Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup
GALAXY WIN BY A HAIR
28/10/01
By Jeff Dieffenbach
The blue dye-job of Danny Califf rose to head home a Cobi Jones’
corner kick for the Golden Goal game winner, giving the Los Angeles
Galaxy a 2-1 victory over New England Revolution to win the 88th
Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup.
The strike was a sweet redemption for Califf, who been beaten in
the penalty area by Dwayne DeRosario for a Golden Goal in the San
Jose Earthquakes’ defeat of the Galaxy a week ago in the MLS Cup
championship game.
When asked by Soccer365 if the blue hair was laced with helium to
help him get up so high, Califf replied, “I guess so. Something
happened. It’s a great way to win. After the setback last week, to
be able to come back from that, it’s insane.”
Califf used overtime substitute Alexi Lalas as a screen to shed
defender Mauricio Wright just under 2 minutes into the first fifteen
minute overtime period. Lalas started the overtime at center
forward, having replaced a spent Sasha Victorine.
Victorine, a second-year player out of UCLA, made full use of his
ninety plus minutes, wearing down the Revolution defense with
tireless running. Among his many head ball plays, he put two just
off target on services from Wellington, New Zealand native Simon
Elliott to close out the first half.
The game started at 2pm on a hazy blue Saturday afternoon. Nearly
5,000 fans came out to watch the under-hyped championship game.
Throughout the game, cheers of “REV-O-LU-TION” filled the stands,
but the Midnight Riders fan club was left to face a disappointing
cross-country flight back home.
The opening that Califf found to knock in the game winner was due
in part to the absence of Revolution midfielder Jay Heaps, shown a
red card and sent off by referee Paul Tamberino for an elbow to the
face of Los Angeles midfielder Adam Frye in the 88th minute.
Throughout the game, former Duke University soccer star and
basketball reserve put his leaping skills on display, repeatedly
clearing dangerous balls sent into the New England penalty area. The
Revolution clearly missed his aerial talents in overtime. Said New
England head coach Fernando Clavijo to a group of reporters after
the game, “It’s a factor in the box because of his jumping
ability.”
The elbow from Heaps, in over-zealous retaliation for the same
play shirt-pulling that earned Frye a yellow card, marred an
otherwise excellent game from the Massachusetts native. Heaps, the
1999 MLS Rookie of the Year for the Miami Fusion, repeatedly
presented himself on the right flank as a target for passes both
short and long.
The first third of the game offered little excitement for the
fans, prompting one sportswriter to lament, “I’ve got only six words
of notes.” The two teams shared possession, with Los Angeles owning
the slight edge in creative play.
New England scored first, however. In the 29th minute, forward
Wolde Harris, who missed on scoring opportunities in the 19th and
52nd minutes, lined up next to midfielder Cate for a free kick from
just left of center about 35 yards from. Harris took the kick,
deflecting his signature low blast off of both the three-man wall
and the unlucky Frye several yard behind. The ball still carried
enough pace to beat wrong-footed Galaxy goalkeeper Kevin Hartman in
the lower right corner.
Reminded of similar under-the-wall goals in years past, Harris
said, “Yes, definitely, I’m pretty happy that we scored early.”
After the game, however, he continued, “A one-nothing lead in any
championship games is a pretty scary lead.”
The goal was the bright spot for Harris in an otherwise
lackluster day. In addition to his two missed scoring chances, he
looked uneven controlling and passing the ball. In the sixty-seventh
minute, he was replaced by Costa Rican national team player William
Sunsing, who was ineffective in relief.
In fact, substitutions were the downfall for the Revolution.
Defender Alan Woods replaced forward and Jamaican national Andy
Williams in the 60th, changing their formation from a 3-5-2 to a
more defensive 4-4-2. While Woods played solidly, he certainly did
not pose the playmaking threat Williams had been.
With twenty minutes remaining, two of New England’s strongest
offensive players were on the bench. In the 77th minute, Ted
Chronopoulos, nagged by a tender left hamstring, replaced Nick
Downing in the midfield, but like Sunsing, failed to factor.
Eight minutes after the Harris goal, Elliott missed a prime
chance to equalize. A Jones pass from the right edge of the penalty
box found Elliott alone at the top of the “D.” He should have done
better with his volley that sailed just high and right.
Just after half time in the 51st minute, New England similarly
squandered a scoring chance. Remarked Clavijo, “You put a game away
two-nothing, they’re going to have to open up, and you can make them
pay on the counter attack.”
The otherwise quiet Cate led Williams into the center of the
Galaxy’s penalty area with a brilliant soft pass. Williams eluded
the charging Hartman, but in so doing, took the ball a bit wider
right than he would have liked.
Williams found himself facing St. Vincent of the Grenadines
native Ezra Hendrickson, Los Angeles’ offensive-minded right back,
who had slipped in behind Hartman. Williams elected not to go low
and instead put a blast wide into the upper outside netting at the
near post.
