Search the web
Sign In
New User? Sign Up
usopen · Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup (USOC)
? Already a member? Sign in to Yahoo!

Yahoo! Groups Tips

Did you know...
Want your group to be featured on the Yahoo! Groups website? Add a group photo to Flickr.

Best of Y! Groups

   Check them out and nominate your group.
Having problems with message search? Fill out this form to ensure your group is one of the first to be migrated to the new message search system.

Messages

  Messages Help
Advanced
12 years later, Open Cup final returns to RFK   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #1096 of 1232 |
12 years later, Open Cup final returns to RFK
CONCACAF Champions League place on the line as D.C. United hosts the
USL First Division's Charleston Battery on Wednesday night

http://www.USOPENCUP.com
2-Sep-08 4:15 pm

http://www.usopencup.com/home/273239.html

MATCH INFO

The only other time RFK Stadium has hosted the U.S. Open Cup final
was in 1996, when D.C. United stopped the upset-minded Rochester
Raging Rhinos of the A-League 3-0 behind goals from Raul Diaz Arce,
Eddie Pope and Jamie Moreno.

HOW THEY GOT THERE

Charleston Battery
1st Round - June 10, 3-0 vs. ASC New Stars (USASA)
2nd Round - June 24, 2-1 vs. Charlotte Eagles (USL-2)
3rd Round - July 1, 1-1 (aet) vs. Houston Dynamo (MLS) (Charleston
advanced on PKs, 4-3)
Quarterfinal - July 8, 3-1 at F.C. Dallas (MLS)
Semifinal - August 12, 1-1 (aet) vs. Seattle Sounders (USL-1)
(Charleston advanced on PKs, 4-3)

Charleston's run to their first championship game appearance began
June 10 when they hosted their first round match against the ASC New
Stars, a USASA club from Houston. The Battery rolled to an easy 3-0
victory behind a hat trick from Darren Spicer. From then on the road
became a bit tougher, as they would find out on June 24 at Blackbaud
Stadium against the USL Second Division Charlotte Eagles. Charleston
opened the scoring after 12 minutes through Spicer's fourth goal of
the tournament. The Battery held the lead through halftime, but
Charlotte equalized in the 66th minute on Jorge Herrera's headed
goal. Extra time loomed when Randi Patterson was brought down in the
penalty area, and Osvaldo Alonso converted the spot kick to send
Charleston through to play the Houston Dynamo of MLS.

Once again at Blackbaud, the Battery hosted the Dynamo for a rematch
of their 2007 third-round encounter, which Charleston won 1-0. Marco
Reda gave the hosts the lead in the 31st minute. The 70th minute saw
Charleston's Chris Corcoran sent off for a hard foul on Houston's
Chris Wondolowski. Down to 10 men, the Battery still seemed able to
hold off Houston despite their disadvantage. In the 89th minute,
Wondolowski's pass was headed to his brother Stephen by Franco
Caraccio, and Stephen Wondolowski headed in the equalizer. Both
teams played cautiously in extra time, but Charleston were reduced
to nine men when Reda was dismissed in the 102nd minute. After 120
minutes, the game went to penalty kicks, and in the third round
Houston's Geoff Cameron sent his attempt high of the goal. After
Charleston made their fourth attempt, Dusty Hudock clinched
advancement for the Battery by saving the final Dynamo shot, taken
by Caraccio.

The Battery played their first road game of the tournament in the
quarterfinals, traveling to Pizza Hut Park, the home of their Open
cup nemesis. F.C. Dallas eliminated Charleston from the Cup in 2006
and '07, but the Battery didn't let it happen again. Eleven minutes
after Charleston took a 1-0 lead through Lazo Alavanja in the 28th
minute, the game was halted for 1 hour, 10 minutes as thunderstorms
rolled through the area. Four minutes after play resumed, the
Battery wasted no time in doubling their lead, as Ian Fuller put the
ball in the back of the net. Patterson and Dallas' Kenny Cooper
traded goals in second-half stoppage time, and the Battery finally
exorcised their Open Cup demons with a 3-1 win.

For the third time in club history, Charleston moved on to the
semifinals where they hosted the fellow USL-1 side Seattle Sounders -
the matchup ensuring that one of the clubs would make their debut
in the Open Cup final.

The teams traded goals in the first half, with Seattle going ahead
on an own goal when Youseff Kante's shot deflected off Osvaldo
Alonso and into the net. Patterson equalized in the 33rd minute with
his second goal of the tournament, ending Seattle's single-
tournament shutout streak record at 453 minutes.

