By Matthew T.F. Harrington
photo by USA Today: San Jose Earthquakes goaltender David Bingham get his fourth clean sheet of 2016 in a 0-0 draw with Dallas at Avaya Stadium on Saturday
SAN JOSE, Calif. – The unbeaten streak at Avaya Stadium continued Saturday night for the San Jose Earthquakes, but a chance at overtaking Los Angeles for second place in the Western Conference went by the wayside for a makeshift Quakes lineup. San Jose and FC Dallas crawled to a nil-nil draw in a match that saw the Quakes take the pitch without five players who have accounted for 75% of their total goals this season.
“Overall I’m not terribly thrilled,” assessed Quakes coach Dominic Kinnear of the team’s result. “But I’m not digging a grave either.”
With Copa America almost underway, the Quakes leading scorer Chris Wondolowski (7 goals) was absent from Saturday’s competition. He instead was playing 1,800 miles away in Kansas City, representing the United States in an international friendly tune-up against Bolivia.
Apart from Wondolowski, the Earthquakes were also without Anibal Godoy and Alberto Quintero (Panama), Kip Colvey (New Zealand) and Simon Dawkins (Jamaica). That group makes up for 12 of the Earthquakes total 16 goals.
Mix in injuries to a number of Quakes players like Innocent, Matheus Silva and Clarence Goodson as well and San Jose seemed short more players than were dressing. It was a struggle to field a fit 18.
“It’s been difficult,” said Kinnear. “But every team goes through it. I’m not going to say our team is the only team to go through injury problems and call-ups. It’s just coinciding with each other and leaving us a little short-handed.”
Chemistry was an early and ongoing issue for the ragtag Quakes, but the team still managed to connect on 74 percent of their passes. They did struggle in the final third, connecting on just over half (53 percent) of their passes, and didn’t generate many chances. In fact, both teams managed only two shots on target a piece.
“At times we let ourselves down with our side passing the closer we got to goal,” said Kinnear. “But the effort we got from everyone was 100 percent.”
While two shots on target for isn’t enough for the Quakes, the two going the other way were nice. Despite struggling to fill the roster, the Quakes still managed to bog down a Dallas team that has scored 23 goals this season over its first 14 games and nearly found three points late in the game. Tommy Thompson, playing the full 90 minutes at midfield for the first time all season, narrowly missed bouncing a header past Dallas keeper Chris Seitz in the 88th minute. Seitz managed to corral the ball and keep the contest even, earning a point on the road for Dallas.
“When Tommy got his head on that ball late in the game it was going to be something good for us,” said Kinner.
With only one point in hand, San Jose will have little time to try to develop a cohesive unit. They head to Portland to face the Timbers Wednesday night again facing the possibility of being shorthanded.
“It doesn’t matter who is playing and who is not,” said Kinnear. “The expectation is always the same. We expect to win a game.”

