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Soccer Timbers

Takeaways: Portland Timbers 2, San Jose Earthquakes 1

The Portland Timbers went into this game coming off two consecutive wins for the first time all season. Unfortunately for them, they had to play three days after Sunday’s dominant 2-1 win over Austin FC.

In the interim head coach Miles Joseph era, Portland have scored two goals in each of their past five games. The 10 goals in that span is the club’s best run of form this season, by far.

This time, however, the Timbers had to do it with a rotated lineup at home against the seventh-place San Jose Earthquakes.

Bingham, Mosquera, McGraw, Zuparic, Bravo, Paredes (C), Acosta, Evander, Moreno, Boli, Blanco Substitutes: Sulte, Araujo, Mabiala, Miller, Antony, Asprilla, Y. Chara, Loria, Mora

Under their interim coach, the home side has played on the front foot quite a bit more than under his predecessor. This would be no different and led to their most complete performance of the year with a 2-1 win. The scoreline does not show their dominance over the game.

“In the first half, I feel like we controlled a lot of the game, especially with our ability to step into the front half of the field and press them and cause a lot of turnovers,” said Joseph. “We gained possession out of that in the front half of the field which is great. We created a lot of chances off that.”

The Timbers had more possession—51% to 49%—shots, shots on goal, crosses, total passes, and better passing accuracy. The offense ran through the midfield and fullbacks. Evander, Cristhian Parades, and Santiago Moreno ran the show in the first half, with support from Juan David Mosquera and Claudio Bravo. Their combinations and link-up play were a beautiful sight to behold. Still, the final product was not there until stoppage time.

In the last minute of stoppage time, Portland unleashed their counterattack, with Franck Boli leading the charge. Boli played it out wide to Bryan Acosta. The newcomer played the perfect ball across goal to find Paredes for the 1-0 lead.

The second half saw much more of the same for the Timbers.

In the 58th minute, Sebastián Blanco blasted a shot that deflected perfectly to Evander, who calmly finished double the lead to 2-0.

There was one slight hiccup. In the 60th minute, San Jose answered, thanks to a Matthew Hoppe goal off a rebound.

True to the Timbers’ new aggressive style, in the 64th minute, Felipe Mora, Yimmi Chará, and Antony were subbed on for energy and to preserve some legs for Saturday.

Instead of parking the bus, also Joseph subbed on Dairon Asprilla for Moreno and looked for the third goal.

“In the second half we continued, and we refreshed with some exciting players again,” Joseph said. “We were able to get in behind and create some more scoring chances. After we gave up the goal, we didn’t have to sit all the way back and protect ourselves. We still tried to progress and keep it in the front half of the field. Really, really good performance from our guys.”

After one of their best performances of season, the Timbers are now eighth in the Western Conference.

They host a reeling Colorado Rapids next, which will be Portland’s last home game until decision day against the Houston Dynamo.

Rotation?

Given the short turnaround, Joseph was required to rotate his lineup. He started Mosquera, Acosta, Blanco, and Boli in place of Eric Miller, Chará, Asprilla, and Mora.

By making this change, Joseph allows the team to play almost a full first XI on Saturday (except Paredes, due to yellow card accumulation).

Joseph’s willingness to trust depth players will pay dividends for this late run. He has refused to play it safe and prefers to turn on the jets, even late in the game.

Luckily, this will be the last short week the Timbers have the rest of the regular season.

Stay on the front foot!
Photo by Riya Patel.

Even if you are accustomed to playing on the back foot, it’s imperative you come out at home stepping on the gas. The Timbers executed their game plan almost to perfection against San Jose and won quite comfortably.

In the first half, the Timbers outshot the visitors five to one. The second half would see Portland grow into the game even more. They continued to attack nonstop, evidenced by their 14 to five shot advantage. In total, Portland outshot the Earthquakes 19 to six.

Much of their success was found by playing through their midfield and having good width with their wingers and fullbacks.

Joseph specifically praised Joseph and Acosta postgame.

Paredes has flourished under Joseph, who has allowed Paredes to be the box-to-box midfielder that suits his game most. He led the game in touches, chances created, shots, expected goals, completed passes in the final third, tackles, and recoveries.

He has been wearing the captain’s armband while Diego Chará recovers from his appendectomy. This year, he is a crucial influence on the team with his play and leadership.

“Cristhian continues to impress, as always, with his energy,” Joseph said. “His positioning has gotten so much better and his ability to control pockets of space with his possession now. I’m just really happy with him.”

Paredes wasn’t the only midfielder who shined on Wednesday.

