Sunday, November 30, 2008

Cup win sweet for Crew's Moreno, Schmid

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid


CARSON, Calif. -- Words didn't need to be spoken. A player and coach both exiled from Los Angeles had reunited in Columbus last season, and Sunday made a triumphant return to their site of past glory.

The player, Alejandro Moreno, scored the game's first goal and was his usual workhorse for 90 minutes. When the final whistle blew and the Columbus Crew had defeated the New York Red Bulls 3-1 to win the MLS Cup, he found coach Sigi Schmid and the two hugged on the field at The Home Depot Center.

"This was very emotional to me. When me and Sigi embraced I started to lose it a little bit," Moreno said. "He stuck his neck out for me and I've been able to respond and I'm very happy to be able to do this with Sigi and not only with Sigi but doing it here in L.A.

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

NEWSMLS Cup recap
• Crew capture first MLS Cup
• MLS Cup Notes: Crew win Cup
• Schelotto named MLS Cup MVP
• Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup
• Lewis: Right team took Cup
• Davis: Tactics trumped by talent
• Wolyniec rewards Osorio's faith
• Red Bulls waste strong first half
• Cup win sweet for Crew's Moreno
• Red Bulls can't dodge final dagger
• Crew win Cup with team effort
• Crew notebook: Trio hope to return
• Red Bulls notebook: Still proud
MLS Cup Sights & Sounds

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Highlights: CLB 3, NY 1

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

ExtraTime: MLS Cup Final

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Crew top Red Bulls, 3-1

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Crew celebrate MLS Cup win

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Crew locker room celebration

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

MLS Cup trophy ceremony

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Schelotto postgame interview

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Crew players react

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Crew press conference

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Red Bulls press conference

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

One-Touch spotlight: Angel

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

One-Touch spotlight: Schelotto

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Hejduk's late clincher

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Marshall's game-winner

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Wolyniec's equalizer

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Moreno puts Crew on top
Nov. 22 headlines
• Tactical surprises unlikely
• NY native Gaven still growing
• Sidelined Stammler supportive
Nov. 21 headlines
• Carroll is Crew's unsung hero
• Goldthwaite stabilizes Red Bulls
• Crew expect strong support
Nov. 20 headlines
• Backline is Crew's backbone
• Angel key to Red Bulls' success
• LA weather sweet as Crew train
SIGHTS & SOUNDS

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

State of the League Address

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Extra Time: Red Bulls preview

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Extra Time: Crew preview

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Crew arrive in Los Angeles

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Crew practice Thursday

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Red Bulls talk Cup

Cup win sweet for Crews Moreno, Schmid

Crew talk beards, MLS Cup

"There's a lot good friends I know and a lot of people supported me when I was here. It was pretty special for both of us to come back here and win the title. It sends a pretty loud message."

The pair were linked in 2002 -- Moreno's second season with Los Angeles and Schmid's third full year -- when the Galaxy won the Supporters' Shield and the MLS Cup.

No team had done it since until the Crew pulled the feat this season.

"The chemistry was right," Crew technical director Brian Bliss said. "We had good quality players in key positions and they were willing to buy into it. We didn't particularly have the best game today but we worked hard and did what we needed. That's been the mantra all year."

Moreno played two more seasons for the Galaxy, including 2004 when Schmid was let go despite having LA in first place.

Moreno was traded to San Jose in 2005 and moved with the club to Houston in 2006, when he won a second championship. Meanwhile, Schmid took control of the Crew in 2006 and traded for Moreno in May 2007.

Although the Crew missed the playoffs for the third consecutive season that year, the foundation had been laid and the team responded with a 17-7-6 regular-season record and its first trip to the MLS Cup Final.

That it was back where Moreno and Schmid had first become acquainted was momentous. "I know this meant a lot to Ale being here as it did for me," Schmid said. "I'm numb with all the emotion right now. It's great. It's special because it's Columbus' first championship. It's special because it's in L.A. It's special because it happened in front of friends and family."

While the Galaxy have struggled in recent years without Schmid, the Crew are basking in their triumph.

"We're very proud of what we were able to accomplish," Moreno said. "Where we were last year and where we were this year, this team has grown a lot. We're very proud of the Columbus Crew organization, the Columbus Crew fans and certainly all of the players here."

Moreno's arrival in 2007 coincided with the signing of 2008 MLS Volkswagen MVP Guillermo Barros Schelotto. The pair were in sync all season and again Sunday on Moreno's goal.

Schelotto stole the ball from Dave van den Bergh in front of the Crew bench just before midfield and got the ball ahead to Moreno.

"When he got the ball along the sideline I tried to give him an option making the diagonal run," Moreno said. "When the defender turned around and allowed me to go I felt I could beat him with my speed to the end line."

Moreno's shot beat goalkeeper Danny Cepero and hit just inside the far post as it went in.

"My first idea was to cross the ball. I looked up and he was at the near post, almost past the near post, and I thought I would be able to get it past him," Moreno said. "When it hit the post I thought, 'Come on, guys. It's the wrong post. It's got to go in.' It did.

"It was important for us to get the lead in the sense it would force them to come out and play and leave us more space in the final third of the field."

