After playing in the U.S. Open Cup during the week, the Timbers hit the road again Saturday to play against St. Louis. It seems like Portland is not afraid to go against tough teams this year; they beat the first and second clubs in the Western Conference table during April, starting with Seattle and finishing with St. Louis.

This win by Portland was special for the Western Conference, since the Timbers were the only team from it to win in week 10 of MLS play.

Even though both teams didn’t show much in the attack, the visitors were the ones who dominated the ball in the first part of the first half. It was a little weird to see, since most of the time, the Timbers are used to playing off the ball and making counterattacks.

By the end of the first half, all stats were pretty even, but Portland was slightly stronger than St. Louis in the final third.

Despite the Timbers’ decent half, they suffered a big blow when David Ayala got injured at the 19′ mark. The midfielder was marking Eduard Löwen when he hurt his knee, trying to close Löwen’s passing lanes near the box. The Argentinian had to leave the field on a stretcher.

Christian Paredes, the super sub

Although Ayala’s injury was awful to witness, it was nice to see the game Christian Paredes had. He subbed in in the 21st minute for Ayala, and he started to win aerial duels and create chances right from the start.

Paredes’ second half was even better. He was the player with the most chances created with five. Too bad Portland couldn’t convert more of them.

Besides chances created, Paredes was good in duels. He won seven total—the second-most second on the team.

Who was the first in this department?

Santiago Moreno, the unsung hero

Santiago Moreno finished the match with a total of 12 duels won. The Colombian had another game good game, contributing to both Timbers’ goals. In the first one, he sent this (below) great ball to Franck Boli. The forward couldn’t convert, but the play led to the penalty kick that gave Portland the lead.

Not only that, Moreno he held the ball and left three defenders behind in the look that led to Yimmi Chará’s winning goal:

 

Defensively, Moreno contributed with five tackles, the most of any player on the team. He was also strong in aerial duels with four. (The only Timber who won more aerial duels than him was Zac McGraw with five.)

Moreno has been instrumental all this time for the team, but for some reason, he hasn’t been recognized as much as he should.

Someone who has indeed been watched and under the microscope, on the other hand, is been Portland’s midfielder Evander.

Evander gets included in the MLS week’s best XI

The Brazilian has been trying to adapt to a new team in a new league this season. That is without mentioning the fact that he has been battling with injuries. It looked like he found some rhythm this week.

In the game against St. Louis, Evander registered seven shots (two on target, four off target, and one blocked) and one goal, the most shots any Timber attempted. Besides that, he created one chance and was second in the team in interceptions with three, after McGraw.

Evander's shots. Source: Opta
Evander’s shots. Source: Opta.

I think he has adapted to the change and MLS very well,” Y. Chará said. “I think he will be an important player to us, especially this season. He has a lot of calmness that helps out in the team and will be able to help us out on the field.”

Evander had a good week. Even though he’s coming back from injury, and defense is not really part of his job description, it will be important for him to be better positioned while trying to mark inside the box.

The Timbers cannot afford the luxury of not being smart in defense. Unfortunately, St. Louis’ only goal scored showed exactly that—not only from Evander while he tried to mark Tomáš Ostrák but from the rest of the team, who left space for Célio Pompeu to score.

Welcome back, Yimmi Chará

The Timbers are getting their starters back little-by-little. This game marked the return of the younger Chará: Yimmi.

The Colombian entered the game in the 64th minute and made all the difference in the 82nd, when he finished with a low diagonal shot to score the winning goal.

It was promising to see Chará making an impact the very same day he came back to the field.

I think it’s really nice to come back from the injury,” Chará said. “I have a really nice feeling from being back on the field with the team, scoring a goal, and leaving with three points.”

What the coach said

After the match, head coach Gio Savarese summed up pretty well how the season has been so far and how the game went.

It hasn’t been easy to have so many injuries and trying to keep the team engaged,” he said. “Credit to the players because anyone I put on the field will put up a good fight, is going to be in a lot of work, and everyone has to believe to keep the Portland Timbers stay competitive. So credit to the players for going through all that difficult time.

“We have been close in all matches except the Atlanta second half,” he said. “I think today, with the mature performance we put in, with guys coming back, that can make a difference. With this maturity, we can get good results like we had today. St. Louis is difficult to play against. They are always high-energy. Today was a good day to get a win away from home.”

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Soccer Timbers

U.S. Open Cup Takeaways: Portland Timbers 3, Orange County SC 1

After a tough loss to on Saturday at FC Cincinnati, the Portland Timbers returned home to face USL team Orange County SC in the third round of the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup.