Acosta played his best match since he joined Portland and paced the team with the game’s only assist. He also led in passing accuracy with 90.2%, chances created, and tackles won.

Evander scored his team-leading ninth goal of the year and led the team in shots on target, chances created, and crosses.

Joseph has the team playing quick, decisive, and exciting football. This is what fans have wanted to see all season, and it’s finally arrived.

Miles is him

In his six games as interim head coach, Joseph has completely turned Portland’s season around. His era is off to a hot start (4-1-1), and it shows no signs of slowing down.

He has changed the team’s mentality, play, and ambition.

“I think we show more character than before,” said Dario Župarić. “When a team changes the coach, something happens. We’re the same team, same group. But I think we’ve changed mentality.”

A team that was on the brink of being eliminated from the playoffs are now at the door for the postseason.

Portland has now found a clear identity. What has been missing all season has been discovered. The structure is clearly defined, and Joseph is making it work by playing to his team’s strengths.

“We were then able to set some structure into place and define some clear roles with everybody available,” Joseph said. “Now, the guys are seeing things much clearer, and it’s been really nice to watch.”

Key Stats

Portland Timbers xG: 2.13
San Jose xG: 1.27

Shots inside the box: Portland 12, San Jose 5

Touches inside the box: Portland 32, San Jose 23

Another Santiago Moreno Performance: He had five dribbles, three successful dribbles, 17 final third passes, and two fouls won to lead the team.

Underrated, Claudio Bravo: Paced the team with three successful dribbles, three aerial duels, and 13 passes in the final third.

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Soccer Timbers

Takeaways: Portland Timbers 0, Houston Dynamo 5

The Timbers traveled to Houston with the goal to do something different in this last part of the season and, hopefully, get some points.

Nonetheless, the game turned out to be a nightmare only 15 minutes into it.

Starting XI. Credit: Timbers FC
Starting XI. Credit: Timbers FC

The Portland Timbers went back to regular season action after playing in the Leagues Cup. Despite the results, the way they performed in the tournament gave fans hope again that they could have a better end of the season, and maybe push for a playoff spot.

Important absences contributed to the disaster

Without Diego Chará due to yellow card, suspension and without Zac McGraw due to an unspecified illness, Portland suffered defensively once again. Not only were they absent, but also Santiago Moreno and Marvin Loría. The defense looked sloppy, to say the least, and in some parts of the match, it looked nonexistent.

Only five minutes into the game, Claudio Bravo fouled Griffin Dorsey inside the box and Amine Bassi scored from the penalty spot.

After that, Houston kept sending through balls to their forwards that could’ve pretty much ended up in more goals. Not much time passed until the Dynamo scored its second of the night through Nelson Quiñones.

Houston’s third goal was unbelievable with Corey Baird going on a 1v1 with Ivačič after Adalberto Carrasquilla destabilized Portland’s defense with a backheel to Baird. Three goals in 14 minutes.

Things could’ve gotten so much worse at the 37th minute but the wood played for the Timbers when the ball hit the crossbar. But another goal was bound to happen and the Dynamo scored one more before halftime.

After the disaster that was the first half, Giovanni Savaresse changed almost 30% of the team at the start of the second half. One might say it worked because the Timbers stopped leaking so many goals but they didn’t improve enough to be near to scoring, let alone equalize this match.

Houston still had something left in the tank and after 60 minutes of soccer, they scored their fifth tally of the match through Brad Smith. 

Portland couldn’t catch a break in the entire game. The injuries ghost that has haunted the Timbers during the entire season appeared again. Jeroslaw Niezgoda entered the game in the 69th minute but he wasn’t going to stay on the field long. Only six minutes later he had to leave on a stretcher. This meant that the visitors played with one man down for the remainder of the match.

Claudio Bravo, we need to talk mister

Not to point fingers and look for a scapegoat but the performance of some of the Timbers in this game was truly disappointing. How did Claudio Bravo, as a fullback, manage to have zero tackles, zero clearances, zero blocked shots and zero interceptions? 

What is more, he looked as if he was bolted to the floor while Houston was attacking Aljaž Ivačič without merci. It is true that the entire backline did a lazy defending the entire night but Bravo’s attitude and the way he was – or wasn’t – doing his job are unacceptable.

No wonder why he was one of the four players the coach subbed off at halftime.

Bravo is just one example, but there are a lot of players that need to examine themselves and wonder if they’re giving their best to this team.

Who are the Timbers?

After this game it is fair to ask about the identity of this team. That question must be in every single fan’s mind, because Portland has shown multiple personalities this year.

