
MNUFC Can't Overcome Early Goals, Falls 3-1 to Seattle
Published on April 22, 2018 under Major League Soccer (MLS)
Minnesota United FC News Release
SEATTLE, Wash., -- Minnesota United returned to the Pacific Northwest a week after facing the Portland Timbers to square off against Seattle Sounders FC at CenturyLink Field. Head Coach Adrian Heath shuffled his lineup, putting in goalkeeper Bobby Shuttleworth in place of Matt Lampson and handing defender Carter Manley his second MLS start after an injury to March Burch last week. After a winless start to the year, Seattle came in hungry and healthier than they've been and left sated with all three points in a 3-1 win despite a stronger second-half showing from the Loons where they had opportunities to draw level.
Minnesota was on the back foot from jump, with Seattle earning its first corner kick in the first minute of the match after Manley went down as the Sounders muscled their way into the box. Midfielder Nicolas Lodeiro's cross found defender Romain Torres' head and Torres fired it straight into the ground and nearly lobbed Shuttleworth but the ball went just over the goal.
The Loons struggled early on to get through the middle of the pitch with Seattle playing very wide in the midfield and effectively shutting down the path to the wings. With forward Abu Danladi getting the nod in the starting XI over Christian Ramirez, it was clear that Head Coach Adrian Heath's plan for the away match was to play aggressive early on, but Danladi struggled to find the gaps, often drifting offside and not presenting much of a threat.
On the other end of the pitch, Seattle tested the defense early and often with multiple forays into the box and long distance shots as well. In the 23rd minute, the Sounders successfully broke down Minnesota's defensive shape with a series of strong possession that ended with a blast from midfielder Gustav Svensson from beyond the box that found the upper left corner. The lead up featured defender Nouhou overlapping deep into the left wing and then playing the ball to midfielder Ozzie Alonso, who played it to Cristian Roldan for an assist out to Svensson.
Seattle's 1-0 lead would be doubled in short order when a streaking Roldan drifted out to the left wing and opened up an angle for a cross to forward Will Bruin, who put a left-footed shot away softly into the bottom left corner to make it 2-0 in the 25th minute.
"It's all desperation football then, because you know if it goes to 3-nil the game is virtually over," said Heath. "Every time you attack and you attack with numbers to try and get back in the game, you leave yourself vulnerable, so it's a conundrum that we have to solve because I know that we can play. I'm not sure is we know at this moment in time how to win. And there's a big difference between playing well and winning games."
In the final 20 minutes of the first half, the Loons began to show signs of life with improved play through the middle getting them better looks in the final third. Their first decent chance came in the 42nd minute when midfielder Darwin Quintero dribbled the ball directly into the teeth of the defense and opened space down the right side for Danladi who couldn't quite settle the ball before firing it and missing wide right. The teams headed to the halftime break with Seattle up 2-0 and winning 56% of the possession, but looking a bit more vulnerable down the stretch.
Heath took off midfielder Ethan Finlay prior to the start of the second half as a precaution following a knock he took in a challenge from Cristian Roldan toward the end of the first half, replacing him with Sam Nicholson. Finlay's exit was followed a few minutes later by Danladi's, also a precaution as he'd gotten his right ankle knocked a couple times. He was replaced by Christian Ramirez.
"I thought Christian did well when he came on," said Heath. "I thought he gave us a bit of life and he can be pleased with what he did."
The lineup change injected further life into a Minnesota offense that had looked more lively at the end of the first half and the Loons got their first decent crack at goal in the 56th minute. Defender Jerome Thiesson crossed the ball from the left wing into the box and found Miguel Ibarra floating off his defender's shoulder. Ibarra headed the ball solidly, but more or less directly at goalkeeper Stefan Frei, who locked it up.
In the 58th minute, Shuttleworth - getting his first start of the year - made back-to-back saves on Cristian Roldan and Bruin in short order to keep the match at 2-0. Minnesota kept the pressure on the offensive side, showing more aggression and initiative. The offense eventually broke through in the 66th minute when Nicholson sent a cross from the left wing to Quintero on the right side and Quintero dinked a pass high over the 6-yard box and found Ramirez waiting on the left side. Ramirez knocked a lofted header onto the far post for his first goal of the year, making it a 2-1 match and giving the Loons a new lease on life.
