Dynamo Edge Revolution To Win MLS Cup

This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

The New York Sun

FRISCO, Texas — Just when the New England Revolution seemed mere minutes from finally winning an MLS Cup, Houston’s Brian Ching brought the party to an abrupt halt.

Then the Dynamo striker put the Revolution away for good.

Seventy-one seconds after New England’s Taylor Twellman broke a scoreless tie with barely seven minutes left in overtime, Ching brought a Houstonheavy crowd from desperation to elation with a stunning header for a 1–1 tie, forcing a shootout.

“I didn’t think we were going to get one,”Ching, who was named MVP, said. “But we were going to die trying.”

He then nailed the decisive goal in the fifth and final set of penalty kicks, which the Dynamo won 4–3 to capture the MLS Cup in their first year in Texas.

Faced with a must-goal in the final attempt of the shootout, Houston’s goalkeeper, Pat Onstad, blocked Jay Heaps’s line drive to the left side of the net and lay cradling the ball as Dynamo fans draped in fluorescent orange erupted.

The championship was technically the third for the former San Jose Earthquakes, which won in 2001 and 2003. It was the first MLS Cup final to be decided on penalty kicks.

The loss was the third defeat in the league championship for the Revolution, who lost 1–0 in overtime to Los Angeles last year. New England also made the final game and lost in 2002.

“We’ve lost every possible way we can lose in the finals,” Twellman said.

After playing even for all of regulation and one overtime, the Revolution finally broke the game open and appeared just minutes away from victory. In the 113th minute, Twellman charged up the field, split two defenders and shot the ball into the opposite corner of the net past sliding Dynamo defender Kelly Gray.

Just over a minute later, before the attending Revolution fans’ joy had a chance to sink in, Ching headed in the tying goal off a long cross from Brian Mullan that first deflected off New England’s Avery John.

“Honestly, when Chinger’s header hit the net, I was in shock because I couldn’t believe we just scored,” the Dynamo coach, Dominic Kinnear, said. “The path from their goal to his goal was so fast, and we had just gone from despair. My head couldn’t catch up.”

Ching later scored the winning penalty kick in the fifth set, stutter-stepping on his approach before knocking the ball that skipped through New England’s Matt Reis’s outstretched fingertips.


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