We are well into the dog days of
summer, but there was a spring-like air of new beginnings in MLS this past
week, from coaching changes to player acquisitions to teams reviving dormant
playoff hopes.
On Wednesday, German icon Jurgen Klinsmann made his debut as coach of the US
national team, ushering in a new era for the program and calling in nine MLSers
for a friendly against Mexico. Three of them—Juan Agudelo, Brek Shea and Robbie
Rogers—combined on the US goal in a 1-1 draw.
On Saturday, onetime US wunderkind Freddy Adu reseeded his career with a return
to MLS, joining the Philadelphia Union after stints with five teams in Europe
in the past five seasons.
Those developments, along with a burgeoning playoff picture, led a Week 22 that
produced a slate of exciting games, some more Ringling Bros. goalkeeping and
yet another dose of controversy.
Let’s give it another look.
Keeper League
Goalkeepers have set the bar pretty
high in 2011, and this week they raised it another notch—and then tipped a shot
over it with a diving save.
In Toronto, where the excellent Stefan Frei was out injured, the Reds called on
his backup, Milos Kocic, and he didn’t miss a beat—or a save—against Real Salt
Lake.
Kocic got some help from his uprights, but he also came up with a couple of
huge stops—including a great reaction save on a volley from Will Johnson in
stoppage time—to preserve a 1-0 upset for the reborn Reds, who are still alive
in the playoff chase.
Another backup answered the call in DC, where 23-year-old rookie Joe Willis
stepped in for the suspended Bill Hamid and made six saves in the home team’s
4-0 romp over Vancouver. Willis made two outstanding denials of Vancouver stars
Camilo and Eric Hassli while the match was still close.
DC eventually broke open the game behind two goals from Chris Pontius and two
assists from Dwayne De Rosario.
Full Circle
Top-notch goalkeeping also figured into the Philadelphia–Dallas game on
Saturday night as FC Dallas’s Kevin Hartman made a pair of unconscionable saves
in added time, denying Danny Mwanga and Keon Daniel to preserve a 2-2 draw for
the Hoops.
But the headline-grabber at PPL Park was the return of Adu, the attacking
midfielder who became the youngest American in modern history to sign a
professional sports contract when he joined D.C. United as a 14-year-old in
2004.
Still only 22, Adu returns to the league after reviving his international
career with a strong showing for the US in this summer’s Gold Cup. He’s also
reunited with Peter Nowak, the coach at DC when Adu launched his pro career in
’04.
On Saturday, Adu started, picked up a yellow card, and sparked a few Union
attacks before giving way to Danny Mwanga in the 62nd minute.
Philadelphia answered Dallas goals by Maicon Santos and Brek Shea with two
penalty-kick goals from Sébastien Le Toux to salvage a 2-2 draw.
Spot kicks—and terrific goalkeeping—also left their stamp in Seattle on
Saturday afternoon, as the Sounders kicked off the weekend with a 0-0 draw
against Chivas USA.
Seattle midfielder Álvaro Fernández hit the post with a 19th-minute PK and
substitute Lamar Neagle had what looked like a legitimate claim for a penalty
waved off in the 89th.
Those two moments, along with two eye-popping saves from Goats 'keeper Dan
Kennedy—just SOP for that guy—combined to keep it scoreless, to the dismay of
the 44th consecutive sellout crowd in Seattle.
Pablo and Sam
While Seattle may have had a gripe
with the man in the middle over the non-call on Neagle, San Jose were furious
over the officiating following their 2-1 loss to Colorado at Buck Shaw Stadium.
Their complaints revolved around two plays involving Sam Cronin and Pablo
Mastroeni. The first came in the 38th minute with San Jose up 1-0 after a 22nd
minute goal by Joey Gjertsen.
Cronin slid in the box to cut out a cross by Mastro, and unfortunately for San
Jose, the ball deflected off Cronin’s trailing arm and out of bounds. He had
blocked a cross headed for the box with his arm, and the ref awarded a penalty
to Colorado.
The fact that the call was made after a consultation with the referee’s
assistant—and some not-so-gentle lobbying from Mastroeni—didn’t sit well with
San Jose, but it was the right call, and Caleb Folan put away the spot kick to
tie the game.
On the second play, Cronin made a two-footed challenge on a 50-50 ball with
Mastroeni. In real time—and on replay—it didn’t look like much: Cronin didn’t
come over the ball, and his studs appeared to be down. However, he did make
contact with Mastroeni’s foot, thoug not his lower leg, and he was shown a
straight red.
Down to 10 men, the Quakes eventually wilted, giving up a 72nd minute set-piece
goal to Jeff Larentowicz, who powered his shot through a leaky wall from 25
yards.
The result gave Colorado four wins in their last five games and extended San
Jose’s winless streak to a franchise-record 11 games.
Crowded East
While Colorado surges in the West,
New York continue to muddle along in the East, opening the door for several
teams chase them down.
Houston did just that on Sunday night, getting an astonishing goal from Adam
Moffat in the 17th minute to pace a 2-1 win over visiting Portland. Brian Ching
followed Moffat’s golazo with a strike of his own after a slick exchange
between Brad Davis and Colin Clark. The win gave the Dynamo 31 points, tied for
third place with New York.
The Red Bulls entered the week with just one win in their previous nine games
and a whopping 12 ties overall. They were playing Chicago, a team with 13 ties
heading into Saturday night, so—naturally—the game ended in a 2-2 tie. (Thierry
Henry opened the scoring nine minutes in with his league-leading 12th goal of
the season.)
DC’s romp over Vancouver and Kansas City’s 4-1-4 record at Livestrong Sporting
Park since June 9 have those teams just one point behind the Red Bulls and
Dynamo.
Columbus, who trailed both New York and Philly little more than a month ago,
are now in first. The Crew extended their lead over second-place Philly to
three points with a come-from-behind, 3-1 win over struggling New England. The
Union and Crew meet next week in Columbus.