It was the first goal of the playoffs for Moreno but he had contributed in other ways. He had the assist on a stoppage-time goal by Steven Lenhart that tied Game 1 at Kansas City in the Eastern Conference Semifinal Series.

In the second leg, his service to Robbie Rogers made it 2-0 and sealed the Crew's advancement into the Eastern Conference Championship against Chicago.

There, his nifty through ball allowed Eddie Gaven to score the winner.

"I was never worried about Ale's scoring," Schmid said. "He does so many other things that lead to goals that are just as important but I will say it's nice that he was able to score today and score here."

Moreno might have been the team's playoff MVP if not for the brilliance of Schelotto, who had three assists Sunday to give him six in four postseason games.

"When we get Guillermo involved you can see what happened," Moreno said. "He's done it all year. It should not be a surprise to anyone. It's not a surprise to us."

And neither is the MLS Cup title, according to Moreno.

"I don't think there was added pressure within this team," he said. "Within this team there were things we wanted to accomplish. We would have been very disappointed if we didn't finish the way we did."


Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win
Nacho Savouring The Málaga Moment

Dynamo get happy end to '08 after all

Dynamo get happy end to 08 after all


HOUSTON -- In 2006 and 2007, the Houston Dynamo's last match of the season featured incredible drama, a huge comeback and a confetti-filled celebration at midfield in stadiums in Frisco, Texas and Washington, D.C.

The team's last MLS match in 2008 ended in what some consider the biggest playoff upset of all time when the New York Red Bulls came to Houston and knocked the Orange off their throne with a 3-0 win on Nov. 9 to claim their Western Conference Semifinal Series.

But Houston got the rare chance to play one more meaningful match. With a good crowd in attendance on a warm night before Thanksgiving, the Orange scored early in the first half and held on for a 1-0 win against El Salvador's CD Luis Angel Firpo to advance to the quarterfinal round in the inaugural CONCACAF Champions League.

Thanks to Hurricane Ike, their last group match was rescheduled for Wednesday night, and the Dynamo didn't disappoint themselves or their fans.

After seeing their bid for a third consecutive MLS title ended, the Dynamo players talked about Wednesday's game as being a therapy of sorts. Maybe the patients can go home cured.

"We were disappointed, yeah, but we were also a little angry," said Nate Jaqua, who played his last match with the team after being selected by Seattle Sounders FC in Wednesday's MLS expansion draft. "We wanted to take that anger from losing to New York and use that as motivation for this game.

"We wanted to leave this season on a little bit of an up note, and we were able to do that. This game was all about getting to the next round, and we won."

Fittingly, Brian Ching, the first player to score for the team, against Colorado in April 2006, scored in the 13th minute, burying a header on a corner kick by Dwayne De Rosario.

And goalkeeper Pat Onstad, a 40-year-old Canadian who is, statistically, the best goalkeeper in MLS history, made five saves to record his 13th shutout of the season in 38 games played in all competitions.

"We wanted to come out here and have a good showing for us and for our fans," De Rosario said. "We deserve this because of the hard schedule and the great season we had. It was very important for us to end this season with a win, not only for the fans but for all the guys in the locker room that worked so hard day in a day out to give 100 percent."

The Dynamo made things interesting, falling prey to Firpo's aggressive style, especially in the second half.

The teams combined for 39 fouls, including eight yellow cards and two red cards that were evenly distributed between the two teams. Defender Eddie Robinson got Houston's red and will miss the team's first Champions League quarterfinal match next season.

De Rosario said his team should share some of the blame for falling into that style of play after Ching gave the Dynamo the 13th-minute lead that held up as the game-winner.

"Playing a team like that that does a lot of diving and draws the other team into a lot of fouls is definitely frustrating," said De Rosario. "But I thought we did well. I lost my composure at times, but I got my head back into the game."

In the end, head coach Dominic Kinnear's defensive substitutions proved key in keeping their Salvadoran guests off the scoreboard in the winner-take-all match. The Dynamo ended up second in Group B after the win, jumping ahead of Firpo, who were eliminated with the result.

Richard Mulrooney came in for De Rosario in the 81st minute. Kei Kamara replaced Jaqua in the 61st and Patrick Ianni replaced Ching in the 85th, giving Kinnear the energy and the defense needed to finish off the 1-0 shutout.

The appreciative crowd cheered as each of the Orange's stars came off the field, and De Rosario said hearing that ovation made up somewhat for the early playoff exit to the Red Bulls.

And getting the first goal, he said, helped the team set the tone and quickly put to rest any fears of not being able to convert as the team was unable to do time and time again against New York.

"I think our focus was to set the pace and the tempo right away," De Rosario said. "To score early, we did that. After that, we lost our focus a little bit, but we kept our composure and made that huge goal stand up.

"We're very good at crosses and Ching is great inside the box. We showed that again tonight."

With the win, the Dynamo advanced to the home-and-home quarterfinals of the inaugural CONCACAF Champions League, with the first legs to be played Feb. 24-26.

