Old nemesis returns to haunt FC Dallas in Portland draw

Zach Loyd and Kosuke Kimura

PORTLAND, Ore. – Some old demons haunted FC Dallas on Sunday night as they let a second-half lead slip in a steamy 1-1 draw with Portland.


Less than two minutes after Scott Sealy finished a goal beautifully created by David Ferreira and Brek Shea, defender Zach Loyd was shown his second yellow card sending Dallas down to 10 men in what seems to be a recurring scene this season. Some heroics from Kevin Hartman kept the Timbers off the scoreboard, but Jack Jewsbury’s spectacular 79th-minute equalizer was really an inevitability.


OPTA CHALKBOARD: Loyd card forces FCD to defend for final 40 minutes

“Once the red card happened, they’re down 1-0 and up a man so they’re playing with reckless abandon,” Andrew Jacobson told MLSsoccer.com. “[They had] outside backs flying through and it becomes very difficult when you can’t counter and punish them for doing it.”


HIGHLIGHTS: POR vs DAL

The red card and ensuing draw cost FCD a vital two points as they try to pull themselves from the bottom end of the Western Conference table. Dallas are 0-4-1 in MLS games where they have seen red this season.


“I would’ve liked to have seen us play with 11 players, and I think there was enough things going on out there that there could’ve been 10 players on each team,” head coach Schellas Hyndman lamented. “But it seems that when you’re on the road sometimes the calls don’t go your way and this has been one of those seasons.”


The red card completely changed the shape of a Dallas team that had limited Portland to just one shot on goal in the first half. Hyndman brought on Panamanian defender Carlos Rodríguez for Scott Sealy to fill the gap on the right while moving Brek Shea from left wing to forward. The moves left Dallas in a position where they were defending for their lives most of the last half hour.


FULL LINEUPS AND BOXSCORE

“A lot of stuff happens [after the red card]. I think the role changes for everyone,” Shea said after the game. “Defending for however many minutes left, it pretty much sucks.”


As usual, Schellas Hyndman smartly minced his words when asked about the calls from referee Ricardo Salazar, but did give a little bit of a window into his head.


“You guys all know I can only really say so much,” Hyndman said about red-card frustrations. “But if you could read my mind I think there’d be a few dirty words in there.”