Houston Dynamo 1, DC United 0 | MLS Match Recap

HOUSTON – On a night when the Houston Dynamo were dominant against D.C. United, the game ultimately came down to being in the right place at the right time.


And it was D.C. United tormentor Will Bruin who made no mistake on a gifted goal in second-half stoppage time to give the Dynamo a 1-0 win Sunday at BBVA Compass Stadium to end their eight-game winless streak.


After missing with headers twice in the first half, Bruin was in the right place at the right time in the first minute of added time when rookie Steve Birnbaum blocked goalkeeper Bill Hamid’s path to a loose ball in the box. Substitute forward Omar Cummings beat the flailing pair and made things easy to set up a Bruin tap-in for his 10th all-time goal against DC in only 12 games.


It was Houston’s first win since a 1-0 decision over the LA Galaxy May 17.


The late goal was deserved, as Houston outshot United 20-7 on the night, while stifling the opponent’s attack for the Dynamo's first shutout in nine games. Houston (6-11-4) move to 22 points, five out of the final playoff spot, while D.C. (11-6-4) remain on 37 points and in second in the Eastern Conference.


Houston were as dominant as a team could be without a goal in the first half.



With new blood in the lineup in the form of US national team defender DaMarcus Beasley and Honduran international midfielder Luis Garrido, the hosts outshot their opponents 13-2 in the opening 45 minutes. The club’s two best chances came off the head of Bruin in the first 22 minutes, missing by inches on both attempts.


In the seventh minute, he redirected a sterling Giles Barnes cross off the woodwork, and 15 minutes later he saw a high shot parried over the bar by Hamid. On both, the forward found space in the D.C. defense, which struggled in the first half to track runners and avoid turnovers.


Twice the Dynamo turned D.C. midfield miscues into breaks, but Hamid was up to the task. The first was in the 10th minute, when Ricardo Clark’s sterling tackle led to a Boniek Garcia shot that was saved by the USMNT goalkeeper. Garcia played supplier in the 39th minute, picking off a pass at midfield to ignite the break, but Barnes’ bullet was right at the D.C. custodian.



Just before Barnes’ break Luis Silva nearly stole one for D.C. Losing his footing on an Eddie Johnson layoff, the midfielder hit a trickling ball from distance that appeared to cause retreating Tally Hall problems in goal. It rolled wide to keep the game scoreless.


D.C. applied more pressure after the halftime break and nearly claimed the first goal when Chris Rolfe finally called Hall into action. After a poor clearance from Jermaine Taylor, Rolfe teed the ball up and hit it low and to Hall’s right. The 6-foot-4 ‘keeper stretched out to stop the effort.


D.C. are back in action Saturday at Real Salt Lake, while Houston will visit the Seattle Sounders on Aug. 10.


MLSsoccer.com Men of the Match

Rank
Player
What We Saw
1
<a href="//www.mlssoccer.com/players/will-bruin" target="_blank"><span style="font-size:12px;">Will Bruin</span></a>
His fifth shot of the night was his easiest goal all year; could have easily finished with a hat trick
2
<a href="//www.mlssoccer.com/players/giles-barnes" target="_blank"><span style="font-size:12px;">Giles Barnes</span></a>
The Dynamo attacker was a handful for D.C.&#39;s backline all night
3
<a href="//www.mlssoccer.com/players/chris-rolfe" target="_blank"><span style="font-size:12px;">Chris Rolfe</span></a>
On a night when offense was tough to come by for D.C., he was usually leading the charge