Both teams were coming off 1-2 losses in regular season play and looking for a huge bounce-back game to advance to the fourth round of the tournament. 

The Timbers received huge news and a boost for the encounter. Returning from injury for the was Sebastián Blanco, who would be available to play his first minutes for the club in 2023. 

Three players from Portland’s second team received opportunities to play this game. Tyler Clegg started at center back next to veteran Larrys Mabiala, Noel Caliskan—who today signed a one-year contract with the senior Timbers team—started in midfield, and Víctor Griffith came off the bench.

The first ten minutes saw the visitors outshoot Portland three to zero, but outside of a few shaky moments, Portland was in relative control of the match.

Portland would end up winning the game 3-1, thanks to goals from Marvin Loría in the 37th minute, Clegg in the 48th minute, and Jarosław Niezgoda in the 92nd minute.

Here’s some takeaways from the match.

April 26 2023; Portland, OR, USA; Timbers vs Orange County SC in the US Open Cup at Providence Park. Photo: Craig Mitchelldyer-Portland Timbers
April 26 2023; Portland, OR, USA; Timbers vs Orange County SC in the US Open Cup at Providence Park. Photo: Craig Mitchelldyer – Portland Timbers
The return of Seba!

Blanco is one of the best players in Timbers history. His contributions include 40 goals and 50 assists in his MLS career. He is vital for this team’s success, and his return provided a huge boost.

The star has battled through injury and adversity most of 2022 and at the start of 2023. His pain in the right knee was so excruciating, that it caused him trouble to even walk at certain times. Blanco even had doubts if his comeback was even possible, but giving up was never an option, he said.

“You know me,” he said, “and I never give up. No matter what the people or someone can say to me. If I have the possibility, I will give everything back. I tried to help my team in the minutes that I can do it and what the coach wants also, but I think I have more time for play.”

He played 34 minutes on Wednesday, but just seeing him on the pitch again should bring a smile to every single person.

Blanco, himself, said he was “very happy” to be back. “It was really hard work mentally and physically to get back,” he said. “It wasn’t easy for me, but I was so happy to pass another obstacle and try to help my team in the way that I can do it.”

Congrats on being back on the pitch again, Seba!

T2 stepping up

As discussed earlier, the Timbers made three call-ups prior to the game: Clegg, Caliskan, and Griffith.

Caliskan, 22, was selected in the first round, 15th overall, by the Timbers in the 2023 MLS Superdraft out of Loyola Marymount University.

Clegg, 22, was drafted by Portland in the third round, 85th overall,  of the 2023 MLS Superdraft out of James Madison University.

Griffith, 22, joined the club ahead of the 2022 T2 season. The Panamanian international made his first-team debut as a starter in the 2022 U.S. Open Cup match against LAFC on May 10.

Caliskan and Clegg started against Orange County, while Griffith came off the bench. Center back Clegg headed home a corner kick off a gorgeous cross from Pablo Bonilla in the 48th minute. 

All three T2-ers played major roles, and head coach Gio Savarese was full of praise.

“They played great,” he said. “They were very competitive. Caliskan [played] the entire 90 minutes, plus [and] did very well. Not only with managing a lot of the middle but also with the ball. Then Griffith came in for Paredes… Griffith did a great job. His second game in the U.S. Open Cup for us, and this is good from a club. When you’re able to play these players and they deliver… [Clegg] looked good in the back. He scored his goal.

“These are the exciting moments for us as a club,” Savarese said, “to see players step up and then deliver.”

April 26 2023; Portland, OR, USA; Timbers vs Orange County SC in the US Open Cup at Providence Park. Photo: Craig Mitchelldyer- Portland Timbers
April 26 2023; Portland, OR, USA; Timbers vs Orange County SC in the US Open Cup at Providence Park. Photo: Craig Mitchelldyer – Portland Timbers

Savarese said he could see some of the T2 players making appearances for the senior team later this season. He also credited Shannon Murray, the head coach of T2 for all the work he has done.

Stat zone
  • Portland outshot Orange County 18 to 13.
  • PTFC xG: 1.54, OCSC xG: 0.86
  • Bonilla led the team in crosses attempted, successful dribbles, and chances created.
  • Rasmussen and Caliskan led the team in tackles won.
  • Loría had four shots to lead the team.
  • Mabiala was the team’s leader in touches, passes completed, and possession won.
April 26 2023; Portland, OR, USA; Timbers vs Orange County SC in the US Open Cup at Providence Park. Photo: Craig Mitchelldyer-Portland Timbers
April 26 2023; Portland, OR, USA; Timbers vs Orange County SC in the US Open Cup at Providence Park. Photo: Craig Mitchelldyer-Portland Timbers
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Soccer Timbers

Takeaways: FC Cincinnati 2, Portland Thorns 1

Another week, another Timbers takeaways.

