Earthquakes top Fire to take title
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| Pat Onstad makes the stop on Ante Razov's PK attempt |
CARSON, California -- The San Jose Earthquakes
defeated the Chicago Fire 4-2 in the 2003 MLS Cup Championship match Sunday
afternoon in front of a capacity crowd at The Home Depot Center in Carson,
California. With the win, San Jose joins D.C. United as only the second
team in MLS history to earn multiple MLS Cup titles, hoisting the Alan
I. Rothenberg trophy for the second time in three seasons.
San Jose forward Landon Donovan recorded two goals in the match, earning
the Honda MLS Cup Most Valuable Player award. Goalkeeper Pat Onstad made
a critical play for the Earthquakes in the second half, knocking away
an Ante Razov penalty kick attempt in the 55th minute to hold the San
Jose lead.
San Jose Head Coach Frank Yallop (2001, '03) is the first coach since
United’s Bruce Arena (1996, '97) to lead his team to two MLS Cup
titles. San Jose defender and team captain Jeff Agoos records his fifth
career MLS Cup title, winning the Championship three times with United
(1996, '97, '99) and twice with the Earthquakes (2001, '03).
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| Jeff
Agoos disrupts Ante Razov's attempt to control the ball |
The Earthquakes jumped out to an early lead when midfielder Ronnie Ekelund
drove home a free kick in the fifth minute for the 1-0 lead. Jamil Walker
was clipped by the Fire’s Jesse Marsch at the top of the penalty
arc, disrupting the San Jose advance and drawing the foul. On the restart,
defender Jeff Agoos lured the defensive wall with a convincing dummy run
to the ball, opening a gap in the wall and exposing the far side of the
net. Ekelund teed up a strong right-footed blast to the upper corner,
putting the shot through the hands of a diving Zach Thornton.
Ekelund’s goal ties former Los Angeles Galaxy forward Eduardo Hurtado
for the fastest goal in an MLS Cup Championship match. Hurtado opened
the scoring in the 1996 MLS Cup final, where the Galaxy fell to D.C. United
3-2 in overtime.
Landon Donovan doubled the San Jose lead in the 38th minute, breaking
in behind Fire defender Carlos Bocanegra to connect with Jamil Walker’s
well-timed diagonal ball into the box. Donovan made his run to the near
post, drawing Thornton off of his line to cut down the shooting angle.
As Thornton committed, Donovan slotted the shot underneath the 'keeper’s
arm for his ninth career playoff tally and his third in the 2003 postseason.
Both sides recorded some quality chances in the first half of play. Gatorade
Rookie of the Year Damani Ralph gave San Jose a scare in the 33rd minute
when he kept his feet after absorbing a hard challenge from Eddie Robinson.
Outracing defender Craig Waibel, Ralph was in prime position to score,
but a poor touch on the ball left an easy save for goalkeeper Pat Onstad.
Moments later, Ralph got another short-range crack on goal, but Onstad
was in position to bat it down.
Manny Lagos elicited a roar from the crowd with his 37th minute attempt,
making a lunging volley attempt to get under a Brian Mullan pass from
the flank. Lagos made good contact with the ball, but Thornton was in
excellent position to cover the play.
Neither side wasted any time opening the scoring in the second half,
as Chicago made it a one-goal game in the 49th minute. Andy Williams laid
off a short pass behind the San Jose defense, springing midfielder DaMarcus
Beasley down the near side of the box. Beasley rushed the net, beating
Onstad cleanly and hitting the far side netting.
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| San
Jose celebrates Ronnie Ekelund's free kick goal in the first half
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The Fire’s celebration was short-lived however, as Richard Mulrooney
found the back of the net directly off the restart. Craig Waibel sent
the ball downfield, exposing the Fire backs as Mulrooney raced down the
flank. Allowing the ball to settle, Mulrooney picked out his spot on the
far side of the goal, putting it out of the reach of Thornton. The tally
was Mulrooney’s first career postseason goal.
San Jose defender Chris Roner, entering the game in the second half,
narrowed his own team’s lead with a 54th minute own goal. Chicago’s
Evan Whitfield chased down the ball at the far side end line, hustling
back to send a dangerous cross in front of the net. Roner’s attempt
to head the ball over the crossbar went awry, however, as he nodded the
ball back into the net.
Roner’s nightmare stretch continued, as a 55th minute challenge
on Damani Ralph drew a whistle and a penalty kick for the Fire. Ralph
was taken down from behind near the end line as he turned the corner to
head towards the near post. Forward Ante Razov went to the spot for Chicago,
attempting to convert the first penalty kick in MLS Cup history. Razov’s
strike was well read by Onstad, who dove to his right to smother the ball
on the goal line.
Razov came within inches of scoring for the Fire in the 58th minute,
taking a one-time strike from the top of the box that grazed the outside
of upper corner of the net.
