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Vancouver Vanishing Act: Austin FC’s Attack Goes Missing in 1-0 Defeat

Austin FC failed to score in Saturday night’s defeat to the Vancouver Whitecaps at Q2 Stadium.

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Are Austin FC simply a bad team?

Or are Austin FC a formerly bad team who are improving after the arrival of key additions in the recent summer transfer window?

A romp through a group of death in Leagues Cup followed by a rollicking 2-0 victory on the road in Nashville last weekend in which new signing Osman Bukari netted his first Austin FC goal suggested that sunnier days may lie ahead for a team trying to avoid missing the playoffs for the third time in its four-season history. Bukari and fellow newcomer, left-back Mikkel Desler, have injected life into a team that has lacked consistency for much of the season.

Enter Vanni Sartini’s Vancouver Whitecaps: Saturday night’s visitors to Q2 Stadium and a team capable of draining the life out of a previously vibrant attack. For 90-plus minutes, the Whitecaps were like an older brother placing his hand on the head of a younger brother who valiantly but ultimately meekly tires himself out by swinging punches into thin air. Austin FC’s 1-0 defeat was as tepid as it was disappointing – the match’s only goal came via a second-half thunderbolt strike from outside the box by Vancouver midfielder Pedro Vite.

“It’s difficult when you build so much momentum through Leagues Cup and the result last week,” Austin FC goalkeeper Brad Stuver said post-match. “And then we come home and we want to use the energy in our stadium and just have a good advantage to capitalize on that and pick up points at home, and we were unable to do that, so [we’re] extremely disappointed,” he added.

Look, you probably don’t need to be reminded that Austin FC entered Saturday night’s contest dead last in Major League Soccer (MLS) in shots per 90 minutes. The Verde and Black’s paltry 8.92 shots per 90 (per fbref.com) were comfortably over a shot per 90 less than the second most shot-averse team in the league.

However, in matches where Bukari has started and at least played into the second half (i.e. not the Pumas UNAM match where he received a red card in the 34th minute), Austin FC’s shot totals are much healthier: 11 against Charlotte on July 20th, 20 against Los Angeles FC on August 7th, and 15 against Nashville last Saturday. The glass-is-half-full crowd had reason to start puffing their chests out.

But against Vancouver, Austin FC’s attack vanished. Per fotmob.com, the Verde and Black had just six shots worth a scant .59 expected goals (xG). Vancouver are a good defensive team – they’ve allowed the fourth-fewest goals in the Western Conference – and played in a stifling 3-1-4-2 mid-block formation that Austin FC failed to play through.

“A combination of both,” Austin FC head coach Josh Wolff reflected in his post-match press conference when asked if his team’s attacking struggles were down to poor performances from his players or the quality of the opposition’s defense. “It’s a poor performance, but [it’s] a little bit of what Vancouver does because they make it a little bit more challenging in those central areas,” Wolff continued.

For the third consecutive match, Sebastian Driussi started as the team’s striker, flanked on the left by Jon Gallagher and Bukari on the right. Driussi’s interpretation of the striker position is more false nine than traditional nine – he looks to drop into midfield, drag opposition defenders out of position, and create space for Austin FC’s wide forwards to exploit.

Against Nashville, this worked to great effect. Driussi dropped, and Gallagher and Bukari each scored with Gallagher taking four shots and Bukari taking three. On Saturday, Gallagher didn’t take a single shot and Bukari only registered one. If the team’s best goal scorer is going to move into deeper positions in an attempt to unsettle the opposition, Austin FC’s other attackers have to take advantage. Neither Bukari nor Gallagher were able to do so against the Whitecaps.

The defeat to Vancouver and results elsewhere on Saturday night moved Austin FC from ninth to 10th position in the Western Conference – below the playoff line. “I’m more focused on what we do on the field,” Stuver said after the match when asked how much attention he pays to the results of the Western Conference’s other playoff hopefuls.

“I know that some results might go our way. We can get a little bit lucky in those terms, but if we don’t take care of our own business then none of that matters. So for me, all I really care about is what we do. As long as we can take care of what we need to take care of, we’ll be in the playoffs, no worries. I don’t really care what anybody else is doing,” Stuver said.

Austin FC have seven matches remaining to prove they are genuinely an improved team worthy of a spot in the 2024 MLS postseason and that the Vancouver performance was a brief, unfortunate reprisal of a (hopefully) bygone era.

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Eric McCoy

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Too Little Too Late: Austin FC on Brink of Playoff Elimination Despite Comeback Draw

Futbol En Vivo discusses Austin FC’s 2-2 draw with Real Salt Lake and super Cole Palmer.

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Eric McCoy
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Feeling Salty: Fan Frustration Mounts as Austin FC Draw 2-2 With Real Salt Lake

The result leaves Austin FC with little hope of reaching the 2024 MLS postseason.