Just when we thought the game against the Seattle Sounders was going to be a turning point in the Timbers’ path to success in the season, Cincinnati got in their way.

Nonetheless, the team showed some positive things despite the loss. Head coach Gio Savarese was absent due to health and safety protocol, and assistant coach Carlos Llamosa replaced him in the dugout.

Not the best of defensive performances

Sadly, left back Claudio Bravo was unavailable after the good game he had against Seattle. His absence was noticeable, with lineup replacement Justin Rasmussen giving away balls in dangerous places of the field that led to Cincinnati’s attacks.

As a matter of fact, the first real chance the home team got came after one of Rasmussen’s mistakes.

The same mistakes were repeated in the second half. In minute 55’ Rasmussen did well to stop Cincinnati’s Brandon Vazquez, but then he missed his mark, and that led to a dangerous cross. Two minutes later, a miss when he trying to clear a ball led to another dangerous cross by Cincinnati.

Of course, the Timbers also suffered defensively as a team, not just because of Rasmussen’s mistakes. 

In the host’s first goal scored, Portland’s center backs left much to be desired. Despite both of them marking Sérgio Santos, Santos got to head the ball sent by Álvaro Barreal.

Near the end of the first half, Portland fell into this defensive trap in the midfield, and chaos ensued. Cincinnati’s look didn’t end in a goal by mere inches.

 

Evander 

A lot has been said about the Brazilian midfielder, despite his not being on the field. After coming back from his injury, Evander is growing back into his more clinical skills, but he showed some interesting touches in this match.

We could see his game awareness during the match, like in this backheel. Evander knew Portland’s David Ayala was behind him, and this play ended up in a shot. The shot was not on frame, but knowing how much the Timbers have struggled to get multiple shots in past games, the slight improvement is still very positive.

The Brazilian also showcased his great services to the box, as he did in minute 14′.

 

Learning to be patient and to take their chances

Portland finally didn’t look bad in the attack in this match, especially in the second half when the team was able to create some very beautiful transitions.

The key was in their patience to move the ball from left to right and vice versa. As a matter of fact, the Timbers created three very nice team build-ups in less than five minutes, from minute 65′ on. 

 

The downside of this was the finishing. Portland wasn’t clinical in the final third, and that showed. “For 90 minutes we created chances,” Llamos said. “We just need to be more clinical in finishing those chances. I think we created problems for this team up top and we started to get in the rhythm. Little by little we’re getting much better in the attack.”

Of course, we don’t expect the Timbers to score every single shot they take, but they definitely need to be more clinical—and more so against a tough team like Cincinnati.

Asprilla is a man with a goal in mind 

After his bicycle goal against Seattle, Dairon Asprilla’s confidence has gone up, up, up. Too bad he couldn’t get this chance right.

Hopefully, he’ll put his name in the scoresheet again next game.

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Soccer Timbers

Takeaways: Portland 4, Seattle 1

Heading into Saturday’s game, the Seattle Sounders were first in the table and were the top scoring team in the West. The Portland Timbers, meanwhile, were 12th in the table and had not won a game since their regular season opener against Sporting KC on February 27. The Timbers were winless in their last six matches.

After losing Eryk Williamson to season ending injury, this team could of continued their downward spiral.

After playing one of their best halves of football, the Portland Timbers looked down and out.

In the 58th minute Sounders superstar Raúl Ruidíaz scored to put the visitors up 1-0.

But all it takes is one moment to change all the momentum. In the 71st minute, Dairon Asprilla scored the MLS goal of the year to tie it at 1-1 with a brilliant bicycle kick.

That goal gave the Portland Timbers a sense of belief and ignited the attack for the first time all season.

Nathan Fogaça gave Portland the 2-1 lead with a beautiful dribble and two touches to get around Sounders defender Yeimar. Seattle Goalkeeper Stefan Frei managed to get a hand on Fogaça’s shot, but it wasn’t enough to stop the ball from going into the back of the net.

Jarosław Niezgoda has struggled to find his form all season and was subbed in the 72nd minute for Franck Boli. Less than 10 minutes later, he put away a rebound to score his first goal of the season.

Juan David Mosquera put the game away in the 89th minute, with a rocket on a quick counter.