Over the next 20 minutes, Minnesota continued to threaten, much as they did against Portland last week down the stretch, but once again could not find the breakthrough. Seattle worked to slow the match down and play for possession, a tactic that worked better and better as Minnesota began to tire of throwing themselves forward. The Loons last best chance came in the 89th minute when a cross from the left side drew Frei out of goal. He barely got a hand on it, but it fell to defender Francisco Calvo who couldn't thread the needle between the Seattle defenders and the post as he fired it into the side netting.
Seattle added a third goal at the death when a sloppy turnover gave forward Clint Dempsey and midfielder Jordy Delem a 2-on-1 break that Delem finished for his first MLS goal.
"The problem that we have is that we started so slowly again and I'm honestly at a loss to explain that," said Heath. "We can't speak about it enough, we can't show people enough, and it's the third or fourth time on the road that it's happened and I feel like a broken record. I said it last week, we can't give teams a head start. We just can't do it and I don't know what the issue is. Because it's not like we're not warming up properly, it's not like we don't speak about it in the dressing room, but I will repeat what I said last week: We cannot give teams a three-goal or two-goal start and expect to win a game. I know we're capable of playing the type of football that we played in the second half, but it's catch-up football all the time. It's desperation football and we have to take so many risks and chances to create these opportunities. It has to be addressed. Now whether that's the shape of the team, whether that's personnel, but it can't continue."
Minnesota returns home to TCF Bank Stadium for a match against Houston Dynamo on Saturday, April 28 at 7:00 p.m. CT. Pre-match coverage gets under way at 6:30 p.m. on FOX Sports North and MNUFC Radio on 1500 ESPN.
Lineups
Minnesota United FC Starting XI: GK Bobby Shuttleworth; D Carter Manley, Michael Boxall, Francisco Calvo, Jerome Thiesson; M Rasmus Schuller, Ibson, Miguel Ibarra (Mason Toye 84'), Ethan Finlay (Sam Nicholson 46'), Darwin Quintero; F Abu Danladi (Christian Ramirez 52')
MIN Unused Subs: GK Matt Lampson; D Brent Kallman; M Harrison Heath, Collin Martin;
Seattle Sounders FC Starting XI: GK Stefan Frei; D Kelvin Leerdam, Roman Torres, Chad Marshall, Nouhou Tolo; M Gustav Svensson, Osvaldo Alonso (Magnus Wolff Eikrem 75'), Nicolas Lodeiro, Cristian Roldan, Alex Roldan (Clint Dempsey 60'); F Will Bruin (Jordy Delem 90+')
SEA Unused Subs: GK Bryan Meredith; D Jordan McCray; M Victor Rodriguez, Handwalla Bwana
Match Events
Goals
23' - Svensson (C. Roldan, Alonso) - SEA
25' - Bruin (C. Roldan, Lodeiro) - SEA
66' - Ramirez (Quintero, Nicholson) - MIN
90'+ - Delem (Dempsey) - SEA
Discipline
58' - Tolo (YC) - SEA
87' - Leerdam (YC) - SEA
MNUFC QUOTE SHEET
MINNESOTA UNITED FC Head Coach ADRIAN HEATH
On the match...
"The problem we have is that we started so slowly again. I'm honestly at a loss to explain that. We can't speak about it enough. We can't show people enough. It's the third or fourth time on the road that it's happened. I feel like a broken record. I said this time last week - we can't give teams a head start. We just can't do it. I don't know what the issue is because it's not like we're not warming up properly, it's not like we don't speak about it in the dressing room. I will repeat what I said last week, I will repeat what I said at San Jose, I will repeat what I said at the Red Bulls - we can't give teams a two or three goal start and expect to win a game. I know we're capable of playing the type of futbol that we played in the second half, otherwise it's catch-up futbol the entire time. It's desperation futbol - we have to take so many risks and chances to create these opportunities. It's something that we need to address, whether that's in the shape of the team or personnel ... it can't continue."