In the sixty-third minute, an era came to an end, as forward
Brian Mullan replaced defender Paul Caligiuri for the Galaxy. As
U.S. soccer fans may remember, Caligiuri scored the “shot heard
round the world” game winner at Trinidad and Tobago in 1989 to put
the U.S. through to the 1990 World Cup. The U.S. presence in that
tournament helped secure the hosting of the World Cup in 1994, which
in turn led to the creation of MLS.
The 2001 U.S. Open Cup final marked Caligiuri’s retirement from
professional soccer. His connection to the game is far from over,
fortunately. He has all of one day off before his first day as coach
of the men’s and women’s Cal-Poly Pomona soccer teams.
When asked by Soccer365 if he might duplicate Michael Jordan’s
comeback from retirement following a championship, he observed,
“Soccer’s a lot different than basketball. Do I look forward to
coaching? Absolutely, I’m very excited.”
Fans who weren’t paying attention might have missed Caligiuri’s
presence on the field today, as his long bottle blonde locks of late
had mysteriously disappeared. In fact, Mullan, his replacement, with
below the shoulder brown hair, looked more like Caligiuri from a
distance than Caligiuri did.
In the 67th minute, the Galaxy appeared due the break they needed
to tie the game when Wright grabbed more than a handful of
Victorine’s shirt inside the penalty area. No call.
No amount of kindness on the part of the officials could save the
Revolution three minutes later, however. From the center of the
field 40 yards out, Galaxy defender Greg Vanney lofted a harmless
looking ball to Hendrickson on the right just above the box.
Hendrickson took Revolution defender Downing toward the end line
before using his right foot to loft what appeared to be a pass
towards the New England goal area. The ball carried over helpless
goalkeeper Jose Fernandez into the upper left corner, knotting the
score at one. As for whether the ball was a pass or a shot,
Hendrickson said, “Definitely where I wanted to put it.”
Fernandez, a member of the Bolivian national team called up for
their next World Cup qualifier against Brazil, kept the Revolution
in the match for the remaining twenty minutes.
Whereas the first half was fairly balanced, the second half was
all Los Angeles. In the 87th minute, Fernandez fought through
traffic to punch clear an Elliott corner kick. Seconds later, he
made a point blank stop of Galaxy midfielder Mauricio Cienfuegos at
the 6 yard mark. Cienfuegos, who uncharacteristically had an
otherwise ineffective game, took a chip pass from Jones from 30
yards out.
In a 97th minute flurry that almost put the Revolution away,
Hendrickson turned and side volleyed a blast from the top of the
penalty area that Fernandez just managed to tip over the top. In his
final save in the first minute of overtime, he came out past his
penalty area to stuff Jones with his feet.
Seconds later, though, Califf’s heroics cemented the Galaxy’s
second championship of the year, the first coming against Olimpia of
Honduras 3-2 in the Football Confederation Champions Cup Final in
January.
Asked if the Revolution’s second-place finish in the U.S. Open
Cup would set the table for next year, Fernandez commented,
“Hopefully this will help us out next year to make things
happen.”
2001 may go down as the year of the retirement. Legends Cal
Ripken Jr. and Tony Gwynn played their final baseball games.
Conversely, another legend, Michael Jordan, ended his retirement to
return to basketball.
Paul Caligiuri may not get the same national attention, but this
soccer star is no less a class act. After the match, he consoled a
dejected Heaps, “It’s the worst feeling, it’s the longest walk (off
the field after being ejected).”
Later, when asked about the day, he said, “It’s remarkable. One
thing is winning a championship, because it’s so difficult, it’s
another thing altogether to conclude a career like that.” Remarking
on a large yellow “Thanks Paul #20” sign put up by fans, he
continued, “This day has just been wonderful. From the way the game
ended up to the gesture of Ezra Hendrickson giving me his jersey
(after scoring the tying goal), the sign, the fans, the standing
ovation, it’s tremendous.”
SCORING SUMMARY: N.E. - Wolde Harris
(unassisted) 30th minute. L.A. - Ezra
Hendrickson (Greg Vanney) 70. L.A. - Danny
Califf (Cobi Jones) 92.
Lineups:
L.A. - 22-Kevin Hartman; 3- Greg Vanney, 20-Paul Caligiuri
(19-Brian Mullan, 64), 23-Danny Califf, 17-Ezra Hendrickson;
12-Simon Elliott, 8-Peter Vagenas, 10-Mauricio Cienfuegos; 18-Adam
Frye, 11- Sasha Victorine (30-Alexi Lalas, 91), 13-Cobi Jones
(Capt.).
Subs Not Used: 1-Matt Reis, 6-Craig Waibel, 9-Brian Chin, 16-Alex
Bengard, 25-Marvin Quijano.
N.E. - 25-Jose Fernandez; 8-Joe Franchino, 29-Mauricio Wright
(Capt.), 2-Leo Cullen; 14-Leonel Alvarez, 6-Jay Heaps (ejected, 88),
19-Nick Downing (5-Ted Chronopolous, 78), 17-Brandon Cloutier,
10-Cate; 7-Andy Williams (12-Alan Woods, 61), 13-Wolde Harris
(77-William Sunsing, 68).
Subs Not Used: 26-Jeff Causey, 3-Rusty Pierce, 20-Fernando Ortiz
Solis, 33-Matt Okoh.
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