The Portland Timbers completed the comeback to win 4-1, with all of their goals scored in the last 20 minutes.

These are the games where we are reminded why we love this game and these players.

Best lineup of the season

Since the season started, Portland has not had their strongest XI. Although Williamson is out for the year, the Timbers had a majority of their first choice squad for the first time.

This starting XI came out on the front foot and outshot Seattle 7-4 in the first half. Unfortunately, they lost control of the game early in the second half.

Once Portland head coach Gio Savarese made substitutions, they regained the upper hand. Many of the Timbers starters for the game are still coming back to full fitness.

When Yimmi Chará returns, they will have all of their first choice starters except Williamson.

The starters played well in the first half, and the substitutes’ fresh legs will give this team a lot of positives moving forward.

Franck Boli starts
Franck Boli made his first start for Portland as they took down Seattle 4-1.Credit: Matthew Wolfe
Franck Boli made his first start for Portland as they took down Seattle 4-1.
Credit: Matthew Wolfe

The Timbers signed Ivorian forward Franck Boli from Hungarian top-flight side Ferencvárosi on March 13.

Boli has been getting up to speed, learning the system, and building a rapport with his new teammates over the past month.

In two sub appearances, he had played 28 total minutes before the Seattle game—including time in which he scored the game tying goal at FC Dallas.

Boli made his first start against the Seattle Sounders.

After the match, Savarese said he was impressed with Boli’s performance and extremely excited to see him with more opportunities. “He started to figure things out,” Savarese said. “You can see the special things that he has. In some moments, you saw how quick he was to get in front of the Seattle defender… He can get in good areas.”

The Timbers head coach believes Boli’s only going to get better with more time to learn the system.

“He has a good understanding of the way we want to play,” said Savarese. “Now it’s about generating the chemistry with the guys. He just arrived. Evander just started to play with him. Some of the guys started to get to know the two of them more and more.”

Forwards can score, too!
Nathan Fogaça scored his first goal of the 2023 season against the Seattle Sounders.Credit: Matthew Wolfe
Nathan scored his first goal of the 2023 season against the Seattle Sounders.
Credit: Matthew Wolfe

The Timbers had only scored six goals in their first seven games. Out of those, each line had contributed two each. The only forwards who had scored prior to the Seattle game were Boli and Tega Ikoba.

That all changed in this game.

Asprilla, Fogaça, and Niezgoda all opened their scoring accounts for the season. If their frontline can continue to produce, this team is going to be scary the rest of the way.

David vs. Goliath

The first place team facing off against the 12th place team. The Sounders went into the game with a +12 goal differential, while Portland was at -6.

Still, the Timbers started off the game on the front foot, outshooting the Sounders in the first half.

At the start of the second half, Seattle could not have started much better. They found the opening goal in the 58th minute and nearly scored again on several occasions.

Seattle’s attacking soccer and ruthless barrages continued, and they kept chasing a second goal.

The Timbers being down a goal with 20 minutes left in the game, things were not looking good to even get a result.

Portland has been beat up all season, but they got up and fought like heck the rest of the way.

Thanks to their forwards, Santi Moreno’s assists, and the return of their dangerous counterattack, Portland was able to take down Goliath.

Shoutouts
JDM celebrates his second goal of the season versus the Seattle Sounders. He continues cement himself as one of the best right backs in MLS. Credit: Matthew Wolfe
JDM celebrates his second goal of the season versus the Seattle Sounders. He continues cement himself as one of the best right backs in MLS.
Credit: Matthew Wolfe

Juan David Mosquera scored his second goal of the season and continues to put in the effort on the defensive end. He led the team in touches, shots, shots on goal, crosses, and possessions won.

Claudio Bravo made a goal-saving intervention in the 39th minute before Jordan Morris could put it in the back of the net. Bravo was near the team lead in a bunch of stats.

The first three goals had Santi Moreno‘s signature all over them. He assisted on the first two goals to Asprilla and Fogaça. On the third goal, he followed up Fogaça’s shot, which allowed Niezgoda to finish it.

Fun stats
  • Portland has now beaten Seattle four consecutive times
  • Portland Timbers xG: 1.38 – Seattle Sounders xG: 1.33
  • Portland had more total shots and shots on goal
    • Portland: 17/8 – Seattle 15/5
  • Diego Chará completed  97.2% of his passes
  • Dario Zuparic led the team with seven aerial duels won
  • Dairon Asprilla also had eight dribbles and six successful dribbles to lead the team.
Coaches’ corner

Savarese on the win: “When you don’t get too many good results, and you’re putting in a lot of work, and you’re trying to manage a lot of things in a difficult way, the way we started—a win like today’s is incredible. It’s amazing, because we needed it. We needed it. We needed the three points; we needed a win like this to feel that we’re capable of competing at the highest level. And we still have some players that need to come back.

