Sunday?s result was all Houston Dynamo fans could have hoped for ?- a two-goal lead heading to Kansas City. Thanks to goals on each side of halftime from Adam Moffat and Will Bruin, the Dynamo are in the driver?s seat after one leg of their Eastern Conference semifinal, taking a 2-0 lead over Sporting Kansas City into Wednesday?s match at LiveStrong Park.
The performance was controlling and comprehensive, with a Kansas City team that was held to one shot on goal showing none of the qualities that won them the Eastern Conference. Now, on the brink of a second consecutive elimination at the hands of Dom Kinnear, Sporting head coach Peter Vermes has to go back to the drawing board. Houston seems to have Kansas City figured out.
Man of the Match:?Adam Moffat had no right to score off that kind of shot, one that gave Houston the dreaded first goal. Chasing a goal against a Kinnear-led team puts Kansas City in an especially unenviable?position.
Moffat?s blast was a thing of beauty (and he?s done it before). After getting the ball back from Will Bruin, the Houston midfielder took one touch before letting loose on a wicked half-volley from 30 yards out. With almost no spin, the ball seemed pulled on a string into the left side of Jimmy Nielsen?s goal, the Goalkeeper of the Year favorite left to leap in vain at the game?s first goal.
After his goal scoring heroics, Moffat did his part to lock down the middle. With Kansas City unable to move the ball through Houston?s front six, Sporting?s attacking trio of Graham Zusi, Kei Kamara and C.J. Sapong were non-factors.
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Houston?s pressure turned the tables on Sporting.
Normally it?s Kansas City that makes things uncomfortable for the opposition, with Roger Espinoza leading a pressing game that?s helped Sporting to the league?s best defensive record. Today, however, it was Houston making life miserable for KC, their pressure repeatedly pushing the ball back to KC defenders Aurelien Collin and Matt Besler. With fullbacks Chance Myers and Seth Sinovic too far up the pitch (and accounted for by Boniek Garcia and Brad Davis), KC?s central pair were left with few options. Defensive midfielder Julio Cesar did not doing enough to provide an outlet. With Collin and Besler left with a collection of bad options, KC could never get their attack going.
Compare Houston?s approach with what we saw last night from DC United. True, we?re talking different opponents and different personnel, but DC was too passive defensively. Even before Andy Najar got himself dismissed, New York was able to amble into attack, short passes with little urgency easily making their way through the middle third.
Tonight, Houston took the opposite approach, taking advantage of their home field to build a two-goal lead.
Houston?s two-man midfield worked
For much of the year, Houston played three in the middle, but shortly before the playoffs started, Dominic Kinnear switched back to his preferred 4-4-2 ? two men in the middle. In theory, that would create a disadvantage against Sporting, who play with Espinoza, Cesar and Jacob Petersen in the center. But with Houston?s forwards pressing and Ricardo Clark?s range in front of Adam Moffat, the Dynamo were able to make two-on-three work for them. The extra man along Sporting?s line enabled Houston?s game-defining pressure.
The second goal could change everything
A 1-0 win would have been nice result against the conference champions, but with Will Bruin?s 75th minute goal, Houston takes an imposing lead out of BBVA. With a one-goal lead after one leg, the tendency is to stay the course, not change your approach, and treat the scoreline as if you scored an early goal in a conventional game. Kinnear may elect to take that approach, but a two-goal lead gives him more freedom to change his team and use his practice time preparing to preserve the lead.
Packaged for takeaway
- The teams combined for only three shots on goal, two finding their way to nylon. Kansas City?s only shot came from an impossible angle wide left of Tally Hall?s goal.
- Roger Espinoza showed few ill effects of an ankle injury that hampered him over the season?s last month, though he did leave after 77 minutes.
- When you look to Kansas City?s bench, you see how much they miss Teal Bunbury, the young striker whose season was cut short by a major knee injury. Peter Vermes has few ways to change his team when he needs to chase the game.
- Houston may be without Jermaine Taylor for Wednesday?s second leg. The Jamaican international picked up a knee injury in the first half, and although he tried to go in the second, Andre Hainault had to come on after 55 minutes.
- Calen Carr showed why he?s preferred to Mac Kandji. Kandji may be the more dangerous player, but Carr?s work rate was essential on Sunday. He got the assist on Bruin?s goal.
- If there was one question about Houston coming into the game, it was young right back Kofie Sardokie, particularly given the potential battle with Kei Kamara. Sarkodie acquitted himself nicely, even if Kansas City?s leading scorer had few chances to exploit the matchup.
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