MLS
2001 GOLD MINE AWARDS
30/10/01
by Jeff Dieffenbach
Sport. Not a sport. It’s a debate that will never be settled, but
one school of thought has it that if you can’t measure the result
(gymnastics, synchronized swimming, ballroom dancing), it’s not a
sport. Extremely difficult, certainly! A sport,
NO! Likewise, many year-end awards (MVP, Rookie of the
Year, and so on) fail the measurement test. Others (top goal scorer,
best goals against average, etc) practically report themselves, no
point in repeating them here.
Great and not so great performances abounded in MLS this year.
Some obvious, some less so. The focus here leans towards the latter,
buried performances mined like nuggets from the statistical depths.
Herewith, the 2001 - and first annual - MLS Gold Mine awards.
Sharpshooter award: Anyone can score goals given
enough shots. Sure, Jason Kreis of the Dallas Burn scored 7 goals,
good for 19th overall (tied with Clint Mathis, Dante Washington,
Steve Ralston, Roy Lassiter, Sasha Victorine, and Landon
Donavanelite company, to be sure) among the 134 players who scored
goals in the MLS this year. But it took him 77 shots, or one goal
every 11 shots!
What’s really impressive is scoring goals without a lot of shots.
Who were this year’s top Sharpshooters among those scoring more than
two goals?
1. Steve Ralston,
Tampa Bay Mutiny, 7 goals on 18 shots (1 every 2.57
shots) 2. Ted
Chronopoulos, New England Revolution, 5 of 15 (1 every
3.00) 3. Brian
Maisonneuve, Columbus Crew, 8 of 26 (1 every
3.25) 4. Alex Pineda
Chacon, Miami Fusion, 19 of 63 (1 every
3.32) 5. Greg Vanney,
Los Angeles Galaxy, 6 of 21 (1 every 3.50)
Congratulations to Steve Ralston, the 2001 Sharpshooter award
winner. Honorable mention to Alex Pineda Chacon for his accuracy
while leading the league in both goals and points.
Passing Fancy award: All true fans know that the
while the heart of soccer may be the goal, it’s soul is the pass.
And best of all is the pass that leads to the goal. The Passing
Fancy award goes to the goalscorer with the best ratio of assists to
goals.
1. Simon Elliott, Los
Angeles Galaxy, 11 assists and 1 goal:
11.0 2. Ross Paule,
Colorado Rapids/New York MetroStars, 10 and 1:
10.0 3. Antonio
Martinez, Dallas Burn, 9 and 1:
9.0 3. Richard
Mulrooney, San Jose Earthquakes, 9 and 1:
9.0 5. Bobby Convey,
DC United, 7 and 1:
7.0 5. Daniel
Hernandez, New York MetroStars, 7 and 1: 7.0
Congratulations to Simon Elliott for dishing it out to win the
2001 Passing Fancy award. Honorable mention to Brian McBride of
the Columbus Crew with 6 assists and 1 goal, one of six players tied
for 7th and one player whom his teammates would like to see show up
in the next category.
Also, honorable mention also to Mauricio Cienfuegos of the Los
Angeles Galaxy, whose 7 assists to 2 goals ratio gives him the
highest ranking (16th) of those players with 2 goals.
And finally, honorable mention to Miami Fusion goalkeeper Nick
Ramando, who tallied 2 assists.
Take My Ball and Go Home award: Everyone
remembers the kid who wouldn’t share. MLS is no different. The Take
My Ball and Go Home award is arrived at by looking at the ratio of
goals to assists.
1. Abdul Thompson
Conteh, DC United, 14 goals and 1 assist:
14.0 2. Roy Lassiter,
Kansas City Wizards, 7 and 1:
7.0 3. Ted
Chronopoulos, New England Revolution, 5 and 1:
5.0 3. Santino
Quaranta, DC United, 5 and 1:
5.0 5. Rodrigo Faria,
New York MetroStars, 8 and 2: 4.0
No shame in putting the ball in the back of the net! No congrats,
but also no rotten tomatoes, for Abdul Thompson Conteh, winner of
the 2001 Take My Ball and Go Home award.
Two (Two!) Men Between the Ball and the Goal
award: It’s hard to blame offensive players for wanting to
score goals. It’s easy to blame them for ignoring the rules,
however. The Two (Two!) Men Between the Ball and the Goal award goes
to those with the highest ratios of offsides calls to goals.
1. Chris Albright, DC
United, 13 offsides and 1 goal:
13.0 2. Junior Agogo,
Colorado Rapids, 12 and 1:
12.0 3. Chris
Henderson, Miami Fusion, 26 and 3:
8.7 4. Brian Mullan,
Los Angeles Galaxy, 17 and 2:
8.5 5. Antonio
Martinez, Dallas Burn, 8 and 1: 8.0
Hold your horses, Chris Albright, winner of the 2001 Two (Two!)
Men Between the Ball and the Goal award. Honorable mention goes to
Mamadou Diallo of the Tampa Bay Mutiny, whose 56 offsides calls
(with 9 goals, for a ratio of 6.2 and a rank of 10th) led second
place Ariel Graziani of the Dallas Burn by nearly 20 (37!).