The score remained 1-1 through regulation and extra time, leading to
penalty kicks. It was the second penalty kick tiebreaker for each
team in the 2008 tournament, Seattle's first coming against the
Kansas City Wizards in the quarterfinals. After Hudock saved the
Sounders' second attempt by standout Sebastien Le Toux, Chris
Eylander returned the favor by stopping Mike Richardson on the very
next kick. Hudock turned aside Seattle's final attempt by Kevin
Forrest to give the Battery a 4-3 penalty kick win, and their first
finals appearance in club history.

Charleston has played the most matches in a single tournament (five)
of any team in the Professional Era to reach the U.S. Open Cup
Final.

D.C. United
3rd Round - July 1, 2-0 vs. Rochester Rhinos (USL-1)
Quarterfinal - July 8, 2-1 (aet) vs. Chicago Fire (MLS)
Semifinal - August 12, 3-1 vs. New England Revolution (MLS) (Video
Highlights)

D.C. United's path to the final was a bit shorter, as they entered
the tournament in the third round. They started off at the Maryland
SoccerPlex against the only other USL-1 team to make it to an Open
Cup final, the Rochester Rhinos. After a scoreless first half,
United's Marc Burch connected on a pair of free kicks in the final
15 minutes to give D.C. a 2-0 win.

Next to visit the SoccerPlex were the the four-time Open Cup
winners, Chicago Fire, a team D.C. had never eliminated from any
knockout competition.

United trailed 1-0 at halftime after Daniel Woolard struck for the
Fire in the 36th minute. But in the 77th minute, Jamie Moreno hooked
up with second-half sub Francis Doe to level the score and send the
match to extra time. Moreno once again helped on United's extra-time
winner, delivering a corner kick that Bryan Namoff headed in for the
lead. Late in the first half of extra time, a scuffle erupted that
ended with Burch and Chicago's Cuauhtemoc Blanco being sent off.
Burch was given a traditional one-match suspension, but Blanco's
actions, combined with an encounter with a D.C. team official off
the field, led to a minimum two-year Open Cup ban for the legendary
Mexican international.

To reach the final, D.C. had to knock off the defending U.S. Open
Cup champions, the New England Revolution (VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS -
BehindTheBadge.com). Playing at their regular home pitch at RFK
Stadium, D.C. wasted no time jumping in front as Luciano Emilio
knocked home a cross from Namoff in the fourth minute. A little more
than 10 minutes from halftime, the Revs answered with a goal from
Joe Germanese, who helped the Des Moines Menace of PDL make a run to
the U.S. Open Cup third round back in 2006. With the second half
only 3 minutes old, Moreno assisted on his third goal of the
tournament, this time helping Santino Quaranta give United a 2-1
lead. Once New England's Wells Thompson was sent off in the 71st
minute for his second caution, D.C. seemed to have the match in
hand. Then with just 9 minutes remaining, Emilio sealed United's
spot in the final by scoring off a cross from new acquisition Ivan
Guererro.

OPEN CUP HISTORY (ALL-TIME)

Charleston Battery
Overall Record: 16-7-3, 45 GF 30 GA
Home Record: 13-3-3
Away Record: 3-3-0
Neutral Site: 0-1-0
Matches decided by penalty kicks: 2-1
Matches decided by extra time: 2-3
Record vs. MLS clubs: 5-6-2, 19 GF 22 GA
Final appearances: 2008
Semifinal appearances: 1999, 2004, 2008

Charleston entered the Cup for the first time in 1999, and made an
immediate impact with their 4-3 extra-time upset of D.C. United in
the third round. After defeating fellow A-League side Staten Island,
the Battery fell to the Colorado Rapids 3-0 in the semifinal. D.C.
would get its revenge with a 4-0 win in the second round in 2000.
Third-round exits to MLS clubs marked their 2001 and 2002
appearances, but one notable result was a 4-1 thrashing of the
MetroStars in the 2001 second round. The Battery missed the Cup in
2003, when they were eliminated in A-League qualifying on a last-
minute goal by the Virginia Beach Mariners.

The Battery returned in 2004, and made a run to the semifinals,
despite finishing near the bottom of the A-League standings that
year. A pair of 1-0 wins over the MetroStars and Rochester Raging
Rhinos put the Battery one match away from the final, but were
stopped short by the Chicago Fire with a 1-0 extra-time loss. In
2005, the Battery suffered the lone upset of their Open Cup history,
a 3-2 loss to the Des Moines Menace in the third round.

As noted earlier, Charleston lost to F.C. Dallas in 2006 and 2007,
first by penalties, then in extra time.

HOME COOKING: Charleston's Open Cup success has been helped by the
fact that many of their games have been played at Blackbaud Stadium.
The Battery have hosted 11 of their last 12 Open Cup games,
including their semifinal win over the Seattle Sounders. Their road
game at F.C. Dallas in the quarterfinals snapped a string of 10
consecutive home games.

