Dynamo's Cameron impressing again at center back

Geoff Cameron

HOUSTON — Former third round draft pick Geoff Cameron has enjoyed a good season as part of the Dynamo’s midfield attack. On Sunday against Mexico's Monterrey, however, he showed he can wow just as much – if not more – as a center back.


With Andre Hainault and Jermaine Taylor away on international duty and Eddie Robinson out with an injury, the 6-foot-3 Cameron stepped into the center of a depleted Dynamo defense and helped Houston run out 3-0 winners.


WATCH: Dynamo vs. Monterrey highlights

The skill and athleticism that he showed has pundits astir about his potential in central defense, a position he played in 2009 for the Dynamo. But the fact that he can fill in capably in spot duty gives the squad something perhaps more important: flexibility.


“It’s important to have guys who aren’t tied to one position,” Houston head coach Dominic Kinnear said. “Against Monterrey, the main reason he was back there was because Andre was gone and Jermaine was gone. It’s good because we know he can play well back there.


“Geoff can play both center mid positions and can also play in the back, so it’s useful. It’s good because it makes your team more flexible that way.”


Cameron has the ability to work well both with and without the ball. His ability to play well on the ball out of the back was evidenced by his slalom through the Monterrey forward line early in Sunday’s match. It's moves like those that have media and fans ready to earmark him for defense. But it's that same skill set is what has made Cameron a weapon as a central midfielder.


His production as a midfielder has not gotten the same attention as his play at center back, where he was a 2009 MLS Best XI selection. However, his nine goals and 10 assists in 57 games in the midfield stacks up very well against the production of his predecessor Stuart Holden in the same time span.


Cameron’s versatility and production are weapons that Houston could look to exploit down the stretch. With players such as Adam Moffat and Luiz Camargo stepping up in midfield, there could be times when all three are on the field at the same time, likely forcing Cameron to defense.


The debate continues, but to the player, it’s ultimately unimportant.


“I like playing center back and center mid and I feel pretty comfortable at both,” Cameron said. “I’m going with the flow. This weekend, I’ll likely go back to midfield and then we’ll just go from there.”


Darrell Lovell covers the Houston Dynamo for MLSsoccer.com.

Dynamo's Cameron impressing again at center back -