Share and Share Alike award: Mom always said,
“Everything in moderation.” The Share and Share Alike award goes to
those players who balance goals and assists.
1. Diego Serna, Miami Fusion, 15 and 15 3. Cate, New
England Revolution, 8 and 8 3. Manny Lagos, San Jose
Earthquakes, 8 and 8 5. Petter Villegas, New York MetroStars,
5 and 5 5. Brian West, Columbus Crew, 5 and 5
Congratulations to Diego Serna, winner of the 2001 Share and
Share Alike award.
Schoolyard Bully award: School yard bullies
don’t disappear when school’s out. The Schoolyard Bully award goes
to the player who hands out the highest ratio of fouls called (more
than 10) to fouls suffered.
1. Justin Evans,
Chicago Fire/Dallas Burn, 11 called and 1 suffered:
11.0 2. Ted Eck,
Dallas Burn, 14 and 2:
7.0 3. Aleksey Korol,
Dallas Burn, 12 and 2:
6.0 4. Billy Walsh,
New York MetroStars, 17 and 3:
5.7 5. Steve Shak,
Colorado Rapids, 15 and 3: 5.0
Shame on you to Justin Evans, winner of the 2001 Schoolyard Bully
award. And forwards, stay out of Dallas. Honorable mention to Matt
McKeon of the Kansas City Wizards, whose league leading 76 fouls
called offset 28 fouls suffered for a ratio of 2.7.
Punching Bag award: For every schoolyard bully,
there’s a punching bag. In MLS, the Punching Bag award goes to the
player who absorbs the highest ratio of fouls suffered to fouls
called.
1. Carlos Valderrama, Tampa Bay Mutiny, 23 suffered and 2 called:
11.5 2. Tab Ramos, New York MetroStars, 60 and 16: 3.8 3.
Peter Nowak, Chicago Fire, 48 and 15: 3.2 4. Marco Etcheverry,
DC United, 63 and 21: 3.0 5. Devin Barclay, Tampa Bay Mutiny, 35
and 12: 2.9
A purple heart to Carlos Valderrama, “winner” of the 2001
Punching Bag award. Hey, Dallas, lay of the elder statesmen.
Honorable mention to Jaime Moreno of DC United, who absorbed a
league leading 87 fouls but managed to find time to dish out 31 in
exchange (2.8 for a rank of 6th).
Sisyphean Fans award: Greek mythology holds that
for betraying a secret of Zeus, Sisyphus was doomed to perpetually
roll a large boulder to the top of a hill, only to lose control and
watch it plummet back to the bottom before starting again. Fans of
the New England Revolution can surely imagine this fate.
A team’s Sisyphus Number for a year is arrived at by dividing
their average home attendance by their average points per game for
all games. Since the league’s inception in 1996, the Revolution have
racked up a league low 1.24 points per game (3 points for a win, 1
for a tie, 0 for a loss). Despite that performance, they averaged a
home attendance of nearly 18,000 fans, good for third in the league
behind Los Angeles and New York. Sisyphus Number: 17,987/1.24 equals
14,561.
The Sisyphean Fans ranking for 2001, recognizing fans who come
out to support their club regardless of performance, is as follows.
1. DC United, 21,518 average home fans, 1.00 points/game, SN =
21,518 2. Tampa Bay Mutiny, 10,479 home fans, 0.52 ppg, SN =
20,209 3. Colorado Rapids, 16,481 home fans, 0.88 ppg, SN =
18,630
Congratulations to the stalwart DC United fans, winners of the
2001 Sisyphean Fans award. Honorable mention goes to the New England
Revolution for having the best Sisyphus Number for the full six year
period in which the league has been in existence.
Pineda Colada award: Every coin has two sides.
The flip side of the Sisyphus coin is named for the Miami Fusion
star whose presence still failed to drag fans away from their air
conditioners long enough to take in a game. Fans of the teams with
the worst ratio of average home attendance to points per game are as
follows.
1. Miami Fusion,
11,177 home fans, 2.04 ppg, SN =
5,483 2. San Jose
Earthquakes, 9,635 home fans, 1.73 ppg, SN =
5,567 3. Kansas City
Wizards, 10,954 home fans, 1.33 ppg, SN = 8,216
Rotten tomatoes to the Miami Fusion “fans,” winners of the 2001
Pineda Colada award.
Paul Caligiuri award: The league is too young to
have had many high profile retirements to date. This year marks the
first.
1. Paul Caligiuri, Los
Angeles Galaxy
No contest. 1989 World Cup qualifying hero Paul Caligiuri went
out a champion as the Los Angeles Galaxy beat the New England
Revolution to win the 2001 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup.
Hey, you can’t measure everything.
A final “Congratulations!” to MLS’ hidden and not so hidden class
Gold Mine award winners for 2001: Steve Ralston, Simon Elliott,
Diego Serna, Carlos Valderrama, the DC United fans, and Paul
Caligiuri.
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