Are they the fun team we saw in the Leagues Cup? Or are they the team that always can’t find the final pass? Are they the promising team that fights the entire match but ends up losing in the end? Or are they this pale version with no defensive skills whatsoever and no attack?

We don’t have the answer but one thing is sure: They’re not a reliable team and cannot score consistently even if their lives would depend on it.

“It was definitely a hard match. We need to be realistic: we played a horrible game tonight, and now we just need to look forward and focus on the next match,” said Cristhian Paredes after the game. He couldn’t have put it in better words.

The team had a lot of time to prepare for this match. This road game was supposed to be the Timbers’ final push to get into the playoffs. Fans were even a little hopeful after what they saw in the Leagues Cup, but the Timbers failed them again.

Now a playoff spot looks farther and farther away, and the end of their season looks nearer than before.

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Soccer Timbers

Takeaways: Portland Timbers 0, San Jose Earthquakes 0

The Timbers got a scoreless draw against the San José Earthquakes on Saturday night. 

There were some positive points to highlight, although finishing continues to be Portland’s Achilles heel.

David Bingham or Jazzy?

Now that Slovenian goalkeeper Aljaž Ivačič is with his national team, backup goalkeeper David Bingham had the chance to showcase himself. He has done very well in the chances he’s gotten this season.

When comparing both goalkeepers’ stats, you can see that there’s not much difference between these two—at least when we talk about their numbers. So far, Ivačič has played the double amount of games as Bingham, but both have recorded four catches and three punches. Bingham has one more clean sheet than Ivačič, but the Timbers have played better defensively in the last handful of games, so this is a team effort.

It’s Bingham who has done better in terms of saves. He has a 78.3% success rate in this department, while Jazzy has a 69.8%.

What about distribution? The Slovenian has made 361 passes in 12 games—30.1 passes per 90 minutes—with a 47.1% success rate in short passes. He’s completed 32% of long passes. Bingham, on the other hand, has made 181 passes in six matches—putting him at 30.2 passes per 90 minutes—and has a slightly better success rate than Jazzy, completing 57.5% of short passes and 41.5% of long passes.

As you can see, both have been pretty similar in terms of numbers with Bingham being slightly better. The American goalkeeper did well against San José, and he made two incredible saves that helped the team get another clean sheet.

 

Cristhian Paredes continues to be in good form

Ever since Cristhian Paredes came back from injury, he has been one of the best on the field. This match was no exception. He contributed to the attack by creating three chances and helped the team in defense with six tackles—two more than Dario Župarić, who was second in the team. He also registered two clearances, two blocked shots, and two interceptions.

Is good that Paredes is helping so much with the defensive-offensive transition, even more so now that Santiago Moreno has dropped in form a little. He hasn’t been as good as he was some weeks ago and the team needs him to go back to be in his old form.

Good defensive performance

Despite San José being a tough opponent, Portland did well to limit give their space to work in. It is true that the Earthquakes finished the game with 12 shots total, but only two of them went on goal. The most dangerous was the free kick that hit the crossbar and left Bingham’s goalpost shaking.

They feel that they have more support, and by that, I think they feel more comfortable,” said head coach Gio Savarese when asked about Portland’s defensive performance. “The good thing has been the fact that the communication has improved. There’s more talking on the field. Also, the team is fitter. The guys feel strong and we saw that they put in a very strong performance all the way through the end.”

And speaking about strong performances, shout-out to Diego Chará and his 13 recoveries.

Diego Chará's recoveries against San Jose. Source: Opta.
Diego Chará’s recoveries against San Jose. Source: Opta.

With the scoreless draw against San José, the Timbers got their third straight clean sheet and the question is how long will they be able to keep it like that? How will they do defensively against Chicago on Wednesday night?

Good chances, no goals

Portland did well moving the ball in San Jose’s part of the field. They didn’t try to shoot right away, but they made the Earthquakes chase the ball to try to find spaces to get clear shots.

The Timbers also pressed high, which resulted in the home team losing possession many times, especially in the right wing.

But despite the chances created and the pressing and recoveries, Portland just couldn’t change the score. It looks like the final pass or some decisions are not the right ones, and promising looks end up in nothing.

Is the coach concerned about his team not being clinical in the final third? “Today we created the chances,” he said. “Now we just have to put them away. That is the next step, but I’m very content in what I saw from the team in regards to the opportunities and now we have to make sure that we can capitalize on those opportunities.”

And no pointing fingers here, but this counter-attack showed so much promise that it was a waste to finish it in this way.

The xG also indicates the Timbers should’ve scored at least one or two goals, since they finished the game with 1.62 expected goals, to San Jose’s 1.21.

