Austin FC

The Drought’s Over: Austin FC Score Twice but Draw 2-2 with San Jose

Rigoni and Driussi end Austin FC’s woes in front of goal.

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Austin’s a city that’s become notoriously crowded. Whether it’s gridlock traffic on I-35 during rush hour, restaurants with wait times longer than the average MLS match, or condos stacked on top of condos downtown, it’s increasingly difficult for Austinites to enjoy a modicum of space.

All of which makes the ample acreage afforded to San Jose Earthquakes midfielder Jackson Yueill for his opening goal on Saturday night at Q2 Stadium especially infuriating. That kind of space doesn’t come cheap in this town.

For all of the talk of Austin FC’s struggles in front of the opposition goal (and there’s been plenty of talk), it was their defense that let them down in the 21st minute against San Jose. Left-back Adam Lundqvist, center-backs Leo Vaisanen and Alex Ring, center midfielders Daniel Pereira and Jhojan Valencia – none of them were anywhere near Yueill when he fired a shot into the net’s top left corner.

The way Austin FC have been playing in attack of late, you’d be forgiven for thinking the match was over before it even reached the half-hour mark. Austin FC entered their match with the Earthquakes having gone 355 minutes since last scoring a goal. You can drive from Round Rock to Buda at 5:00 PM on a Friday in less time.

Perhaps desperation to compensate for Austin FC’s misfiring forwards led to the defensive breakdown. “It’s making us defenders work a little bit harder,” Vaisanen said after the match when asked if the team’s struggles going forward are putting more pressure on the defense.

Unlikely as it may have seemed before kick-off, Austin FC would mercifully score not once but twice before the final whistle. However, Josh Wolff’s team couldn’t prevent Jeremy Ebobisse from adding a second Earthquakes goal in the 75th minute, so Austin FC concluded the night having dropped two more points at home in a 2-2 draw that will illicit mixed emotions from fans.

The end of Austin FC’s embarrassing goal drought came via an unlikely duo. Emiliano Rigoni has spent most of his Austin FC career hitting crosses to fans sitting in the stands instead of his teammates and looking like a daydreaming student suddenly asked a question by the teacher when taking a shot at goal.

If there’s a player who’s confounded Austin FC supporters more than Rigoni, it would be Rodney Redes. The team’s first-ever signing has still yet to find the back of the net in a competitive Austin FC match, but that didn’t stop him from perfectly heading a gorgeous Pereira cross straight into the path of Rigoni in the 40th minute.

Considering Rigoni’s tribulations, it felt like he was going to volley the ball straight off the crossbar back into his own face. That didn’t happen. The Argentine Designated Player defiantly smashed the ball past San Jose goalkeeper James Marcinkowski for his first MLS goal. Palpable catharsis erupted at Q2 Stadium.

“I’m really, really pleased for him to get on the board,” Wolff said in his post-match press conference. “He works incredibly hard. I’m sure he takes a lot of punishment because he hasn’t scored enough goals, but he’s a great dude and he’s going to continue to perform for us.”

For the second straight match, Rigoni started on the left wing instead of the right, but Wolff doesn’t think his move to the other side of the field is responsible for him finally putting his name on the scoresheet.

‘Emi’s been great,” Wolff reflected. “We lined him up on the right wing. We played him in the pocket as an attacking mid in the first three or four games. His expected goals, assists were quite high and he had great opportunities.”

Wolff’s right about Rigoni producing solid expected goals (xG) and expected goals assisted (xGA) numbers early this season. Per fbref.com, Rigoni posted .9 xG and 1.1 xGA through the season’s first four matches. Rigoni was getting in good positions; the finishing touch was just absent. Lately, though, Rigoni’s underlying numbers had gone ice cold. In the four matches prior to San Jose’s visit to Q2, Rigoni had registered a meager .3 xG and .3 xGA.

On Saturday night, Rigoni’s greatest asset was the winger playing opposite him down the right flank. Redes was dangerous all match and provided directness and a willingness to drive to the end line that has been sorely lacking from Austin FC all season. Now in his third season playing for Wolff, Redes understands his team’s system well.

“I feel really good. I feel really comfortable,” Redes said after the match. “I’ve adapted very well to this system.”

After Ebobisse’s goal put the Earthquakes up 2-1, Austin FC’s equalizer came via likeliest of sources: Sebastian Driussi. An MVP candidate last season, Driussi has gotten off to a slow start in 2023; his 78th-minute goal was just his second in league play this season and his first since the season opener against St. Louis City. Still, few sights are less surprising than a Driussi goal prompting raucous beer showers at Q2 Stadium. The goals should come in bunches for Driussi as the season progresses. He’s simply too good to be held goalless for long.

More worrying to Austin FC than Driussi’s slow start should be the lack of goals from the team’s center forwards. Austin FC strikers have scored just once all season. Maxi Urruti started and was quiet against San Jose while Gyasi Zardes and Will Bruin were ineffectual as substitutes. If the team is going to end their winless streak in MLS play (now at six matches), better production from their trio of veteran strikers will be needed.

Eric McCoy

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