“I think with that said, I felt tonight the guys wanted to win. You felt it. And I think, as I said, a goal like Asprilla’s just gives that energy at the end to make sure that the guys just felt that we can win this game.

“Now we have to continue to work. It’s not staying on one game and that’s it. It’s about all the games that are coming, and we need to prepare very well, because now we have Cincinnati. We have the U.S. Open Cup. Then we have to go to St. Louis. We have a difficult schedule, but now with players coming back and finally getting a bench that is full, we can compete to a better level.”

Sounders head coach Brian Schmetzer on his postgame message to the team: “I told them I don’t feel that it’s a rivalry. That’s my initial gut thought. At 1-0, we have to have that killer instinct against a team that has beat us three games in a row, that’s had our number. At their place, stick the knife in, kill the game. I don’t give a shit if it was the second goal or extending possession. After the game, some of our staff members, everybody talking, laughing. It’s like another loss. It’s not another loss; it’s against the Timbers.

“We have to get back to understanding that this is a rivalry. And that’s what I said to everybody. That’s the reflection that I have. It’s not good, it’s not good. We don’t have the killer instinct to put them away. We gave them life; we talked about it, messaged it before the game. They were using this game as a springboard. They have to go to Cincinnati next week. They get a bad result here and have to go to Cincinnati, that could doom them. But we give them life.”

Quote of the night

Asprilla, on if practicing bicycle kicks during practice attributed to his goal: “Yes. I talked to [David] Ayala before the game. ‘You wait for [the] bicycle’. It’s my confidence.”

Categories
Soccer Timbers

Takeaways: Thorns 1, Dash 1

The Thorns dropped their first points of 2023 campaign Friday night against the Houston Dash—but not without a myriad of close chances to earn the win. Since the Dash joined the NWSL in 2014, the Thorns have had an oddly hard time winning outright against Houston at home in Providence Park. In both 2021 and 2022, the Thorns won away in Texas, and lost at home in Portland, and they have already continued their non-winning streak in the 2023 season. 

Luckily, Crystal Dunn seems to hate the Dash as much as I do; she scored her eighth career goal last night, making the Houston the team she has scored on the most in the NWSL. 

Photo by Matthew Wolfe

Statistically, the Thorns were by far the better team on the night. They had 2.84 expected goals to Houston’s 1.47, which came from 22 shots, almost 500 passes, 133 passes inside the final third, and eight corners. So, how did the Thorns, who are currently sitting on a +7 goal differential after two games, only manage one goal? 

The game was won and lost in the final third. An international break that saw Hina Sugita, Rocky Rodríguez, Christine Sinclair, and Natalia Kuikka all go to Europe for games while Sophia Smith, Becky Sauerbrunn, and Dunn played significant minutes in the U.S. was always going to produce a rocky first game back. Thorns fans got their first glimpse at what the team could look like during the World Cup as Reyna Reyes, Olivia Moultrie, and Michele Vasconcelos got their first starts of the season. 

Photo by Matthew Wolfe

When a team scores as much as the Thorns do, their defense is usually overlooked. Against the Dash, who have one of the most threatening front-threes in the league, Portland’s defense was able to hold strong and only allow a combined 11 shots from Diana Ordóñez, Maria Sánchez, and Ebony Salmon. Reyes, this year’s fifth overall draft pick, got her first professional start as right back, placing her up against a fellow Mexican international in Sánchez. Reyes grew into the game during her 45 minutes, showing her quick feet and aggressive overlapping runs with Vasconcelos on the right flank. 

Postgame, Kling complimented Reyes, saying that, “she is super tough and gets in there and tackles. She has a lot of potential, and it was nice to see her get some minutes and have some fun.”

Thorns head coach Mike Norris acknowledged Reyes’ role in the allowed Dash goal. “She wants that moment back,” he said, “but she’ll be good moving forward. I think the first 15, 20 minutes, how she started, she started positively, and she looked comfortable in the environment.” 

With more minutes under her belt, Reyes will be hungry to show her talent and redeem herself for the missed interception. 