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Chicho Arango, Diego Luna, and second-in-the-West Real Salt Lake visited Q2 Stadium on Saturday night. Sounds like a big deal, right? A match against a top team with big-name national and international stars playing fun, front-foot soccer should be one that fans circle on their calendars and eagerly await.

But this particular Austin FC/RSL match? The main concern amongst the majority wearing Verde and Black probably wasn’t what formation the team would play or who would feature in the starting 11, but how to best express their displeasure that Josh Wolff remains the team’s head coach. Last Saturday’s defeat to the Houston Dynamo all but mathematically guaranteed that Wolff and Austin FC would miss the postseason for the third time in four years.

Austin FC 2 2 Real Salt Lake | Foto CLub Deportes Jorge Iturralde

For most of Austin FC’s 2-2 draw with RSL, preoccupation with off-field issues was a wise decision. Aside from Julio Cascante’s stunning last-ditch challenge to deny Luna an empty net tap-in after he had swerved around an aggressive Brad Stuver, not much happened in the first half. Austin FC looked like a team resigned to its fate, and RSL looked like a team aware that it had more important matches on the horizon.

A primary cause of Austin FC’s general toothlessness this season has been striker play. Gyasi Zardes and Diego Rubio – the two traditional strikers in Austin FC’s squad – have a combined seven goals in 2024. And for the first time since August 31st’s 1-0 defeat to the Vancouver Whitecaps, both started on the bench.

This meant Sebastian Driussi would take up a more central position on the team’s forward line, flanked by Jader Obrian on the left and Osman Bukari on the right. In theory, this should have allowed Driussi to drop into midfield areas to ping passes forward to Obrian and Bukari, who would look to make runs in behind RSL’s defense. That isn’t what happened.

“The setup was that Obi (Obrian) and Buka (Bukari) were the strikers, and Seba (Driussi) would be down; he just wasn’t coming down in the first half,” Wolff said in his post-match press conference. “It was to have their speed and their verticality, and the opportunities are there to play behind the line, and we miss a lot in the first half with those chances,” he added. Per Fotmob.com, Austin concluded a lackluster first half with six shots worth just .28 expected goals (xG).

Austin FC 2 2 Real Salt Lake | Foto CLub Deportes Jorge Iturralde

RSL began the second half like a team tired of playing down to their competition. Midfielder Matt Crooks slotted home an easy goal after Stuver redirected an Arango shot directly into his feet, and substitute Diogo Goncalves converted a penalty he won by firing a cross off Owen Wolff’s arm. Twenty minutes into the second half, and RSL were 2-0 up. The match looked done and dusted. Arango and Luna had even been subbed out, their vibrancy preserved for more meaningful contests.

It all seemed appropriate. As the conversation around Wolff’s future rises to deafening levels – drowning out discussion about literally anything else pertaining to Austin FC – the Verde and Black would be officially eliminated from playoff contention with a meek performance not worth talking about. A poor RSL clearance in the 82nd minute, however, allowed Austin FC to barge back into the match.

The ball fell to a man who has played more positions this season than there were Wolff Out signs at Q2 Stadium on Saturday night: Jon Gallagher. Gallagher had been shifted to right-wingback from left-wingback after the 77th-minute introduction of Ethan Finlay, and he nudged the ball to Obrian (moved back to his preferred right wing after Bukari was subbed out in the 66th minute), who swerved a shot past RSL goalkeeper Zac MacMath.

Seven minutes later, Guilherme Biro – who spent the closing stages of the match rampaging forward from his left-sided center-back position into RSL’s penalty area – drilled a Driussi cross into the back of the net to give Austin FC an unlikely equalizer. Wolff confirmed post-match that Austin FC were still technically in a back five during their comeback with Finlay and Gallagher as wingbacks, but really, conventional positions go out the window when a team is as desperate for a goal as the Verde and Black were.

Austin FC 2 2 Real Salt Lake | Foto CLub Deportes Jorge Iturralde

“I think the grit and the competing is always what this group’s been about,” Wolff said when asked about the fight Austin FC showed in the match. “We get that question here in the last few weeks and it’s always evident. I think they’ve (the Austin FC players) had that the entire way,” he continued.

The solitary point earned for their troubles against RSL and results elsewhere in Major League Soccer (MLS) on Saturday night means Austin FC’s gritty fightback is of little meaningful consequence. With three matches to play, the ninth-place Portland Timbers (occupying the last playoff spot in the Western Conference) are nine points up on Austin FC and have a safety net in the form of a plus-20 goal differential on Wolff’s team should they lose out and the Verde and Black win out. FC Dallas also sit a point ahead of Austin FC.

So, meaningful soccer matches are all but over for Austin FC in 2024 – not that anyone has been talking much about the actual matches, anyway.

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Eric McCoy
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Austin We Have a Problem: Dynamo Deal Damaging Loss to Austin FC

Futbol En Vivo discusses Austin FC’s 1-0 loss to the Houston Dynamo and then recaps Manchester City/Arsenal.

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Eric McCoy
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