The Dynamo will find out who they play on Dec. 10, and will play host to one of the other three group winners (either Atlante or Santos Laguna from Mexico or Marathon of Honduras) at Robertson Stadium in the first leg. The return match will be played at their opponents, March 3-5.


Jiménez: Players Gave Their All
Cerezo Assures Aguirre Will Stay
Twist of fate pays off for De Rosario

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win


CARSON, Calif. -- Columbus Crew defender Frankie Hejduk spends most games careening up and down the right flank with reckless abandon. If Hejduk isn't defending in his own end, he streams up the sideline to overlap Eddie Gaven and fire in cross after cross.

In order to win his first MLS Cup, he had to alter his style.

Dutch winger Dave van den Bergh provides much of the offensive thrust for the New York attack and Crew head coach Sigi Schmid wanted Hejduk to tame his offensive ways heading into the title tilt against the Red Bulls.

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

NEWSMLS Cup recap
• Crew capture first MLS Cup
• MLS Cup Notes: Crew win Cup
• Schelotto named MLS Cup MVP
• Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup
• Lewis: Right team took Cup
• Davis: Tactics trumped by talent
• Wolyniec rewards Osorio's faith
• Red Bulls waste strong first half
• Cup win sweet for Crew's Moreno
• Red Bulls can't dodge final dagger
• Crew win Cup with team effort
• Crew notebook: Trio hope to return
• Red Bulls notebook: Still proud
MLS Cup Sights & Sounds

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Highlights: CLB 3, NY 1

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

ExtraTime: MLS Cup Final

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Crew top Red Bulls, 3-1

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Crew celebrate MLS Cup win

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Crew locker room celebration

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

MLS Cup trophy ceremony

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Schelotto postgame interview

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Crew players react

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Crew press conference

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Red Bulls press conference

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

One-Touch spotlight: Angel

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

One-Touch spotlight: Schelotto

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Hejduk's late clincher

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Marshall's game-winner

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Wolyniec's equalizer

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Moreno puts Crew on top
Nov. 22 headlines
• Tactical surprises unlikely
• NY native Gaven still growing
• Sidelined Stammler supportive
Nov. 21 headlines
• Carroll is Crew's unsung hero
• Goldthwaite stabilizes Red Bulls
• Crew expect strong support
Nov. 20 headlines
• Backline is Crew's backbone
• Angel key to Red Bulls' success
• LA weather sweet as Crew train
SIGHTS & SOUNDS

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

State of the League Address

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Extra Time: Red Bulls preview

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Extra Time: Crew preview

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Crew arrive in Los Angeles

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Crew practice Thursday

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Red Bulls talk Cup

Hejduk adjusts style in MLS Cup win

Crew talk beards, MLS Cup

"One of the goals we had heading into the game was to shut down the service of van den Bergh a little bit," Schmid said. "Frankie was going to have to be a little bit more defensively inclined for us that way."

Scaling back his attacking mindset isn't Hejduk's first instinct, but the World Cup veteran and one of 11 remaining active players who played in the original MLS season used all of his acquired knowledge to change his game.

"If you ask me, Frankie was perfect today," Crew goalkeeper William Hesmer said. "He picked his spots. He normally just loves to go, go, go. He recognized that he had to sit himself in a little bit, open them up and let the space create itself. Then he could take advantage of it."

Hejduk spent most of the first half pinned back in his own end as van den Bergh pushed up the field and flighted cross after cross into the box. Runs forward were few and far between.

"I thought his timing coming forward was very good," Hesmer said. "It showed his experience. It showed that he was able to do what was needed to win the game."

After the break, things changed. Van den Bergh faded out of the game and Hejduk had a little bit more space to roam. Frankie was Frankie again, albeit in a more muted fashion.

"In the second half, I think he got forward a lot more than he did in the first," Schmid said. "He got two or three crosses in that were very dangerous. That culminated in the goal."

That goal came from another of those trademark Hejduk runs. As the Red Bulls pushed more and more men forward in search of the tying goal, Hejduk exploited space down the right hand side of the field. On one such occasion, he fed the ball to Guillermo Barros Schelotto and he eventually flicked the ball through to Hejduk as he surged into the penalty area.

"It's unbelievable," Hejduk said. "He has eyes on the back of his head. He's been doing that all year to different players on the team all year. When I give him the ball, I just take off because I know that if there's anyone that can find me, it's him."

Hejduk directed the delicate flick toward goal with a looping header and watched it nestle in the far side netting. The cruical third goal went to the Crew captain and hysteria broke out amongst the Nordecke with the club's first MLS Cup all but sealed.

"I didn't even know what I was doing up there," Hejduk said. "I didn't even know I scored. I was looking at Robbie and Robbie was looking at me. He said 'Dude, what are you doing.' I said, 'Dude, I don't know. Did I score?" I was thinking it was maybe offside."

Surfer Dude didn't make an appearance after the goal. He hadn't really made an appearance all afternoon as Hejduk stuck to his task. Lifting his first MLS Cup, 13 years after making his MLS debut with the Tampa Bay Mutiny, provided his reward.

"It was a little bit surreal and a little bit crazy," Hejduk said.


Agoos, Williams lend Red Bulls perspective
Red Bulls notebook: Much to be proud of
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