SAN JOSE, Calif. -- To snap a winless streak that had lasted more than two months, the San Jose Earthquakes crafted what might be their most improbable victory in more than three years.
Despite losing Anibal Godoy late in the first half and Alberto Quintero early in the second, the nine-man Quakes rode Simon Dawkinsā knuckling goal in the 70th minute to a 2-1 victory against Toronto FC on Saturday.
It was San Joseās first league triumph since May 11, and matched (if not exceeded) the longshot odds of the Quakesā 3-2 win against LA on June 29, 2013, when Shea Salinas and Alan Gordon tallied in injury time at Stanford Stadium to pull things out while down a man.
āWe needed the win,ā Dawkins said after scoring just his second goal since returning to San Jose this year. āYou could see what it meant to us at the end of the game. I donāt think youāve seen a team any happier than today.ā
After a seven-match stretch with only four points to show for their efforts, the result could be spun as a bit of payback for the Quakes, who were bossing the game before Godoyās ejection -- including a nice build up to Quincy Amarikwaās opener in the 30th minute.
āItās definitely not something that I was really expecting,ā team captain Chris Wondolowski told MLSsoccer.com. āI was hoping to just keep it tied, get a point out of it. . . . Weāre definitely hoping this can be a catalyst. We need a little bit of that. I feel like weāve played well in different games but havenāt necessarily gotten the results that weāve wanted.ā
Said Dawkins: āWe definitely need to turn the corner. Hopefully this is the game where we can show everybody what we can do.ā
After a turnover in the Quakesā defensive third came to the feet of Cordell Cato, the Trinidadian international pushed forward against all odds, picking up Dawkins in a 2-on-4 break. Cato threaded a pass along the left wing to Dawkins, who cut in from the edge of the penalty area, eluded the grabbing hand of Toronto right back Steven Beitashour and finally lined up a right-footed shot from 24 yards out.
It wasnāt clear if the outstretched foot of Josh Williams brushed the ball in flight; whatever the case, instead of curling in, the strike knuckled and tailed away slightly to the far post, appearing to catch 22-year-old goalkeeper Alex Bono off guard. Bono, playing in place of injured starter Clint Irwin, could only wave futilely at the ball with his left hand.
āThat may be the loudest Iāve heard this place,ā Quakes coach Dominic Kinnear said. āI think it really made the fans go from being mad [about the red cards] to being really hopeful. You could feel the sense of the stadium and everybody changed by Simonās goal.ā
From there, it was all a matter of defending for dear life. Every cross nabbed or save made by goalkeeper David Bingham drew rapturous applause. So too did every thundering clearance from defenders Victor Bernardez and Jordan Stewart, who was making just his second start of the season in his return from an Achilles tear.
āThe second half seemed to last about six hours, especially after Alberto got sent off,ā Kinnear said. āYouāre just willing them to win. And I think the thing was, they were willing themselves to win, which is even better.ā