365 Analysis
STAGGERING TO THE FINISH
19/09/02
by Jeff Dieffenbach
The Wise Old Men of FIFA see fit to schedule group-ending matches
concurrently to minimize shenanigans of various sorts. Teams that
know that they are in might take it easier on their opponents to the
passive detriment of others in the group, or more actively play to
deny a group member whom they would prefer to avoid in later
rounds.
Major League Soccer, on the other hand, has created just the
opposite scenario. The final five matches of the season will be
played out over a four day period.
Thursday night: Dallas at DC
Dallas has already clinched a playoff spot (they currently sit
5th), and the best that they can do is move themselves up a notch to
4th. Since 4th plays 5th, the incentive isn’t there. Rest and
recuperation seem the better course.
DC, on the other hand, must win (and hope for a New England
victory over the MetroStars and a loss by either Kansas City or
Chicago) for a shot at post-season play. Batten down the hatches,
here comes Marco Etcheverry.
Prediction: DC over Dallas
Friday night: Kansas City at Colorado
Colorado, like Dallas, has much less for which to. They can’t
improve their playoff seeding and a drop from 4th to 5th has no
downstream impact. Rest, recuperate.
Kansas City, like DC, needs a win, but could back in with losses
(later in the weekend) by New England or Chicago. Thursday’s game
means nothing—Kansas City owns the tie-breaker over DC. Preki and
the Wizards will come out fighting.
Prediction: Kansas City over Colorado
Saturday night: New York/New Jersey at New England, Los
Angeles at San Jose
Finally, a game with something at stake for both teams. New
York/New Jersey leads the series 3-0, but will be at less than full
strength. Scorer Clint Mathis and goalkeeper Tim Howard both saw red
cards in the previous match. The MetroStars may be less motivated,
however, if DC and KC both lose their matches—they’ll have clinched
a spot already.
New England rides their hottest stretch in history (4-0-1) and
has the benefit of playing at home. Perhaps most importantly,
though, their fate in the event of a loss will depend on Sunday’s
Columbus-Chicago match. With their playoff picture unclear, Taylor
Twellman and the Revolution will play harder.
Prediction: New England over New York/New Jersey
Los Angeles and San Jose are fighting for the overall first seed
(and home field advantage) in the playoffs. A fair reward to be
sure, but certainly not the same motivation as elimination. A Galaxy
win or tie gives the crown to Los Angeles, a loss and it goes to
Ariel Graziani and San Jose.
Prediction: San Jose over Los Angeles
Sunday afternoon: Columbus at Chicago
Columbus is assured a playoff berth. A win or tie guarantees them
the Eastern Conference crown, as does a loss in the event of a New
England tie or loss. They’ll of course know this already. Motivation
may be low.
A Chicago loss and home they go. Clear cut, end of story. The
Fire will have no part of that.
Prediction: Chicago over Columbus
Playing out the string
How do the standings play out if all of the above (the “have-nots
over the haves”) comes to pass?
1. San Jose: 51 points 2. New England: 38 points 3. Los
Angeles: 51 points 4. Colorado: 42 points 5. Dallas: 40
points 6. Columbus: 38 points 7. Kansas City: 38 points 8.
Chicago: 37 points ------------------------------ 9. New
York/New Jersey: 35 points 10. DC: 35 points
Note the circular tie-breaker oddity that New England is better
than Columbus, Columbus is better than Kansas City, and Kansas City
is better than New England (except for the fact that the best
record in the Eastern Conference guarantees a top 2 seed).
Getting back to the original question, who is hurt most by the
staggered ending to the season, and who is helped?
Kansas City and New England are both in a way hurt. Were they
each to play the Sunday game, they would know their needed result.
Conversely, New York and Columbus are helped—prior outcomes may
already have them through.
Who is right: FIFA or MLS? As hard as this it admit (and
surprising as this is to believe), our international brethren occupy
the moral high ground. That said, bad news for a few teams is good
news for most fans, though, as the cascade of matches to close out
the season should make for great play and even greater shuffling of
the standings.
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