On trying to play catch up...
"It's all desperation futbol because you know if it goes to 3-0 then it's virtually over. Every time you attack, you attack with numbers to try and get back in the game, then you leave yourself vulnerable. It's a conundrum that we have to solve because I know we can play, but I'm not sure at this time that we know how to win. There's a big difference between playing well and winning games."
On playing Bobby Shuttleworth in goal for his first start of the season...
"He's had to wait for his chance and I had a gut feeling that it was the right time to bring him back. He really couldn't have done much with the goals. It was a great first strike and the other two he was left with not many options. The second goal was a poor goal for us and the third one we were charging forward and it was just a cheap turnover, so he can't be at fault for the goals."
On Christian Ramirez...
"I thought Christian did well when he came on. He gave us a bit of life and can be pleased with what he did."
On moving forward from here...
"We have a big next game at home and five of the next six there so hopefully this will be a turning point for us. I do know one thing - if we keep conceding soft goals like that it's going to be very difficult for us to mount a playoff charge this year, and we are capable of it with the group we have."
MINNESOTA UNITED FC FORWARD CHRISTIAN RAMIREZ
On his goal...
"I just redirected it back where it game from. Quintero did a good job to find me on the back post. I know we have been working on more and more of my movement with his service, so just continuing to get comfortable with him. He is going to pick you out if you get an open spot."
On the changes going into the second half...
"I don't know, I think we just brought up our energy levels. I don't think we started the game off matching the crowd intensity and Seattle's energy. I think that is something we have to continue to work on - figure out a way how to start the game with that type of energy."
On the flow of the game being down 2-0 on the road...
"It is pretty difficult being down 1-0, and then two minutes later shooting yourself in the foot. This is a continued story with us so far, something that we have to fix. Whether it's if we give up a goal to go along for the next couple minutes, weather that storm. More and more teams are starting to punish us as we turn off once we give in a goal. That can't continue to happen."
On almost scoring a second goal...
"Yeah, I thought there was another goal in the game. We just didn't finish that final ball at the end. Francisco (Calvo) had a great chance that he almost put away. I thought we came up a little short and again the score line is not going to say that. We fought until the end. We just came up a bit short and we have to figure out how to bring that from the beginning."
MINNESOTA UNITED FC GOALKEEPER BOBBY SHUTTLEWORTH
On the game and being back...
"Yeah, of course, I was excited to play. I think we let ourselves down again. We conceited two goals in the first half. To come back out, we had some good play in the second half. We just let ourselves down. Again, I don't know for how many games in a row now, we are not good enough."
On the pressure in the first half and flow of the game...
"Yeah, to be honest with you, we rode out the first bit of the game fine. I think the first goal was a good strike. We put our heads down and conceited right away again. We have done that two or three times this season and it is something we need to cut out."
On if his strategy changes down two goals...
"No. I am back there to keep the ball out of the net. So obviously watching two goals go past you is not great. 2-0 down I think we responded well in the second half, but, again too little too late. We are trying to dig ourselves out of a massive hole on the road, in front of 30,000 people against us. From that point on you have to be perfect, get some luck, and unfortunately we don't get that in the second half."
On moving forward to the next match...
"I think you know we need as a group to take more responsibility for what we are doing. We are conceding two, three goals on the road. You know it's not as if we don't go over this stuff in training. The manager is all over us about it. I think it starts with the week of training. Us taking responsibility trying to push forward and put a couple of results together."
Major League Soccer Stories from April 22, 2018
- Timbers Notch First Clean Sheet in 2018 with 3-0 Win over New York City FC - Portland Timbers
- Seattle Earns First Win of the Season in 3-1 Romp over Minnesota United FC at CenturyLink Field - Seattle Sounders FC
- MNUFC Can't Overcome Early Goals, Falls 3-1 to Seattle - Minnesota United FC
- Atlanta United Defeats LA Galaxy, Extends Unbeaten Streak to Six - Atlanta United FC
- Real Salt Lake Explodes for 3-0 Win over Colorado Rapids - Real Salt Lake
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