Los Angeles Times

Schmid’s first game back is a bit of a success

Galaxy playing to a tie under the new coach represents progress at this point.

- By Kevin Baxter kevin.baxter@latimes.com Twitter: @kbaxter11

The first profession­al soccer game Sigi Schmid coached was for the Galaxy. And the last one he coached before Saturday was for the Seattle Sounders.

So it seemed fitting both teams were on the field at StubHub Center when Schmid returned to the sidelines for the first time in more than a year. Also fitting, perhaps, was the fact neither lost, with the Galaxy and Sounders playing to a 0-0 tie before an announced crowd of 25,667.

For the Galaxy, however, a scoreless draw marks progress since it snaps the team’s five-game losing streak, longest in a decade, as well as a three-game slide at home.

“Right now we’re still in the process of learning each other. I’m getting to know them and they’re getting to know me,” Schmid said. “And it’s going to take time.

“I look at this as a success. Yes, it’s one point and one point isn’t going to get us to where we need to go. But it’s something we can build upon.”

The point, the first for the Galaxy in five weeks, moved them within seven points of Vancouver in the battle for the Western Conference’s final playoff berth. And Schmid, the winningest coach in MLS history, could also take comfort in how the team played to earn it.

Hours after taking over for Curt Onalfo, fired after 20 games as coach, Schmid said his first task would be improving a defense that has given up 37 goals, fourthmost in the league. The team made progress on that, confusing the Sounders most of the game and helping goalkeeper Brian Rowe to his second shutout this season and first in three months.

The toughest shot Rowe faced was a bicycle kick from Clint Dempsey off a set piece late in the first half that he saved easily.

The game, in fact, was arguably the team’s best of the season. The Galaxy were organized, played with purpose and conviction, and led in time of possession. They weren’t exactly discipline­d, however, with captain Jelle Van Damme picking up two yellow cards and defender Bradley Diallo drawing one. Van Damme, who was expelled, missed the final four minutes and both players will be sidelined next week.

They were also healthy. Under Onalfo, the Galaxy commonly played without half a dozen starters who were lost to injury, suspension or internatio­nal duty. Against Seattle, a team that lost only once since May, Schmid had a full bench.

Yet, the Galaxy were rewarded with few dangerous scoring opportunit­ies, getting only four shots with their best effort coming on a Gyasi Zardes header in the 65th minute. Goalkeeper Stefan Frei, the defending champion’s lone selection to this week’s All-Star game, stopped that with a diving save.

So while it was a good start for the new coach, the long-term aim is to copy what Seattle did last year after Schmid was fired. And that will take more than one good game.

The Sounders were ninth in the conference, where the Galaxy are now, with six victories after 20 games when Schmid was replaced by longtime assistant Brian Schmetzer in the last week of July.

Schmetzer and the Sounders played the Galaxy to a draw in his first game, then went on a late-season run that ended with the first MLS Cup in franchise history.

Schmid, who led the Galaxy to their first league title in 2002, was rehired a year and a day after his sacking in Seattle.

“It was great to be back on the sideline,” said Schmid, who exchanged a handshake but not a hug with Schmetzer afterward. “I don’t know what it is but I love this game. No one can take that away from me.

“Playing against Seattle certainly was special and unique. It’s a team that I put together. I still have a lot of good relationsh­ips with those guys.”

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