Final thoughts

The Timbers did well against San Jose. It was a convincing performance in so many ways, but they still need to find success in the final third. They’ve managed to score only two goals in their last six games, and that’s just not enough.

Right now they’re in the ninth position of the table, barely hanging on the last playoff spot, and we already have passed the first half of the season. It’s getting real, and Portland needs to start to make stronger performances in the final third and find a way to score more goals ASAP.

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Soccer Timbers

Takeaways: Portland Timbers 0, Seattle Sounders 0

With a must-win mindset, the Portland Timbers traveled to Seattle for a Cascadia Rivalry game. And with the Thorns playing OL Reign later that day, the doubleheader was supposed to be a double party. 

Both the Timbers and Seattle Sounders entered this match off a losses a couple days before, so they wanted to leave that behind and look better against their opponent.

Of course, the intent was there. But neither team could gain control of the game in the first 20 minutes. Portland tried to exploit the left side, with Cristhian Paredes and Evander sending balls to Dairon Asprilla, but Asprilla couldn’t get a shot off.

Quality vs quantity

Although it is true that the Timbers generated the most chances in this game, it was the home team who had the best opportunities to open the score. Not that Seattle created many, but their final xG was 0.35 while the Timbers had an xG of 0.27.

It was Asprilla who could’ve opened the scoring on the counter twice, but missed in his attempts.

The fact that those were the best chances the Timbers could create says a lot.

“I think we did create some moments in the final third. I remember the one with Asprilla, I remember not too many, but two or three,” said Timbers head coach Giovani Savarese about the chances his team created. “We were aggressive with shots. Maybe not so much with crosses. In order to get more players a little bit more into the box, I think what was missing today was a little bit of that final product.”

As shown below, the coach was right. The Timbers were not aggressive with their crosses at all.

Timbers' crosses. Source: Opta.
Timbers’ crosses. Source: Opta.
Cristhian Paredes did everything well

“Our two defensive mids had to go press higher so the space in behind was big, and [Nicolás] Lodeiro kept looking for that space,” said Savarese. “But we always had one player stepping to make sure that we can manage the situation, and they did it very, very well.”

One of those players that stepped in was Cristhian Paredes. The Paraguayan was great in the midfield, winning duels (he was first in the team with 10) and creating chances (he was second after Evander with three).

Midfielder boss. Cristhian Paredes' heat map. Source: Opta
Midfielder boss. Cristhian Paredes’ heat map. Source: Opta

He was also first in tackles with and second in recoveries with 11, after Claudio Bravo.

Cristhian Paredes recoveries. Source: Opta.
Cristhian Paredes recoveries. Source: Opta.
Final thoughts

As much as both teams tried, the match was truly disappointing, and neither club looked good in the final third. Seattle looked even more sterile than the Timbers, and what was supposed to be a big rivalry clash ended up being a dull game without much to celebrate.

But what I think was way more disappointing was to see Seattle fans leaving the stadium after the match finished. It was a doubleheader; they’re supposed to support Seattle soccer, and that includes the women. Shame on you, Sounders fans!

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Soccer Timbers

Takeaways: LAFC 3, Portland Timbers 2

The Timbers forgot how to play soccer in the first 45 minutes, but they got their memory back in the second half. Even if it wasn’t enough for them to come away with a point against LAFC, Saturdays match saw Evander score his first goal as a Timber, and Cristhian Paredes also put his name on the score sheet.

The odds weren’t right

The Timbers went to California searching to spoil the LAFC title party, but they fell short. According to The Analyst, Portland was the underdogs, with only an 18% chance of winning against the MLS reigning champions, and they just couldn’t beat those odds.

LAFC started to move the ball fast and find spaces from the get-go, putting the entire Timbers XI to work to stop the fast transitions. Portland could only break the pressure twice before LAFC scored the first goal of the game

The host showed they can use the half spaces very well, as we could see in the previous play to the goal. It was Kellyn Acosta who sent a long pass through the half-space, full back Juan David Mosquera lost Denis Bouanga, who got to the ball before it went out, forcing Timbers goalkeeper David Bingham to make the save and send the ball to the corner.

Defending set pieces

One of the many weaknesses the Timbers showed in the first half was their defense of set pieces. That’s how Giorgio Chiellini scored the match’s first goal. Justin Rasmussen lost the mark on Chiellini, and the Italian finished with a tap. Marvin Loría and Zac McGraw contributed to the defensive mistake, obstructing one another and favoring the bouncing of the ball toward Chiellini.

