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    November 2, 2007

    D.C. United Out of Touch, Out of Time

    For 25 minutes, D.C. United attacked the Chicago Fire unrelentingly. They poured all of their efforts forward, creating chance after chance. In the process, they scored the two goals they needed to advance to the Eastern Conference finals. Unfortunately, United's disjointed play during the preceding 70 minutes allowed Chicago to tally two goals of their own, earning them the 2-2 tie, the 3-2 series victory on aggregate, and a ticket to the next round.

    United came into the game knowing that Chicago would likely sit back and defend their one-goal aggregate lead. In the opening minute, the home side almost cracked the defense when a string of passes landed the ball at the feet of Luciano Emilio. The MVP candidate's weak shot was easily handled by goalkeeper Matt Pickens. That first-minute chance stood out as one of the lone bright spots in United's first half.

    The Fire's speedy midfield denied United space going forward, while their imposing back line cut off long services before they could reach their intended targets. Though United held possession for most of the first half, they could do little to threaten Pickens' goal. Chicago, in contrast, made the most of their possession time. Mexican midfielder Cuauhtemoc Blanco played to his reputation: quick passes, great field vision, and reprehensibly poor sportsmanship (I counted at least four dives in the first half alone).

    Photos by Kyle Gustafson

    Two of Chicago's recent draft picks combined in the 31st minute to deal a crushing blow to United. Calen Carr sent a spectacular service that bent around United's defense, allowing forward Chad Barrett to settle the ball and volley it past Troy Perkins. Just two minutes later, the Fire struck again. Fred's poor clearance of a throw-in was met by Carr, who headed the ball toward the penalty box. Blanco, in turn, whipped a header into the box as Chris Rolfe sneaked past United's back line and flicked the ball over Perkins.

    The goal stunned United. They seemed doomed to repeat their playoff futilities against the Fire. In the 41st minute, Coach Tom Soehn inserted Rod Dyachenko for Marc Burch, whose performance was uneven at best -- clumsy, predictable, and ineffective at worst. The opening of the second half showed little improvement for United. They lacked passing rhythm going forward, and were unable to synchronize their runs on long passes.

    The home side finally began to show some life when Emilio was subbed out for Nicholas Addlery. The Brazilian gave a gritty performance, but it was clear the injury to his left ankle diminished his abilities. After Addlery's insertion, United began to play more aggressively, sending up to nine men forward. The tactic paid off in the 69th minute.

    Devon McTavish, subbed in for a cramping Bobby Boswell 10 minutes earlier, sent a long ball cross-field that traveled 50 yards to Fred on the right wing and into the corner. He promptly crossed the ball to the top of the box. Christian Gomez settled the ball to Dyachenko, who served a slow roller to a charging Clyde Simms. The normally defensive-minded midfielder struck a low, bending missile of a shot into the corner of the net.

    The goal was almost therapeutic for United. It was the first they had ever scored against the Fire in the playoffs, and it reinvigorated the entire stadium. United's chances now were coming fast and often. Addlery made a couple of great runs to latch onto passes, but was unable to finish.

    United's second goal sent the crowd into an absolute frenzy. In the 74th minute, Dyachenko sent in a perfect ball over the Chicago defense. Gomez barely beat the offsides trap, settled the ball, and blasted it off the bottom of Pickens' arm and into the net.

    United continued to produce chances in the waning minutes while preventing a fruitful Chicago counterattack. In the 82nd minute, Gomez' run to the endline allowed him to cross dangerously, but Addlery whiffed on his attempt. Five minutes later, Olsen sent a dangerous cross into the box, but Gomez' header went wide.

    United's best chance to force overtime resulted in the match's most controversial call. Gomez looked to double his goal total on the night two minutes into extra time. As he fought to control a through ball in the box, he bounded past Pickens and finished cleanly. The play was whistled dead, however, when Gomez was found guilty of guiding the ball with part of his arm.

    In the closing minute, Dyachenko was issued a red card for a late slide tackle, and United's comeback bid fell short.

    For the third consecutive year, United suffered a disappointing playoff defeat. This year's edition stings particularly for a team that is probably the most talented in the league, and has the record to show it. D.C. United should be content with a single piece of hardware, but, with the MLS Cup final being played in their home stadium, will likely feel a tinge of lingering regret. To this end, Soehn let his feelings be known after the game. "The final's here and we're not in it. Of course I'm bitter."


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    Comments (8)

    can somebody please explain what "the aggregate" is?

     

    The aggregate refers to the combined score in a 2-game series (also called a home-and-home series). Chicago won the first game 1-0. If Gomez's last goal had counted, the aggregate score would have been 3-3.

    MLS uses a simple aggregate. If the aggregate is tied, the two teams go on to overtime and a penalty kick shootout if nobody scores during the overtime.

    European leagues use the away goals rule. If the aggregate is tied, then the team that scored the most away goals is declared the winner. If MLS used this rule, United would have needed a fourth goal to move on last night.

    In the Mexican league, the higher-seeded team gets the win if the aggregate is tied. SI's Ryan Hunt made a case for this variation yesterday.

     

    If you're going to mention European league procotol, I think it also bears repeating that such "aggregate" scores would never occur in a league competition over there, since none of them use the playoff system - if MLS were a European league, United would have been crowned champions a couple of weeks ago!

     

    Absolutely, James. The European aggregate system is used only for domestic cup tournaments and international competitions (UEFA Cup, Champions Leauge, etc.).

    Over there, and in most leagues around the world, the league champion is the team with the best record at the end of the season.

    Many wish that MLS used the same system, Soehn included.

    The test of a true good team is over the course of a season, and anywhere else in the world, the champion is crowned after the season, so i'm still real proud about what we did... When it comes to the MLS cup, you hope your team is hot and healthy, and unfortunately we weren't, but that's soccer and you have to deal with it.
     

    Thanks for the terrific photos.

    And thanks for the news about the Boswell/McTavish substitute.

    Cramping? Silly me, I thought it was made b/c Boswell sucks. But only b/c he does.

     

    I am a beginner soccer fan, so this might sound ridiculously naive, but holy shit, all those dives the Fire took last night were annoying. Just a tap from a United player would send the Fire players across the turf, always clutching their leg as if it's the worst pain ever known to man. And then a minute later they'd be up off the ground running again at full speed. It was such a joke.

    Blanco was the star of this show, but it definitely happened across the board. Does the coach train the team in dives? Do they have a "Diving Coach" like a baseball team has a batting coach? Because really, the Fire have perfected the act.

     

    Matt - thanks for that quote from Soehn. We can only dream...

    And thanks to Matt and Kyle for their fantastic DC United coverage throughout the season. Looking forward to your posts next year (and in the off-season hopefully - Veron anyone?)

    :^)

     

    For me, it still comes back to Soehn's decision to keep the regulars in the game for the meaningless season finale against Columbus. With Moreno and Emilio hurt in that first leg, the attack suffered badly. DC's problems advancing the ball without Moreno to receive and hold the ball with his back to goal are well-documented, and, as a consequence, we had nothing going on in that first leg. The blame's on Soehn for that one.

    Side note too... I think Addlery has a breakthrough next season. Inconsistent this year, but there's skill, size, and power there.

     
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