Photo by Matthew Wolfe

For me, the player of the match was Kling. She was all over the place, and her link-ups with Morgan Weaver on the left side were incredibly productive at launching Weaver one-on-one against Dash goalkeeper Jane Campbell. If Weaver can increase her shots on target, the partnership will become lethal. Additionally, Kling had 98 touches on the ball—nearly double what the highest Dash player had—seven crosses, and three chances created. She is also a leader, and her postgame analysis was an honest and unbiased reflection of the game.

“There were periods in the game where we lost ourselves a little bit, and when we do that, teams can compete with us,” she said. “I think Houston is a good team. They’re physical, and they’re high pressure. They’re direct, and that’s difficult to combat sometimes when you’re playing on your backfoot. The part that I was really proud of, though, was that the team didn’t stay on the backfoot. We kicked it into gear, got on the front foot again, and started getting after them, getting good chances. And it was a winnable game. We had chances that we could’ve won and put one away in the first half. The thing about us is that we’re never satisfied even when we win; we’re satisfied being unsatisfied. And I think that’s the story of this match.”

While the draw was won on the backline, it was lost in the front line. The majority of substitutions came through the front line, sans Reyes for Kuikka at half, and it was these changes that took the lethal sting out of the game for the Thorns. Olivia Moultrie has a real talent for seeing potential through-balls, but her actual delivery isn’t quite there yet. If she can get her 54% passing accuracy in the final third up, she will be able to fully put Smith, Sugita, and Weaver in on goal. 

Photo by Matthew Wolfe

Vasconcelos will be Mike Norris’ first choice on the wing to fill in for Hina and Soph when they are gone on international duty, and she had flashes of brightness to show that she deserves a valid shot. However, she only had one shot over 64 minutes, which is not quite good enough for a forward. Both Weaver and Smith are high-volume shooters, which usually results in a goal or two for each of them. This tactic is embedded in the Thorns’ recent playing, which regularly sees the team put up over 20 shots. For Vasconcelos to more regularly get that starting position, she needs to start putting up similar numbers to Sugita or Weaver. 

Like Leo said last week, the way the Thorns play during the World Cup will make or break the rest of the season. With more time, players like Moultrie and Reyes will become crucial to winning points during this period. In the meantime however, the Thorns need to practice on tightening up their passes in the final third. With three games this week, they will have plenty of time to try new techniques and improve their chemistry. 

By the way, the new kits are incredibly sick.

Photo by Matthew Wolfe
Categories
Soccer Timbers

Takeaways: Portland Timbers 0, Vancouver Whitecaps 1

Good grief, Charlie Brown! That was a tough game to watch, uh? Bear with me while we break down this Cascadia rivalry game.

After the Timbers got a point against FC Dallas with a last-minute goal, we had some reasons to believe. They defended well as a unit in that match, cutting Dallas’ passing lanes.

Of course, the major and obvious difference between that game and this one against Vancouver is the score, with Portland losing by one in this case. No one on the team was able to provide the Franck Boli heroics of the Dallas match this time around.

How did the defense do?

Head coach Gio Savarese decided to put Justin Rasmussen in the starting XI instead of Claudio Bravo, a surprising decision surprising after Bravo’s strong performance against Dallas.

Rasmussen had an okay game in defense but he lost the ball too many times in the Timbers’ half. In fact, he ranks first in this department with 11 losses. The player from the back line that ranks second in this regard is Zac McGraw, with five.

Nonetheless, he added himself to the attack and is the only Timber that registered a chance created (xA = 0.31), which came from this cross. 

Portland had serious problems trying to create something in the first half, but that changed a little in the second. Still, Rasmussen’s cross was the only real chance the Timbers created for this match.

Savarese referred to it in the post-game press conference. Yes, the buildup wasn’t ideal in the first half,” he said. “But then the second half was completely different. We had more of the ball, we created more than just moments, we had an opportunity to score with [Juan] Mosquera, and we could’ve tied the game. But Vancouver today put us in a lot of trouble, and it was just a difficult game.”

McGraw was once again the player with the most clearances made with 12, followed by Eric Miller with seven.

Jazzy makes an impact

After Aljaž Ivačič’s good performance against Dallas, he polished his work in goal and made a total of 8 saves against Vancouver. 

McGraw praised his teammate’s performance after the match. “He proves day in and day out why the Timber’s offered him a contract extension,” McGraw said. “He made a huge save at the end, where there was a ball over the top, and the second ball the midfielders just popped over our back line. And one-on-one with the keeper and all the pressure is on the attacker in that situation, and he just came out big because statistically, that’s a goal every time. He had great saves in the first ten minutes of the game. Ball went back post and was headered down in the bottom corner, that’s a hard save to make for any goalie in the world and he made that, keeping us in the game.”

