However, a slow start and a rash of injuries made 2014 an uneven year for the club on the field with the Quakes missing the playoffs for the second straight season. Despite the team struggles, the year had a number of individual highlights. Both Chris Wondolowski (United States) and Victor Bernardez (Honduras) represented their countries at the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil. They are the first Quakes to play in the World Cup since 2002 when Landon Donovan and Jeff Agoos represented the U.S. Wondolowski helped the U.S. advance to the Round of 16, while Bernardez played in all three matches for Honduras.
Additionally, goalkeeper Jon Busch tied the single season San Jose record for saves in a season with 137, while tying the team record with 34 games played and 3,060 minutes played. Rookie homegrown midfielder, Tommy Thompson, made his first start for San Jose on Aug. 20, 2014 against Seattle Sounders FC to become the second youngest player to ever start for San Jose. The year also saw the end of the Quakes tenure at Buck Shaw Stadium on the campus of Santa Clara University.
San Jose saw numerous memorable moments at the stadium, including opening day on May 3, 2008 and clinching the Supporters’ Shield on Oct. 21, 2012. The Quakes had unbeaten streaks of 18 and 15 games during their time at Buck Shaw Stadium, losing just one out of 34 regular season games from the Sept. 10, 2011-March 15, 2014. Overall, the Quakes finished their Buck Shaw Stadium tenure with a 52-24-38 record in all competitions and a 45-22-35 record in MLS regular season matches. Near the end of the 2014 season, the Quakes let go of head coach Mark Watson and named Fremont-native Dominic Kinnear head coach for the second time in club history. Kinnear previously served as head coach from 2004-05.
2015: AVAYA STADIUM'S INAUGURAL SEASON
The headline heading into the season was the opening of the Earthquakes brand new, state-of-the-art venue, Avaya Stadium.
The 18,000-seat stadium provided Quakes fans with a sense of permanence and a proper home to call their own. The stadium opened to great fanfare and Krazy’s George’s drum on March 22 as San Jose defeated the Chicago Fire 2-1. Rookie Fatai Alashe scored the first goal ever at the stadium. The Quakes sold out all 15 MLS matches at Avaya Stadium, as well as three other soccer contests, during the inaugural season. The Earthquakes finished the year with a 7-3-5 record during league play at their new home. Overall, San Jose broke their club record for attendance with an average of 20,979, which includes matches at Levi’s Stadium and Stanford Stadium.
On the field, San Jose was coming off a six-win season, fewest in club history, but had made a wide array of moves in the offseason to strengthen the team. Among the more notable moves was bringing back head coach Dominic Kinnear, who led the Quakes to a Supporters’ Shield in 2005. He recorded his 150th win as an MLS head coach during the season. The club also signed Innocent, a Swiss striker, giving the roster three Designated Players for the first time in club history.
San Jose had a season defined by streaks. In July, the Quakes went 0-4-0 in MLS play and 0-7-0 in all competitions while forward Chris Wondolowski was away at the 2015 CONCACAF Gold Cup, but rebounded in August with a sparkling 4-1-1 record, which included a shutout streak of 448 minutes. Ultimately, the Quakes fell just shy of reaching the playoffs, although they more than doubled their win total with 13 wins and their 47 points were a 17-point improvement over 2014.
Wondolowski tallied a team-high 16 goals, becoming the first player in MLS history to reach a double-digit scoring total in six consecutive years. He also tallied his 100th career goal and 100th goal for San Jose during the season. He finished 2015 in fifth place all-time in MLS in goals scored with 109.
Stanford Stadium was once again home to another California Clasico with the Quakes setting another attendance record (50,422) in a 3-1 victory over the LA Galaxy.
Fresh faces largely impacted the Quakes season as a whole. The No. 4 pick in the 2015 MLS SuperDraft, Fatai Alashe, was a staple in the Quakes starting XI, as were defender Marvell Wynne and midseason signing Anibal Godoy. Forward Quincy Amarikwa was acquired via trade in late June, and finished with six goals, second most on the team. San Jose also handed the reins in goal to young keeper David Bingham, who responded by tying the 10-year-old club record with 12 shutouts.
While Wondolowski continued to suit up for the U.S. national team, the Quakes entire roster was full of internationals. Cordell Cato (Trinidad and Tobago), Sanna Nyassi (The Gambia), Anibal Godoy (Panama), Tommy Thompson (U.S. U-20 national team), Fatai Alashe (U.S. U-23 national team) and Marc Pelosi (U.S. U-23 national team) all represented their country during the year.
The Quakes also had the opportunity as one of three MLS clubs to compete in the International Champions Cup North America.
2016: SETTLING INTO OUR NEW HOME
The Earthquakes 2016 season was full of ups and downs, resulting in an 8-12-14 record and a ninth place finish in the Western Conference. The team’s 14 draws tied the franchise record set in 2011 and the team’s eight wins were tied for the second fewest since 2010.
