David Ousted
had no problem agreeing with the description of his team’s performance.
The Vancouver
goalkeeper was deeply puzzled after the Whitecaps bowed 2-1 to a shorthanded Portland Timbers
squad on Sunday at B.C. Place Stadium.
“Frustrating
is a good word for it,” said Ousted . “We weren’t good enough. Simple as that.”
On this particular
Sunday, the Whitecaps should have been the better team just based on numbers. The
Timbers were missing 12 players due to injuries, suspensions and Gold Cup
duties.
Portland only
dressed 16 players instead of the usual 18 and called up two from its USL
affiliate. But the Timbers never trailed as rookie Jeremy Ebobisse scored his
first Major League Soccer goal and assisted on the winner in his inaugural start.
Before
Sunday, the Timbers (8-8-6) had gone six games without a win 0-3-3. The
Whitecaps (8-8-3) had won two straight, including a 1-0 win over the Galaxy in
Los Angeles last Wednesday.Ousted was at a loss to explain why the Caps did not display the same desire that they did in L.A. – a placed where they rarely win – especially on the defensive side of the ball.
“We lacked energy,” said Ousted. “We lacked a little bit of spark – which I don’t understand, especially in a Cascadia Cup (match). It’s frustrating, especially in front of our fans, not to perform better in a period where I think we’ve been playing well.”
(The Cascadia Cup is a fan-created, in-season competition involving Vancouver, Portland and Seattle.)
Sebastian Blanco scored the winner in the 49th minute as he fired home a heel-pass from Ebobisse after originally giving him the ball. The scoring play resulted from a counter-attack that originated in Portland’s zone after Vancouver striker Fredy Montero was shoved down but no call was made – and some angry Whitecaps were slow to get back.
The goal spoiled Vancouver’s comeback hopes after Andrew Jacobson had created a 1-1 tie moments before half-time as he footed in Tim Parker’s header off a corner-kick. Ebobisse, drafted fourth overall by Portland this year, nudged in Dairon Asprilla’s shot 14 minutes into the game as the Whitecaps failed to clear a Timbers’ corner-kick properly.
“First half,
we played very well, exceptionally well, got the equalizer just before
half-time and I think, probably, it was a fair reflection of the first half,”
said Robinson. “I thought we were the better team. Second half, it was always
going to come down to a mistake, a wonder goal or something like that. When you
give a good team like Portland the lead five minutes into the second half, it’s
very difficult. So I will give them credit today, because they managed to hang
on.
“Their ’keeper
(Jake Gleeson) came up with one or two big saves as well. But it hurts.”
Gleeson
robbed second-half substitute Brek Shea as he one-timed a volley from close
range in the 80th minute and then made a sensational diving save on a Parker
header five minutes later. But for most of the game, Vancouver’s passing was
off as attempts inexplicably went to Portland players after they applied little
pressure. As a result, the Whitecaps generated little offensively.
The loss
spoiled a strong effort by Jacobson who, in addition to scoring, made several
strong defensive plays. He filled in admirably at central defender while
captain Kendall Waston was rested after playing for Costa Rica at the Gold Cup.
While Robinson liked Jacobson’s effort, he was not pleased with the overall
defensive showing by any means.
“Obviously, I’m
disappointed defensively all around for the two goals (against), because I think
they are very avoidable,” said Robinson.
And, like
Ousted, the coach was puzzled.
“You play on
Wednesday and you do every little duty correctly – individually and
collectively – and then you play four days later and it seems it’s not your
day,” said Robinson.
Five yellow
cards – three to Portland and a pair to the Whitecaps – were handed out, but the
game lacked the emotion and intensity often witnessed when these teams meet.
Until after the game, that is.
Timbers coach
Caleb Porter thrust his fist in the air and hugged his assistant coaches,
ecstatic with the Timbers’ first win since June 10. After shaking hands with
Robinson, Porter also took exception to something that he claimed the Whitecaps
coach had said, and the two had to be separated.
Robinson was
not about to reveal what he said as he couched his comments with praise for
Portland’s coaching crew. It was obvious that Porter’s frustration had ended –
at least for now.
But with next
Saturday’s contest in Dallas serving as the first of three straight difficult road games,
Robinson’s obvious frustration could last a while longer.