Before the end of the first half hour, the hosts could’ve scored their second goal, but the referee deemed it as a foul. This time, Portland double-marked Chiellini, with McGraw helping Rasmussen. It was the latter who couldn’t clear the ball and gave LAFC’s Ryan Hollingshead the chance to tap it and score. Loría was marking him, but for some reason he stopped following Hollingshead closely and let him get to the ball. The visitors had to thank the referee for calling it off.

Not long after that, LAFC had another corner. Bingham got to punch the ball but it fell to Kwadwo Opoku. Santiago Moreno came too aggressively on him, and the referee granted the home team the PK. LAFC star Carlos Vela took it and scored, and it seemed like the Timbers would have a long afternoon.

Set pieces and defensive problems aside, some of the players looked slow when taking decisions. LA was pressing high during the entire first half, and they were taking advantage of turnovers in the midfield, which led to fast transitions in the attack. So, you would expect the Timbers to pass the ball quickly and be aware of their surroundings.

Well, that wasn’t always the case.

Moreno giveaway. Credit: Fox Sports.
Moreno giveaway. Credit: Fox Sports.

We had to wait almost 50 minutes to see a decent chance from Portland in the attack. This started with Rasmussen sending a good service to the far post. Loría headed the ball but goalkeeper John McCarthy reacted quickly and made a save with his chest. The Timbers created one more chance, but weren’t able to finish it.

Starting the second half with a bang

Just seconds after the start of the second half, Vela could’ve scored a brace, but a great tackle by McGraw denied him of the opportunity.

But LAFC was on a mission, and the slowness of some players was this time reflected in Diego Chará, when José Cifuentes stole the ball from him. The turnover led to Portland’s defense being outnumbered and to Opoku scoring. (Fun fact: Opoku was the LAFC player most involved in attacking sequences in 2022, with Vela coming in second, according to Opta.)

Defense outnumbered and bad positioning. Source: Fox Sports
Defense outnumbered and bad positioning. Source: Fox Sports

So yeah, LAFC was actually the one starting their second half with a bang.

The impact of the subs

By 54′, it was obvious the Timbers needed some subs to change the dynamic of the game… and quickly.

Župarić with the giveaway when trying to build from the back. Source: Fox Sports
Župarić with the giveaway when trying to build from the back. Source: Fox Sports

Head coach Gio Savarese moved the bench. Christian Paredes replaced Loría, Larrys Mabiala entered for Moreno, and Claudio Bravo came in for Rasmussen.

The Timbers finally put one in in minute 62 with a fast transition, outnumbering LA’s defense. Paredes showcased nice off-the-ball work, and left the ball to Evander after sucking the attention of LAFC defenders. That made it possible for the Brazilian to shoot, unmarked.

Jarosław Niezgoda didn’t have a good game in the attack. True, no Timber did in the first half, but at the end of his 72 minutes, he registered zero shots on target, zero duels won, and zero chances created, and he barely stepped a foot inside LAFC’s box.

No wonder he was replaced by Nathan Fogaça. The Brazilian didn’t do well in duels or passes—he missed three out of seven passes total and lost nine duels—but he made his presence notorious in the last 10 minutes of the game. After a corner, McCarthy couldn’t get ahold of the ball and left his goal open for Mosquera to score. The defense reacted, but Fogaça kept the ball inside the box and, by doing so, assisted Paredes.

After that, both teams could’ve scored at least one more, but the hosts kept the three points at home.

What Gio said

If anything, the game against Sporting KC showed us Savarese has some decisions to make regarding the Timbers’ starting XI.

The coach spoke about Fogaça, Paredes, and Bravo and what they brought to the game after the LAFC loss. “[Bravo] didn’t look off at all,” Savarese said. “It looked like he was comfortable, and he created a lot of good moments going forward.

“Bravo and Paredes brought a lot of energy into the team,” he said, “and I think that’s also the reason why the team elevated their level at a particular time.”

Claudio Bravo vs LAFC. Credit: Timbers FC
Congrats on your 50 games as a Timber, Claudio Bravo! Credit: Timbers FC

Fogaça surely made a case to be in the starting position next game. “Nathan is competing very well,” Savarese said, “and he’s putting himself in a situation that he’s pushing me to get more playing time.”

It is true that the Timbers were missing Sebastián Blanco, Dairon Asprilla, Felipe Mora, and Yimmy Chará, but part of the coach’s job is to find a way for the team to work without them. And this game against LAFC showed that maybe there’s a way for Savarese to do so.

Two of the things to look at are the style and system of play. “We pressed completely differently,” Saverese said. “We pressed 4-4-2 last game. We played more with a 4-3-3 [in this game] that ended up being with five midfielders. That’s why we changed, to be a little more aggressive, to press a little bit higher.”