San Jose started the season with tremendous promise, dropping just one of their first six matches (3-1-2). Unfortunately the season was marred with rough patches, including winning just one of their final 11 matches (1-6-4).
The Quakes defense built off of the previous year’s success and ultimately allowed just 40 goals, tied for third fewest in Major League Soccer. Center back Clarence Goodson, the club’s 2015 Defensive Player of the Year, made just two starts before sustaining a season-ending back injury, and young central midfielder Marc Pelosi also lost his season to injury, failing to make a single appearance after offseason knee surgery.
The team made a handful of midseason moves, including swapping Designated Player Matias Perez Garcia for Orlando City SC’s Darwin Ceren, and signing the Swedish Allsvenskan’s reigning Most Valuable Player Henok Goitom. The Quakes hoped Goitom’s arrival would spark the offense late in the season, but he ultimately finished with no goals and one assist in eight total appearances.
Avaya Stadium held the 2016 MLS All-Star Game against Arsenal FC of the English Premier League and forward Chris Wondolowski and goalkeeper David Bingham each featured in front of the hometown crowd. The duo also played a role for the United States National Team and Bingham even earned a shutout victory in his first career cap against Canada in February.
In August, the Earthquakes parted ways with general manager John Doyle, who held the role since the team returned to the league in 2008, and eventually replaced him with former Roma executive Jesse Fioranelli. The Quakes also continued to invest in their youth setup, agreeing to a multi-year affiliate partnership with USL side Reno 1868 FC beginning in 2016, and making strides on a 44-acre, $37-million academy complex down the street from the stadium.
2017: BACK IN THE PLAYOFFS
The Earthquakes entered 2017 with a reinvigorated spirit on the back of new general manager Jesse Fioranelli. Fioranelli, hired on January 5, brought in several new players with Targeted Allocation Money, including Albanian international Jahmir Hyka, Dutch striker Danny Hoesen and German defensemen Florian Jungwirth, all while keeping a Designated Player spot open for the summer. The club also signed their second-ever Homegrown Player in Nick Lima, who had previously played for the Quakes Academy, PDL affiliate Burlingame Dragons FC and the University of California. San Jose got off to good start, dropping just three of their first 10 games (4-3-3) and found themselves near the top of the table in the Western Conference. The Quakes then hit a rough patch, going 1-3-1 over their next five games, including a 4-2 home defeat to the LA Galaxy. Following the team’s 2-1 victory against Real Salt Lake on June 24, head coach Dominic Kinnear was replaced by the then technical director Chris Leitch, who made his First Team coaching debut one week later in the annual California Clasico at Stanford Stadium. Two late goals, including a stoppage-time winner by Shea Salinas, propelled the Quakes to a 2-1 comeback victory in front of 50,617 fans. Under Leitch, the Earthquakes experimented with their tactical approach and featured more attack-minded play through a variety of formations. The new tactical style provided mixed results leading to many important wins and several lopsided losses as the team pushed for second-half equalizers. The Quakes finished the regular season with a -21 goal differential. San Jose did well to hang around the playoff line through timely wins and avoiding lengthy losing streaks. The club also signed Georgia international forward Vako during the summer transfer window, who would go on to tally five goals and two assists in less than 800 minutes. In the penultimate game of the season, the Quakes earned a 1-1 draw in Vancouver to put their playoff destiny in their own hands, later clinching the playoff spot with a stoppage-time goal in the season finale. San Jose would play the single-elimination Knockout Round match in Vancouver, falling 5-0. The Earthquakes also had a strong run in the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup, defeating the San Francisco Deltas (NASL), Seattle Sounders FC and the LA Galaxy at Avaya Stadium and earning a berth in the semifinals for the first time since 2004. The Quakes ultimately fell to Sporting Kansas City on penalty kicks after the score remained 1-1 through overtime. Chris Wondolowski, voted team MVP, led the Quakes with 13 goals and a career-best eight assists. He became the first player to ever score 10+ goals in eight consecutive seasons and moved into a tie for second on the league’s all-time scoring list. .
