Whether he was motivated or well rested, Minnesota United striker Angelo Rodriguez did everything but score in his 45-minute return to action Sunday in the team's 1-1 draw with LAFC at Allianz Field.
Rodriguez hadn't played 29 minutes in his previous six games, including the past three in which he hadn't made the lineup as either starter or substitute. Coach Adrian Heath instead turned to speedy forwards Mason Toye and Abu Danladi.
Rodriguez, 30, hasn't started a game since Aug. 17, when he played 27 minutes in a home game against Orlando City and came up clutching his hamstring.
On Sunday, Rodriguez came on after halftime for Toye and gave United the kind of possession player and scoring threat it signed last season as one of three designated players.
"Well, it's my style," he said.
He was stopped by LAFC goalkeeper Pablo Sisniega from short range two minutes after entering the game and chipped a shot just over the crossbar 10 minutes later. He just missed the winner in the 83rd minute when Sisniega stopped him not once, but twice in succession.
Rodriguez also set up Darwin Quintero with a crossing pass for a quality chance that the keeper stopped, too, in a second half when United controlled much more of the play than it did before halftime.
"He certainly gave us some life up there," Heath said after the game. "He gave us a starting point. It's an old saying in football: If you can't get a hold of the ball in the opposing team's half, invariably it comes straight back and that was what was happening in the first half.''