11/14/2004 4:50PM

MLS Cup 2004: By the numbers

Miscellaneous notes on the MLS Cup Final between D.C. United and the Kansas City Wizards:

MLS Cup 2004
D.C. gives vintage per-four-mance
Player by player recap
HDC the place to be for D.C.-K.C.
Gazidis discusses expansion, future
Hunt given Commish Award
Chivas USA gets first pick in draft
D.C. locker room
Esky's double garners MVP
Stewart departs an MLS champ
Adu finishes as crowned prince
D.C. reaps reward from hard work
United quote sheet
K.C. locker room
Closed lanes doom Wizards
No call adds to Wizards woes
K.C. lets opportunity slip away
WIzards quote sheet
MLSnet.com columnists
Columnist corner
Schmid: What a way to end
Match Sights
 Game package: 56K | 384K
 Trophy presentation: 56K | 384K
 Esky gets the MVP: 56K | 384K
 Zotinca's own goal: 56K | 384K
 Wolff PK, Dema's card: 56K | 384K
 Burciaga scores quick: 56K | 384K
 Esky's double: 56K | 384K
Photo Gallery
 MLS Cup 2004: launch gallery >
 Trophy time: launch gallery >
 D.C. celebrates: launch gallery >
  • Kansas City set an MLS record with eight 1-0 victories this season. The previous high was six by the Los Angeles Galaxy in 1999.
  • The Wizards' backline of Jose Burciaga Jr., Jimmy Conrad, Nick Garcia, and Alex Zotinca played 1063 minutes together this season, allowing only six goals during that time (regular- and postseason combined)-an average of 0.51 per 90 minutes.
  • United outscored their opponents 34-21 with Alecko Eskandarian and Jaime Moreno on the field together; the team was outscored 21-9 when either or both were on the bench.
  • Bob Gansler was hired as Wizards coach in May 1999. His current tenure is the longest of any head coach in MLS history.
  • D.C. United coach Peter Nowak could do something tomorrow that hasn't been done in any major U.S. pro sports league in nearly 50 years-win a championship within two years of the end of his playing career. Nowak retired following the 2002 season after five years with the Chicago Fire.

    The last coach to win a title that soon after the end of his playing career was Alex Hannum, who retired as an NBA player after the 1956-57 season-when he was a player-coach for the St. Louis Hawks. The Hawks won the NBA title under Hannum in 1958, his first season after retiring.

    Since then, several coaches have won titles soon after retiring. Some examples: Lenny Wilkens with the Sonics in 1979, four years after he last played; and Frank Yallop last season with the Quakes, five years after he last played in MLS. But no one since Hannum has won a title in the first or second year after his retirement as a player.

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