New England Revolution
PERFECT WEEKEND IN NEW ENGLAND
16/09/02
by Jeff Dieffenbach
On Friday night, the New England Revolution found themselves
sitting ninth out of ten in a playoff table designed to reward only
the top eight. Twenty-four hours later, at the close of play on
Saturday, they sit poised to capture the Eastern Conference crown
and the number two playoff seed overall.
How did such a scenario come to pass? Everything that could
possibly have gone right for New England over the weekend did go
right … with one exception.
The Revolution took care of business, beating Dallas 2-1.
Reportedly plagued by a stomach bug, the only thing that first year
phenom Taylor Twellman threw up was a pair of goals. The first came
on a justly awarded penalty kick after referee Brian Hall unjustly
showed his red card to Dallas defender Ryan Suarez, whose only
intent was self-protection.
Twellman leads the league in scoring by two points, trailing
Galaxy forward Carlos Ruiz by a goal but leading him by four
assists. To be sure, Twellman excels in receiving the ball, not
dishing it out. While eleven different Revolution players have
assisted on Twellman goals thus far this season, by far the best of
his partners has been Steve Ralston, eight of whose league-leading
nineteen assists have been to the Revolution’s league leader.
The second goal was classic Ralston-Twellman. Ralston received
the ball on the right wing, then calmly crossed it through the six
yard box. Twellman muscled his way over/through teammate Jay Heaps
for a diving header that temporarily tied him for the league lead in
goals with 22.
How good have the Revolution been of late? With 4 wins and a tie
in five games, they’ve never had a better stretch of play, certainly
never at a better time. Only 4 consecutive wins in 1996 comes close.
Owner Jonathan Kraft told the Boston Globe before this latest
win, “These have been the best four games the Revolution have
ever played in a row.”
Their play of late should not surprise the Revolution faithful.
New England tends to finish the regular season relatively well,
never having failed to earn at least a quarter of their points in
the final quarter of the season (this year they could top 40%).
This year, recover they have. Two weeks ago, this observer had
them written off: “Show coach Steve Nicol the door or sign him on
for 2003, but either way, start the lineup experimentation.” Nicol
has been able to have his cake and eat it too—lineup experimentation
(most notably, Wolde Harris up front as Twellman’s strike partner)
and a run of wins to boot. He’s earned the right to stay.
The Revolution entered the Dallas match knowing that a win and
another against the MetroStars in the season finale would guarantee
them a playoff berth. With their own task complete and 35 points in
hand, it was time for the scoreboard watching to begin.
Kansas City, starting the evening with 35 points but victims
lately of their own uninspired play, lost 2-1 to Colorado on
injury-plagued John Spencer’s fifth goal of the season. The Wizards’
final game is at Colorado, who have already secured a playoff spot.
With two wins over the Revolution this year, the Wizards own the
tie-breaker should they finish even.
The Crew hold the Eastern Conference lead with 38 points after a
2-0 victory at home against the slumping Fire (34 points). Of the
teams near New England in the standings, the Crew are the only ones
over whom the Revolution own the tie-breaker. A Revolution win this
coming Saturday over the MetroStars coupled with a Crew loss in
Chicago would give New England the Eastern Conference title.
Paradoxically, while a Fire win over the Crew gives New England
the crown in the event of a Revolution win, it’s a Fire loss that
guarantees New England a playoff slot. The one outcome they can’t
stomach is a loss coupled with a Fire win. They won’t know whom to
root for until Sunday, however—the Crew-Fire match is the last
contest of the regular season.
Perhaps most spectacularly, a late season MetroStars implosion
against DC United (a 1-0 loss Thursday night and a second 2-1 on
Saturday) has boosted the Revolution’s chances. Going into their
final match together, the breaks appear to fall New England’s way—at
least on paper.
The Revolution host New York/New Jersey (“New Jerk?” a wag once
said) in the friendly confines of Gillette Stadium. More
importantly, they do so against a depleted roster.
Goal scorer Mamadou Diallo is nursing a tender ankle and a
resulting lack of match fitness. At least he’s likely to see some
playing time, unlike two of the MetroStar’s brightest stars, current
national team standout scorer Clint Mathis and future national team
standout goalkeeper Tim Howard. Both earned red cards in the DC
United match, and won’t see playing time until the playoffs … or
Spring of 2003.
Weakened MetroStars line-up or not, the Revolution are yet to
earn a point from them this year (three losses in as many outings),
so they have their work cut out for them. And they’ll have to do
that work despite the one exception to their miracle weekend. Steve
Ralston’s 62nd minute yellow card against Dallas earned him enough
caution points to sideline the league-leading assist
machine.
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