D.C. United
Record: 19-7-3, 59 GF 27 GA
Home Record: 15-1-1 (6-1-0 at RFK Stadium)
Away Record: 4-6-1
Neutral Site: 0-0-1
Matches decided by penalty kicks: 1-2
Matches decided by extra time: 3-2
Record vs. USL-1 clubs: 9-2-1, 26 GF 9 GA
Championships: 1996
Final appearances: 1996, 1997, 2008
Semifinal appearances: 1996, 1997, 2001, 2003, 2006, 2008

D.C. United won the first Open Cup to involve MLS clubs in 1996,
with a 3-0 win over the A-League's Rochester Raging Rhinos. They
nearly retained their title in 1997, falling to the Dallas Burn on
penalties after a scoreless draw in the final. (VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS:
MLSnet.com) On their way to the 1997 final, D.C. knocked off the
upstart San Francisco Bay Seals in the semifinals - the USISL D3 Pro
League club had upset MLS sides San Jose and Kansas City in the
previous rounds before losing to D.C. 2-1.

D.C. didn't enter the 1998 Open Cup because of their involvement in
the Copa Merconorte, a tournament they were eventually removed from
in the aftermath of a dispute between the Mexican federation and
tournament organizers. A year later, they were upset by Charleston,
though D.C. got their revenge with a 4-0 win in 2000. United's run
that year ended with a 3-2 extra-time loss to the Miami Fusion in
the quarterfinals. They didn't enter the 2002 tournament due to
schedule congestion.

D.C. was back in 2003, with another run to the semifinals that fell
short with a 3-2 loss to the MetroStars when John Wolyniec scored in
the 88th minute for their New Jersey-based rivals. The 2004
tournament saw United exit the Cup after one game for only the
second time in their history, when they fell 2-1 to the A-League's
Richmond Kickers.

After a quarterfinal penalty-kick loss to F.C. Dallas in 2005, D.C.
rebounded to reach the semifinals in 2006, dropping a 3-0 decision
to eventual champions Chicago Fire. That year provided another
milestone for D.C., as their quarterfinal win over the New York Red
Bulls marked the first time since 1997 that the club defeated a
fellow MLS team in the tournament. The next year was arguably the
low point of United's Open Cup history, losing to the USL Second
Division's Harrisburg City Islanders 1-0 after fielding a lineup
full of reserves. It was only the third time D.C. was eliminated
from the Cup after one match.

HOME COOKING: United has hosted seven of their past nine Open Cup
games, with the only road games during that stretch being losses to
the Chicago Fire and the Harrisburg City Islanders. D.C. is 6-1-0
all-time in Open Cup games played at RFK Stadium and 15-1-1 all-time
in home games.

PREVIOUS MEETINGS

The most famous meeting between Charleston and D.C. United was on
Aug. 4, 1999, a match that has become known as the "Coffee Pot
Game."

D.C. United was a juggernaut at that point, having appeared in the
first three MLS Cup finals (winning the first two), and reaching the
finals of the U.S. Open Cup in 1996 (win) and 1997 (runner-up).
Charleston on the other hand, was a middle-of-the-table A-League
side, fighting just to make the playoffs.

The Battery had the honor of hosting the third-round U.S. Open Cup
match at their new soccer-specific Blackbaud Stadium, and with a
packed house of 5,456 watching, the Battery jumped out to a 2-0 lead
in the first 24 minutes on goals from Mike Burke and Dean Sewell.

D.C. quickly replied with a goal from Moreno, leveled the score on
Chris Albright's goal off a corner kick in the 59th minute and then
took the lead with 6 minutes remaining on a goal by A.J. Wood.

With just 3 minutes left, it was Bulgarian Ivailo Ilarianov to the
rescue, beating United goalkeeper Tom Presthus off his line to send
the game to extra time. Ilarianov did it again 10 minutes into extra
time, this time scoring the golden goal. Ilarianov and Sewell broke
in on a 2-on-1 against Clint Peay, and Sewell fed Ilarianov, who had
plenty of time to send his shot past the outstretched right hand of
Presthus for the dramatic upset.

After the match, it was reported that some of United's players were
so upset, they smashed two coffee pots and ripped out shower heads
in the locker room. Since 2004, the supporters groups of both clubs
present the winners of the teams' meetings with a coffee pot full of
beer - the Coffee Pot Cup.

D.C. and Charleston have only met in friendly matches since 2000,
most of the time in the Carolina Challenge Cup, the Battery's annual
preseason tournament.

1999 - U.S. Open Cup: Charleston Battery 4, D.C. United 3 (after
sudden death extra time)
2000 - U.S. Open Cup: D.C. United 4, Charleston Battery 0
2004 - Carolina Challenge Cup: D.C. United 2, Charleston Battery 1
2005 - Carolina Challenge Cup: D.C. United 2, Charleston Battery 2
2006 - Carolina Challenge Cup: D.C. United 1, Charleston Battery 1
2006 - Friendly: D.C. United 2, Charleston Battery 0 (at Cary,
N.C.)