2018: A YEAR OF CHANGE
Under first-year head coach Mikael Stahre, San Jose started the year with an impressive 3-2 victory over Minnesota United FC, a match they once led 3-0. Despite the positive result in the season opener, the Quakes won just one of their next 20 matches (1-12-7), picking up a second win against Minnesota in Week 9 and failing to defeat any other MLS side until August. After signing Georgian defender Guram Kashia and moving 20-year-old midfielder Luis Felipe into the starting lineup, San Jose appeared to pick up steam midseason. The club earned a pair of upset victories over FC Dallas, who would finish with the Western Conference’s fourth-best regular season record, and began a promising 2-2-2 run from late July into August. The Earthquakes opted to part ways with Stahre and assistant coach Alex de Crook with six games remaining, promoting Steve Ralston to interim head coach. Ralston was tasked with facing four of the top five teams in MLS and the Quakes earned just one point the remainder of the season: a scoreless home draw against Colorado. San Jose’s primary storyline during the 2018 season was Chris Wondolowski’s pursuit of Landon Donovan’s all-time goals record. Needing 12 goals to reach 146 for his career and break the record, Wondolowski finished the season with 10, his fewest in a single season since 2009, but extended his record of consecutive seasons with 10+ goals to nine. Three Homegrown Players were signed prior to the season: goalkeeper JT Marcinkowski, defender Jacob Akanyirige and midfielder Gilbert Fuentes. Nearly all of the Quakes’ five Homegrowns made an impact during the year, with defender Nick Lima recording a team-high 3,049 minutes, midfielder Tommy Thompson making 14 appearances, Marcinkowski starting five of the team’s final six matches and Fuentes making his MLS debut on Oct. 21. Fuentes, at 16 years and 246 days, became the youngest player to debut for SJ. Just prior to the end of the season, the Quakes announced the hire of former Chivas head coach Matias Almeyda, who would take over beginning in 2019. He marked the team’s fifth head coach since June of 2017 .
2019: RESURGENCE AND REVIVAL
Under new head coach Matias Almeyda, the San Jose Earthquakes experienced a strong resurgence following the dismal four-win season of 2018. Despite making minimal changes to the roster, Almeyda set the tone for the year in preseason, taking players on a two-and-a-half-week camp in Cancun, Mexico, where they would train twice a day. The players were asked to learn an entirely different system of play, while aiming to be the fittest and most physically capable side in Major League Soccer. Despite scoring just minutes into their season opener, the Earthquakes fell to the Montreal Impact in what would be the start of a four-match losing streak to begin the year. Each of the four matches had a larger margin of defeat than the one before, culminating in a 5-0 loss at home to eventual Supporters’ Shield winners LAFC. Prior to the start of their fifth match, Homegrown Tommy Thompson gave a rousing pregame speech on live TV. He professed his belief in the team and exclaimed, “We’re going to fix this!” The Quakes would go on to defeat the Portland Timbers 3-0 for their first win of the season. The victory sparked an incredible turn of events for San Jose, who went 11-3-4 in 18 matches following the losing streak to start the year. It also marked the start of a 12-match unbeaten run at home (10-0-2), the club’s longest in six years. Chris Wondolowski, who entered the season just one goal shy of Landon Donovan’s career goal-scoring record of 145, failed to score in each of his first 10 appearances of 2019. After losing his starting spot, Wondolowski was named to the XI on May 18 for the first time in six weeks due to an injury to Danny Hoesen. He exploded for four goals against the Fire, breaking Donovan’s record and earning MLS Player of the Week honors. He would go on to score eight goals in four matches from May 18 to June 8 and force his way into the MLS All-Star Game against Atletico Madrid. Climbing as high as second in the Western Conference standings, the Earthquakes became the talk of Major League Soccer for their unique tactical approach and hard-working style of play. With six matches remaining, the Quakes were 13-10-5 and in strong position to finish top-four and host their first playoff game since 2012. Facing a difficult slate of opponents to close out the season, the Earthquakes were without head coach Matias Almeyda for four of the team’s last eight matches due to two separate sideline ejections. San Jose made many self-inflicted errors down the stretch, including receiving three red cards to key players across the final few matches. The Earthquakes ultimately lost each of their final six matches, including the season finale in Portland, which served as a win-and-they’re-in scenario. San Jose finished as the best non-playoff team in MLS for the third time in the past seven years. While only 20% of field-player minutes were given to newcomers in 2019, the Quakes were aided by a few important acquisitions. Cristian Espinoza, the team’s eventual Offensive Player of the Year, finished with a team-best 13 assists - something not previously achieved by a Quakes players since 2012. Defensive midfielder Judson and goalkeeper Daniel Vega also proved to be influential performers throughout the season. No player experienced a breakout season like 22-year-old Jackson Yueill, who went from role player to vital starter. The UCLA product established himself as one of the league’s best young players and earned numerous call-ups to the U.S. National Team in 2019.
History of the Earthquakes Name
When the San Jose Major League Soccer club decided to change its name and look in 1999, it went into the past to do so. Reaching back to a previously successful soccer team in the area, the Clash became the Earthquakes. The previous incarnation of the Earthquakes played in the North American Soccer League from 1974-1984, and then in the Western Soccer Alliance from 1985-88. Those Earthquakes teams called Spartan Stadium home. The name Earthquakes originally came from a newspaper contest in the San Jose Mercury News, in which fans were encouraged to send in suggestions for the name of the soon-to-be formed San Jose franchise. The name Earthquakes was chosen by the team's management. Following are the results of those teams:
Note: The team was known as Golden Bay Earthquakes in 1983 and 1984.