BEAVERTON, Ore. ā Caleb Porter was being tested.
The Portland Timbers head coach would say life in professional sports is always a test. At this particular moment in the Timbers season, however, the pressure was hard to deny.
They had just lost for the third time in their last five games in a 1-0 home defeat to Sporting Kansas City on Oct. 3, which came on the heels of an especially dismal performance in a 2-0 loss Sept. 20 to the New York Red Bulls, also in front of Portlandās famously passionate crowd.
It left the Timbers out of the playoff picture and facing two very tough road matches ā against Real Salt Lake and LA Galaxy ā out of their final three games of the regular season.
Missing the MLS Cup Playoffs for a second straight year ā after advancing to the Western Conference Championship in Porterās first year at the helm ā seemed a likely conclusion to the 2015 campaign.
And as happens in professional sports when a team fails to live up to expectations, Porter faced questions over whether his team had set their goals high enough. There were rumblings on social media over his job status and even an MLS commentator suggesting Porter would return to coaching at the college level ā where he was highly successful at the University of Akron before taking over in Portland.
A highly touted Designed Player signing of young Argentine attacker Lucas Melano wasnāt producing results, while the departure of popular veteran forward Gaston Fernandez had perplexed yet more onlookers.
āEverybody lives in their own fish bowl,ā Porter said, looking back on the moment. āIn our fish bowl, Iām in it, the players are in it, you guys are in it, weāre all in this fish bowl. And sometimes it seems worse than it is. You go in other teamās fish bowls and you go in their scrums and you go on their blogs, you go in their supportersā bars, itās the same thing.
āThis is MLS, you know what I mean?ā
Yet, with all that mounting, however fair, Porter and his team responded.
What has happened since the Kansas City loss has been well documented, leading up to their place in Leg 2 of the Western Conference Semifinal Series of the Audi 2015 MLS Cup Playoffs that will take place Sunday against the Vancouver Whitecaps at BC Place (10 pm ET, FS1 in US, TSN/RDS in Canada).
Unlikely road victories against RSL and LA ā the Galaxy win being an eye-popping 5-2 rout ā and 12 goals in four games leading up to a scoreless draw against Vancouver in Leg 1 of the conference semis last weekend was vindication for the third-year head coach and of the clubās direction as a whole.
āWhen push comes to shove and the pressure tightens and the bullets start flying, some players, they duck and run,ā Porter said. āSome coaches do the same.ā
Their season-long goal-scoring problem, despite leading the league in shots, appeared to have been fixed. Their status as one of the best defensive teams in MLS, a label theyāve worn all season, now makes them all the more formidable for opponents.
āYou always question that maybe something is missing, but we werenāt that worried because we knew that we were playing good,ā left back Jorge Villafana said. ā⦠We knew the time was going to come, and it came.ā
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Porter said it all came down to keeping the faith.
āA lot of times when youāre not getting results, even though youāre right there, you think itās worse than it is, the players think itās worse than it is, the media compounds that, thatās just a reality,ā Porter said. āBut I think weāve stayed very insulated, and part of that is we have a lot of trust in this club, coaches to players, players to coaches, owner to GM, all that.ā
Of course, the turnaround didnāt come out of thin air.
Heading into the RSL match, following the Kansas City loss, Porter made a tactical tweak by moving Darlington Nagbe from the right wing to a central midfield role. Porter also brought in another attacker, in this case Melano, who had been on the bench in the previous two games, and switched from his normal 4-2-3-1 formation to a kind of 4-1-4-1/4-3-3 hybrid that featured one holding midfielder. It allowed one of the Timbersā most dangerous players, Nagbe, to have a bigger role in the offense.
Porter said it was his preferred formation from his college days, and itās a big reason for Portlandās offensive renaissance.
āSomething was missing,ā Porter said. ā⦠You look at [Nagbe], and he wasnāt contributing as much as we thought he could. We had talked about moving him into the center. ā¦
āAnd we had questions too of would it work, but we were in a situation where it made sense.ā
In the run-in to the playoffs, it resulted in three goals and an assist for Nagbe and three goals for striker Fanendo Adi and an attack with renewed confidence after it had averaged just a goal per game most of the season.
āItās amazing,ā Adi said after the regular season. āThis is what weāve been looking forward to the whole season. ⦠Weāre just going to enjoy it, and weāre very glad and weāre very motivated. Itās beautiful, thatās all I can say.ā
The doubters, as they do when a team suddenly is winning again, have been silenced ā for now. Rumors of Porterās departure, which he called āridiculousā at the time, feel all the more laughable.
But Porter also knows that youāre only as good as your last result, and he said the team is hyper-focused to give their supporters at least one more home game in 2015 ā which in this case would come in another conference championship series.
Itās a process, he said, which prevented him from ever questioning his ability to lead.
āIāve been a head coach for quite awhile, so you learn to just stay focused on the process and continue to believe in what you know. And yet Iām always challenging myself all the time, privately, and questioning what could I do differently. ⦠Iām always going to look at ways to stimulate things. I donāt always tell you Iām doing that, but Iām doing it.ā
Dan Itel covers the Timbers for MLSsoccer.com.