For such an outstanding effort, Ivačič was included in the MLS’s Best XI for Week 7:

What about the midfield?

With Eryk Williamson unavailable for this match (more on that in a minute), the Timbers suffered. Williamson is usually one of the few players who can carry the ball from defense to offense effectively—and someone who draws many fouls in the midfield. He and Diego Chará usually complement each other well; while Williamson has the freedom to go forward, Chará covers his back. And of course, the American midfielder creates chances for the team, something few Timbers have proved capable of in this first part of the season.

As a consequence of his absence, Savarese decided to start Diego Gutiérrez. It is true that is not easy to fill Williamson’s shoes, but it is also true that Gutiérrez should’ve been more involved in this match. In the 45 minutes he was on the field, he only made eight passes—and completed six—and touched the ball 13 times, per Opta.

Gutiérrez and Evander's touches maps. Source: Wyscout.
Gutiérrez’s and Evander’s touches maps. Source: Opta.

So, it wasn’t a surprise when the coach decided to put Evander in Gutiérrez’s place. No doubt Portland found more fluidity in the second half because of this. What is more, the Timbers attack leaned heavily to the right, according to Wyscout.

Attacks by flanks and danger level. Source: Wyscout
Attacks by flanks and danger level. Source: Wyscout

If we speak about Chará, he had a consistent game as usual. Among the starting midfielders, he was the one with the biggest percentage of pass completion (84.6% out of 52 passes) and the one who won the most duels, with five. If we talk about his defensive work, he registered three tackles, two interceptions, and one clearance.

Finally, Santiago Moreno didn’t have a performance as good as the one he had against Dallas, but he was okay. Moreno was one of the few who contributed to the attack in this game with a blocked shot (xG = 0.03) and tried to cross the ball once—although unsuccessfully. The thing he has to work on, though, is duels; he attempted 10 and was successful in only one.

A positive thing we can point out here is the return of David Ayala, who came in the second half for Moreno. It was good to see him on the field again, winning duels, winning tackles, and earning fouls.

Attack? What’s that?

I think this pass network says it all, but we still need to say something here.

Timbers' pass network. Source: Wyscout.
Timbers pass network. Source: Wyscout.

Besides Moreno and Juan David Mosquera, none of the Timbers had a shot in the 90+7 minutes of the match. We already pointed out the best chance the Timbers had in the game, but it is true they had some good combinations throughout the game that ended up in nothing thanks to Vancouver defending well in their own box.

We don’t have to downplay the Whitecaps’ good pressing work, which effectively prevented Portland from creating dangerous plays when they tried.

Maybe if the Timbers would’ve played more directly and didn’t try so many passes, they would’ve created more chances. Another choice could’ve been to circulate the ball at a higher tempo, so the opponent’s pressing wouldn’t have been so efficient.

It was no doubt a difficult game for Portland, and Vancouver’s good job was rewarded in minute 74, when Julian Gressel sent a cross that was blocked by Rasmussen. Nonetheless, the rebound fell to him, and Gressel immediately sent a cross again that this time connected with Brian White, who put the ball in the back of the net.

Some news

Considering the way the team has played lately, it is no wonder that the fans are praying for the starters to come back as soon as possible. Fortunately, their prayers have been heard: Sebastián Blanco, Cristhian Paredes, Yimmi Chará, and Marvin Loría were back in training on Tuesday. What is more, Savarese has said that Loría and Paredes will probably be available for the game against Seattle next weekend, according to Oregonian reporter Ryan Clarke.

But not everything is good news. That same day, we found out that Williamson would miss the remainder of the 2023 season due to an ACL injury. The procedure was scheduled for April 12, and he is expected to be out of the fields at least for nine months.

“Eryk is an extremely important component within the team who was performing at a high level again, making it difficult news to accept,” said Timbers general manager Ned Grabavoy. “We will support Eryk both on and off the field during his recovery process, and we are confident that he will make a full recovery in reestablishing himself within the team again next season.”

 

Coming up next…

The rivalry games continue on Saturday, when the Timbers host Seattle Sounders at Providence Park. The game is scheduled to kick off at 7:30 p.m. PT.

Categories
Soccer Timbers

Takeaways: Portland Timbers 1, FC Dallas 1

On Saturday night, the Portland Timbers played FC Dallas in Frisco, Texas. After a good first half by the visitors, the tables turned. The Timbers had to find a solution to a home team that pushed them to the brink of another loss.