OPEN CUP CONNECTIONS

While there are no players on D.C. United's current roster with
connections with their opponents, Charleston features a trio of
players who have spent time in a D.C. United shirt.

Forward Lazo Alavanja appeared in 17 games for D.C. in 2002, after
three years with the Dallas Burn and Miami Fusion. After playing
indoors for two years, Alavanja signed with Charleston in 2005, and
has nine goals in his 78 appearances for the Battery.

Midfielder Stephen Armstrong played for D.C. United in 2001,
appearing in 15 games and scoring three goals. After four more
seasons in MLS with Kansas City and Columbus, Armstrong signed with
Charleston in 2006 and has recorded 16 goals in 60 appearances.

Finally, defender John Wilson has the unique distinction of having
played for Charleston before and after his D.C. United stop. Wilson
played for Charleston from 1999-2003, appearing in 95 games with one
goal. After a stint with Rochester in 2004, Wilson spent three
seasons with D.C. United, making 28 appearances. After D.C. released
Wilson, he returned to Charleston and has played 21 games this
season.

Both teams also have one rather unique connection: they each feature
players that appeared in their famous 1999 Open Cup clash. Moreno
started and scored D.C.'s first goal and assisted on another.
Charleston features goalkeeper Hudock, who started between the posts
for the Battery in their historic upset, as well as Wilson, who also
started and played the whole game.

LEAGUE FORM

Charleston Battery
USL First Division record: 10-9-7, 30 GF 26 GA
3rd in USL First Division
Home record: 9-2-3, 22 GF 10 GA
Away record: 1-7-4, 8 GF 16 GA
April: 0-1-2, 3 GF 4 GA
May: 5-1-0, 9 GF 3 GA
June: 2-1-1, 7 GF 4 GA
July: 2-2-1, 5 GF 5 GA
August: 1-4-3, 6 GF 10 GA
(Records reflect league matches only)

From April through July, Charleston never went more then one match
without earning a point in league play, going 9-5-2 in that
stretch.

August has taken a different turn for Charleston, as the Battery
have compiled a 1-4-3 record, including a six-game winless streak (0-
3-3). Charleston has gained only 13 points out of a possible 39
since July. In their defense, eight of their last 10 league matches
have been on the road.

D.C. United
Major League Soccer record: 10-10-2, 36 GF 34 GA
4th in MLS Eastern Conference
Home record: 8-3-1, 28 GF 13 GA
Away record: 2-7-1, 8 GF 21 GA
March/April: 2-3-0, 9 GF 8 GA
May: 1-4-1, 6 GF 12 GA
June: 4-0-0, 13 GF 4 GA
July/August: 3-3-1, 8 GF 9 GA
(Records reflect league matches only)

D.C. United has seemed to go through every up, down and in between
period a team can have this season. After starting 2-7-0, D.C.
seemed to suddenly wake up, stringing together a six-game unbeaten
streak (5-0-1) in which they outscored opponents 18-8.

Then came the SuperLiga, where they lost all three group matches.
Since then, D.C. has been 3-3-1 in league play.

Interesting stat: D.C. is 11-4-0 in all competitions (CONCACAF
Champions Cup, SuperLiga, MLS and U.S. Open Cup) when Luciano Emilio
is involved in a goal.

If D.C. has one advantage, it is that the match is being played on
their home pitch. Both clubs are a combined 17-5-4 in league matches
at home, but a dismal 3-14-5 on the road.

OPEN CUP LEADERS

Charleston Battery

Goals
Darren Spicer - 4
Randi Patterson - 2
Osvaldo Alonso - 1
Marco Reda - 1
Ian Fuller - 1
Lazo Alavanja - 1

Assists
Ian Fuller - 1
David Kenga - 1
Stephen Armstrong - 1
Aaron King - 1

Goalkeeper Stats (Min./Goals Allowed)
Dusty Hudock - 330/3
Keith Wiggins - 180/2

D.C. United

Goals
Marc Burch - 2
Luciano Emilio - 2
Francis Doe - 1
Bryan Namoff - 1
Santino Quaranta - 1

Assists
Jamie Moreno - 3
Bryan Namoff - 1
Ivan Guererro - 1

Goalkeeper Stats (Min./Goals Allowed)
Zach Wells - 300/2






Wed Sep 3, 2008 3:24 pm

l32425759d
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email

Forward
Message #1096 of 1232 |
Expand Messages Author Sort by Date

12 years later, Open Cup final returns to RFK CONCACAF Champions League place on the line as D.C. United hosts the USL First Division's Charleston Battery on...
William Jennings Bryan
l32425759d
Offline Send Email
Sep 3, 2008
3:24 pm
Advanced

Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Guidelines - Help