Donovan scored his second goal of the match in the 71st minute, easily
tapping home the ball to extend the Quakes’ lead to 4-2. Forward
Dwayne DeRosario, who came in for an injured Jamil Walker at the hour
mark, was afforded space and time on the near flank. DeRosario slipped
the cross to the end of Donovan’s near-post run. With defender Jim
Curtin and Thornton trailing behind, Donovan was able to tap the ball
into the gaping net.
The goal marked a new high-scoring mark in MLS Cup History, as the two
sides became the first to combine for more than five goals in the Championship
match. The previous record was set in MLS Cup 1996.
Razov had another golden chance to score for Chicago in the 82nd minute,
but missed the play by inches. Ralph weaved through the San Jose defense
again on the near side, outpacing the Roner to slip a dangerous ball across
the box and into the path of an onrushing Razov. Razov got a step on his
defender and attempted to slide in and touch the ball home, but fell just
short as the ball rolled out of danger.
San Jose took a hard road to the MLS Cup title, coming from behind in
both the Conference Semifinals and the Conference Championship to book
passage to the title match. In the first round of the playoffs, San Jose
overcame a four-goal aggregate deficit to put away defending Champion
Los Angeles in overtime. Then, in the single elimination Conference Final
at Spartan Stadium, the 'Quakes came from behind twice to earn the golden
goal victory.
The Fire miss out on the domestic treble, having already won the Lamar
Hunt U.S. Open Cup and the Supporters Shield for the League’s best
regular season record. Chicago became the first team to advance to the
MLS Cup final without allowing a single goal in the postseason. Chicago
defeated D.C. United 4-0 on aggregate in the opening round before dispatching
New England 1-0 at Soldier Field.
Honda MLS Cup MVP: Landon Donovan (San Jose Earthquakes)
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| San
Jose starting lineup |
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| Chicago
starting lineup |
| San
Jose Earthquakes (3-1-0) vs. Chicago Fire (3-1-0) |
| November
23, 2003 -- The Home Depot Center |
|
Goals by Period |
1 |
2 |
Tot |
| San Jose
Earthquakes |
2 |
2 |
4 |
| Chicago Fire
|
0 |
2 |
2 |
| Scoring Summary:
|
|
SJ -- Ronnie Ekelund 1 (unassisted) 5
|
|
SJ -- Landon Donovan 3 (Jamil Walker 2) 38
|
|
CHI -- DaMarcus Beasley 1 (Andy Williams 1) 49
|
|
SJ -- Richard Mulrooney 1 (Craig Waibel 1) 50
|
|
CHI -- own goal (Chris Roner) 54
|
|
SJ -- Landon Donovan 4 (Dwayne De Rosario 1, Brian Mullan 1) 71
|
San Jose Earthquakes
-- Pat Onstad, Eddie Robinson, Troy Dayak, Craig Waibel (Chris Roner
51), Jeff Agoos, Brian Mullan, Ronnie Ekelund, Richard Mulrooney,
Manny Lagos (Ian Russell 70), Landon Donovan, Jamil Walker (Dwayne
De Rosario 60).
Substitutes Not Used: Jon Conway, Ramiro Corrales, Todd Dunivant,
Rodrigo Faria, Roger Levesque, Josh Saunders.
TOTAL SHOTS: 11 (3 tied with 2); SHOTS ON GOAL: 8 (3 tied with 2);
FOULS: 14 (Eddie Robinson 3); OFFSIDES: 3 (3 tied with 1); CORNER
KICKS: 3 (Richard Mulrooney 2); SAVES: 9 (Pat Onstad 8)
Chicago Fire -- Zach Thornton, Jim Curtin (Nate Jaqua 81),
Evan Whitfield, Carlos Bocanegra, Orlando Perez (Kelly Gray 46),
Andy Williams (Justin Mapp 70), Chris Armas, Jesse Marsch, DaMarcus
Beasley, Ante Razov, Damani Ralph.
Substitutes Not Used: Jonathan Bolanos, C.J. Brown, Ryan
Futagaki, Logan Pause, Dipsy Selolwane, Curtis Spiteri.
TOTAL SHOTS: 22 (Ante Razov 8); SHOTS ON GOAL: 10 (Ante Razov 4);
FOULS: 17 (Jesse Marsch 4, Ante Razov 4); OFFSIDES: 4 (Damani Ralph
2, Ante Razov 2); CORNER KICKS: 13 (Andy Williams 7); SAVES: 4 (Zach
Thornton 4)
|
| Misconduct Summary:
|
| SJ -- Craig Waibel (caution;
Tackle from Behind) 15 |
| SJ -- Eddie Robinson
(caution; Professional Foul) 54 |
| Referee: Brian
Hall |
| Referee's Assistants:
-Craig Lowry; Darren Engers |
| 4th Official:
Noel Kenny |
| Attendance:
27,000 |
| Time of Game:
1:56 |
| Weather: Sunny-and-71-degrees
|
All Statistics contained in
this boxscore are unofficial
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