It’s an axiom that getting a point on the road in soccer is always a good thing. Minnesota United took not one but three points at San Jose on Saturday night, so in the end, no one is going to be that disappointed with the result.
That said, the Loons had plenty of chances to ease the blood pressure of fans who stayed awake for the West Coast encounter, instead of making everyone involved sweat out a 1-0 victory.
The numbers say the three best chances in the match all came for Minnesota United, all after Kelvin Yeboah had given the Loons the lead in the 32nd minute. Yeboah, Morris Duggan and Bongokuhle Hlongwane all had one-on-one chances against San Jose goalkeeper Daniel, but none of the three could convert.
It was notable that the three chances came from each of the three ways that the Loons have been able to create offense this season. Yeboah’s chance was straight from a long ball over the top from Duggan. Duggan’s came after a recycled set piece. And Hlongwane won the second ball after a long ball out of the defense was headed away, passed to Robin Lod, then got a return pass that slipped him in for a shot — a textbook example of how the Loons want to go long, win a second ball and create a chance.
Coach Eric Ramsay, though, isn’t happy with the Loons just being a team that can score from set pieces and the ol’ “route one” of the long ball over the top.
“I felt like we almost let ourselves down a little bit in the middle, in how easily we turned the ball over and how desperate we were to play forward,” he said.
Ramsay said that at halftime he pulled out a video clip from the first half showing midfielders Wil Trapp and Hassani Dotson connecting short passes with the defense, then turning and passing to attacking midfielder Lod.
It was in the hope of showing the Loons that it was, in fact, possible for them to move the ball down the field in a controlled way, rather than solely looking for quick-strike counterattacks.