The San Jose Earthquakes just beat Chicago 2-0 and won their group. From a neutral perspective, theyāve been more entertaining than most and more likable than maybe all. Itās hard not to like a team that responds to every question and criticism in style. Itās why this team might have a tightly crowded bandwagon the rest of the way in Orlando.
Itās too hot. They wonāt be able to keep it up.
Theyāve obviously been able to keep it up. Through three games, San Jose has been able to not only survive to the very end but at times bring its best late in the game. Itās led to seven points and the top spot in Group B.
There were plenty of worries about the Quakes collapsing under the weight of the central Florida heat, but it hasnāt happened yet. Having five subs at your disposal helps, yet itās remarkable that anybody on the team has been able to go a full half without keeling over. But thereās a special vibe around this team. And it stems from a culture where guys are willing to man-mark for as long as their bodies will let them for the sake of the teammate next to them as much as protecting their own.
Itās rare in sports to get buy-in to a culture thatās genuine and isnāt drowning in cliche. When it happens in soccer, it feels big. Something about collective sacrifice and mentality being more readily apparent, I think. You know, dumb things that donāt seem real until you actually see them in action. Things that get us to be earnest which makes us feel equal parts gross and inspired. Matias Almeyda and this San Jose team live in this feeling and soak in it. Theyāre constantly trying to drag you in with them. And itās why theyāve become one of the best stories of the tournament.
Everyone has them figured out by now anyway. They lost like thirty games down the stretch last season.
This almost seemed true. The last month-plus of 2019 went as poorly as it could. And with the Quakes down 3-1 to Vancouver the other night, it looked like we might get the same version. But last year was as much about establishing a culture as it was getting results. Now the culture is starting to shine through. Of course they came back from 3-1 because theyāve been growing together until they could face challenges like that head-on.
āWe [the coaching staff] were brought here because things werenāt going well and we're building San Jose both on the soccer and human side," Almeyda said after the win over Chicago. "My objective as a coach is that the players could grow day-to-day and they could grow in value. Our system of play exposes them for good and bad. Theyāve interpreted it to expose themselves in the best way. And it's there that I see the growth, where everyone knows what to do. And we train for this. But wins always give happiness and weāve been in difficult moments where we've doubled down and the team emerges because they have a great group and this is fundamental.ā
Everything Almeyda says about his team sounds like an expert giving advice on how best to raise a child. āLet them make mistakes. Support them in good and bad. Foster their personal development. Encourage them to ask questions.ā And again, it would be so annoying if this team didnāt buy in and came out flat every game. But the effectiveness of Almeydaās humanistic approach makes it endearing.
There have been plenty of incredible speeches that have ended with the speakerās side getting thrashed. Thereās a reason no one makes movies about those. We want to see ideals and philosophy matter. It makes us feel like we can control things. Right now it doesnāt seem to matter that teams know everything they need to about Almeydaās system, and itās hard not to be invested in that.
Itās not like theyāre going to score much. Whoās going to do it? Wondolowski?
Yes, of course itās going to be Wondo. Heās already grabbed two off the bench. But the rest of the team has been stepping up when it matters. Andres Rios, Oswaldo Alanis, Shea Salinas and Cristian Espinoza each have a goal a piece, and players like Jackson Yueill have put in less flashy but no less impressive performances. Even better, it looks like theyāre having fun doing it.
āWeāve created a group that enjoys being around each other on and off the field," Yueill said. "Thatās the most enjoyable thing we have. We enjoy being around each other and it translates to the game. You want to work hard for your friends and make them look good on the field. Itās a representation of the locker room group.ā
They just canāt turn it off. Everyone seems to āgenuinely like each otherā and ācare about the otherā and āwant to have fun playing sports.ā It might seem weird to some but itās a mindset thatās clearly working and a joy to watch.
The Quakes care about each other, and they care about you, the viewer. Theyāre not going to stop being entertaining anytime soon. They want you to enjoy yourself and theyāre going to gain a lot of fans because they want you to view soccer in the same way they do: in a special way.
āAs a technical staff, we feel and we experience soccer in a special way," Almeyda said. "We donāt get stuck on a result but instead on the path to achieve the result. Weāre conscious of a lot of things. The world is living through a difficult moment and Iāll repeat it: Weāre playing soccer in Disney. How would we not transmit happiness in the place weāre at, with this chance that they give us and the way they treat us? You will know and many know how I manage the group. I prioritize the human side and then comes the soccer side.ā
Right now, both sides are putting on a show.