Red Bulls again left to rue faulty set piece defending

New York allow three goals via corner kicks in 4-2 loss at Seattle

Seattle away gallery 7

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For more than a month now, the Red Bulls have victimized themselves
with poor execution in defending set pieces, a storyline which was on
display in full force on Thursday night in their 4-2 loss to Seattle.

WATCH: FULL MATCH HIGHLIGHTS

The first three Sounders goals came via dead ball situations, dooming
New York to play catch-up from a deep hole early in the match.

"Conceding three goals on corners hurt us. It's ridiculous. You can't
win games that way," said head coach Hans Backe after the match. "The
way we defend against corners absolutely has to stop now."

Since May 7, the Red Bulls have hemorrhaged goals in dead ball
situations, a prominent factor in why this team has just one win over a
nine-game stretch.

How bad has it been? All told in league play, New York have given up 18
goals over nine matches. Most worrisome for the Red Bulls is that 13 of
those goals during that stretch have come via set pieces, corner kicks,
or from the penalty spot.

But on Thursday night, the Red Bulls abandoned their zonal marking
system on set pieces where players mark turf to go man-to-man instead.

“We were trying to do something different because we’ve conceded too
many goals on set pieces,” Jan Gunnar Solli told MLSsoccer.com. “A
little unlucky to let these in.”

The Red Bulls conceded set piece goals No. 11 and No. 12 through corner
kicks within the first 12 minutes of the match to put themselves
immediately on their heels. Set piece goal No. 13, via the head of Roger
Levesque, also arrived through a corner kick midway through the second
half and gave the home side the lead for good.

Just one of Seattle’s four scores came from the run of play, another
example of how over the last month the Red Bulls have given away the
chance at points through their sloppy play during dead ball situations.

Thursday night’s match was one where the Red Bulls were far from being
outplayed. New York held a significant edge in possession, maintaining
the ball 62.6 percent of the match and holding steady with the home side
in terms of shots, shots on goal and corner kicks.

Even after going down 2-0 in the opening dozen minutes, the Red Bulls
battled back with a wonder goal from Dane Richards and an own goal
set-up by Solli.

“Set pieces are our problem. We were actually playing well, especially
after the equalizing goal,” Solli said. “At 2-2, I felt like we were the
team in control.”

WATCH: Solli run makes it level

If the Red Bulls had not conceded those 13 goals from set pieces thus
far in the season, they would have an additional 18 points in standings.
Five draws would have been wins, as would two losses. Instead, New York
are left ruing their defective defending.

"We have conceded 21 goals and 13 of them have been from set plays," said Backe. "That has to be stopped."

Said Solli, “I think we came out strong. I feel like we controlled the game after the equalizer. But it’s not good enough.”

Kristian R. Dyer can be followed at twitter.com/KristianRDyer