Ivačič is back

After goalkeeper David Bingham got injured in the game against LA Galaxy, Aljaž Ivačič had to leave any differences he has with head coach Gio Savarese aside and put on the gloves for the Timbers.

The Slovenian had a good game on Saturday night with some heroic saves (five total), like the one we witnessed at minute 62.

‘Jazzy’ made crucial saves during the entire game that helped the Timbers to stay in the match.

One aspect of his game he has to improve, though, is his distribution. Ivačič attempted a total of 34 passes, and he had a passing accuracy of 35.3%. Granted, the Timbers were playing direct, but still. If that’s the plan, you want the team’s goalkeeper to be more clinical with his passes, right? Out of those 34 passes, 30 were long and only 4 were short, which of course gives more room for inaccuracy. 

Strong defending

If there’s a department where the Timbers are lacking more than others, that’s defense. 

Portland has 11 goals against, the second most in the West conference after Real Salt Lake. So, they needed to revamp in this regard—a complicated task playing on the road, since teams tend to be stronger at home. 

Nonetheless, they did improve against Dallas. We could see how the home team didn’t find proper channels to put the ball on the box, since the Timbers would put many people in the middle while staying organized. This made it possible for them to recover balls and make clearances.

Source: Opta
All 32 Timbers’ clearances. Source: Opta

Zac McGraw continues to be by far the King of Clearances for this team. In this game, alone, he made a total of eight, followed by Dario Župarić with six. And what about this block by McGraw?

The Timbers showed they can dominate if the entire team puts in a defensive effort, as we could see in the first half. The second half was a different story, though. The right side of the field became the preferred flank where Dallas would build its attack and Portland focused so much on the players passing the ball there, that they often missed the one coming from the middle, which became the obvious passing option.

That was how a Dallas goal happened. Thank goodness it was called off due to offside.

The crossbar denies Moreno, but Boli saves the day

The most dangerous and best-attacking sequence in the first half for Portland was undoubtedly the one they created 30 minutes into the match. It was a counter-attack that started and finished with Santi Moreno.

In said play, the team got from one end of the field to the other with just three passes. Sadly, the post denied Moreno.

And after an entire half with Portland in the driver’s seat, things leveled in the second half. Dallas ended up outshooting the Timbers 17 to six, with 11 of those shots happening in the last 45 minutes.

Despite this, Portland kept trying to create chances with fast transitions. That is how a promising counter-attack happened in minute 70. It was three Timbers against the world like it happened in the first half, but the difference was that the team was tired and unlike the first half, the ball ended nowhere near Dallas’ goal.

The home team goal came through a set piece, a corner. Portland tried to clear the ball without success and left five (!) opponents unmarked inside the box. One of them, Facundo Quignon, ended up scoring in the 74th minute.

Source: MLS/Apple TV
Source: MLS/Apple TV

Searching for the equalizer, Juan David Mosquera could’ve scored in the 76′, but the goalkeeper Maarten Paes made a great save.

The subs came in at minute 86 for Portland. With Moreno and Eric Miller out, Larrys Mabiala and Franck Boli got into the match. 

The Timbers had to wait until second half stoppage time to level things up. The play started with Diego Chará sending a long ball to Dairon Asprilla, who was on the right wing. He beat his marker and sent a back pass. Boli was faster than any Dallas player and got to that ball first, hitting a powerful diagonal shot that beat Paes.

The aftermath

“Our substitutions came in at the right time, and they provided what we needed,” said coach Savarese after the game. “After they found the goal, the group had that belief that they could not give up and that they could come back. What a great start for Boli, who came into this game and scored the tying goal that gave us the point.” 

The man of the game, Boli, talked with the press about how the game unfolded. “It was a very interesting match,” he said. “There were a lot of moments and chances for both teams. If we could have finished our chances, we could have won the match, to be honest. It was fun to watch from the sideline. We started well, and once I came in, I knew it was for me to get participation minutes. I am thankful that the coach gave me at least five minutes. I enjoyed it, and I was lucky to be there at the right place and the right time to score the goal and help us get the tie.”

For sure, this was a valuable point gotten away from home, and the fact that the equalizer came after the 90 minute mark made it even better. To be honest, it felt like a win: Portland not only played good soccer most of the match, but now they have reasons to believe. Now they can believe that, despite all the injured players, the men coming from the bench have the key to keep going and find results.

Now, what’s next? It’s rivalry week! Portland will continue their road trip and will face Vancouver at BC Place next Saturday at 7:30 p.m. PT.

Source: Ted Lasso/ Apple TV
Source: Ted Lasso/ Apple TV