It was something less than convincing ? and that?s being kind ? but the Galaxy came into Seattle and left with just enough.
It will be difficult for Bruce Arena?s Galaxy to feel warm and wonderful about a 2-1 loss, but they can sure like the opportunity that results from Sunday?s, er, ?achievement? at CenturyLink Field: a chance to defend their MLS Cup inside their very own building.
Eddie Johnson?s early goal and another from Zach Scott kept hope afloat, but a controversial penalty kick for the visitors turned things in favor of the champs.
So the Galaxy prevailed in the two-leg, total goals series by a 4-2 margin and stands once again as Western Conference champion.
Man of the Match:
The midfield Sunday was no contest. At all. Seattle?s Osvaldo Alonso, assisted by central partner Brad Evans, crushed the Galaxy in the center of the park. The league?s top ball-winner did his usual bouncing around, and his distribution was sharp and precise. But his game had a better tactical discipline than we sometimes see. He remained central and kept himself out of tackles and tussles that might incur referee wrath. When Alonso did get a booking, it looked like a smart one to take.
Threesome of knowledge: What we learned
One decision can change everything:
The Galaxy didn?t have much going right in this one; they were beaten pretty well all over the field.
It looked so much different from the day?s earlier match, where Houston came into a hostile environment with a lead and a plan, and nursed home the mission a certain calm and cool.
The Galaxy looked surprisingly rattled and even a little overwhelmed. They were without Landon Donovan (sore hamstring) and didn?t have central midfielder Juninho until the second half. Still, there was plenty of experience out there.
And yet they were being run out of the stadium. Robbie Keane, so good for the last few months, never had much chance to be a factor; the Galaxy just never got enough possession. Even steady center back Omar Gonzales was having a bad match.
But then ?
Sounders right back Adam Johansson had his arms out, away from his body as Keane tried a tricky little chipped cross on one of the few Galaxy incursions. Referee Mark Geiger had a good look as the ball hit first Johansson?s left hand and then skimmed his right.
Sounders fans may not agree, but it was the correct call.
To that point, the Sounders were rolling downhill, on a rave green rampage, powered by on the momentum of the playoff record crowd of 44,575. Seattle had a 2-0 lead in the match, still trailing by one on aggregate but surely feeling that the equalizer was in them.
But what a buzz kill the PK was. Keane converted and you never really got the impression Seattle had enough left to overcome the two-goal margin that had just been re-created.
Steve Zakuani had a big impact on things:
Sounders? manager Sigi Schmid is never afraid of playing the hunch, gambling and trying something new, never mind the big circumstance. Sometimes things work out, sometimes not. Clearly, going with Steve Zakuani on a slick field, on a big occasion, was something of a gambler?s hunch. But this one paid off.
The Sounders went down Zakuani?s left side time and again in the first 45. He zipped by L.A. right back Sean Franklin early and that one seemed to power up the confidence. Fredy Montero, recognizing where Seattle was hurting the visitors, drifted left to create better connections.
It all had the added benefit of more or less shutting down L.A. right-sided attack; not only was right back Franklin utterly uninterested in roaming forward, right midfielder Christian Wilhemsson expended lots of energy in retreat, looking to give Franklin a defensive hand.
The Fredy Montero mystery deepens:
Did we just see the last of Fredy Montero?s turbulent four-year run at CenturyLink?
And wasn?t this the perfect microcosm of his up-and-down time in Seattle?
Montero looked like he could win it all by himself in the first 45 minutes, alive with ideas and energy, making those killer connections with Eddie Johnson and Zakuani, even winning aerial challenges with the towering Gonzalez.
And then came the second half, when Montero looked more like the broken and beaten shell we saw last week, when the Colombian striker was shockingly ineffective in Los Angeles.
So here?s the bottom line on Montero in the playoffs across four years: 10 games (829 minutes to be precise) and zero goals. And in the critical moments, season on the line, Montero was on the bench. Schmid removed Montero ? the man who has absolutely carried Seattle?s offense over stretches since 2009 ? after 73 minutes.
That cannot speak well of Montero?s chances of staying around.
Packaged for take-away:
- Good as Alonso was over 90 minutes, he made himself look bad after the final whistle, berating Geiger and earning a second yellow card. He will miss Seattle?s first match next year, at least.
- Johnson struck in the 11th minute. He was ruled offside, although replays showed otherwise.
- Goalkeeper Josh Saunders may have been the one and only Galaxy man to have a match worth remembering.
ProSoccerTalk will keep up the discussion of the chase for MLS Cup through the Dec. 1 final.
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