SAN JOSE, Calif.āDavid Bingham has been credited with 101 saves this season for the San Jose Earthquakes, but it was a play that canāt be found in the boxscore which saved the Quakesā Audi 2015 MLS Cup Playoffs aspirations.
Bingham made four saves during San Jose's 1-1 tie with the Vancouver Whitecaps on October 3. He didnāt receive any statistical credit for leaping out in the 94th minute to break up a 2-on-none breakaway after teammate Anibal Godoy slipped while trying to deliver a last-ditch ball into the Whitecapsā penalty area from a free kick.
Vancouver right back Steven Beitashour delivered a sliding interception to free Cristian Techera, who in turn played a first-touch pass into space for Kekuta Manneh to track down, with Godoy and JJ Koval futilely chasing the 20-year-old Gambian speedster.
āWeāre trying to put pressure on them, and then all of a sudden, the kick goes in their favor and theyāre running the other way,ā said coach Dominic Kinnear, after that game. āYou almost donāt want to look at the play develop.ā
He would have missed something impressive. Bingham stood poised, roughly 10 yards off his line, when Mannehās third dribble proved a bit heavy. The former Cal All-American sprang into action: sprinting into a full slide, Bingham got both hands on the ball moments before Manneh could intervene, with the rebound scooped up by San Jose's Tommy Thompson.
āI saw them coming down, and I knew we needed to make the stop on them, just keep the point intact,ā Bingham said. āI was just getting back, and I saw a bit of a heavy touch and thought that was my best chance to go on and stop their counter. ⦠I saw him coming down, and knew I had to stay big. If he was going to beat me, he was going to beat me, but I didnāt want to beat myself in that situation. I donāt want to give him an easy goal. So I stood up, and I saw my chance, and I took it.ā
Quakes captain Chris Wondolowski described his reaction to the play as ārun back and hopeā that the Whitecaps somehow couldnāt find a game-winner ā and steal a critical point at the death, with San Jose fighting desperately to stay above the red line.
āItās so nice to have David back there,ā Wondolowski said. āHeās so quick. Great job coming off his line to save that. Heās very good at breakaways; heās a very good goalkeeper. We owe him that one.ā
It was a play emblematic of the choice San Jose made this offseason, when veteran Jon Busch, a starter for more than four years, was let go to make way for Bingham. Busch, 39, eventually landed with Chicago, while the 25-year-old Bingham has played every league minute for the Quakes ā after making just five regular-season appearances in his first four MLS campaigns.
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Binghamās 101 saves are good for fourth in the league, but he actually tries to snuff out chances before they require a goal-line grab. Itās a strategy with higher rates of risk and reward, one that has sometimes shaken up the Quakes, but it proved a point-saver against Vancouver.
Regardless of what happens in San Jose's final two regular-season games, Bingham seems set for a sustained run as the team's No. 1 in the nets.
āI think heās had a really good season,ā Kinnear said. āItās still a relatively young career, and as long as heās open to improving and listening to Tim [Hanley], our goalkeepers coach, heās only going to get better.ā