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MLS Cup

The MLS Cup is the annual championship game of Major League Soccer (MLS) and the culmination of the MLS Cup Playoffs. The game is held in November or December and pits the winner of the Eastern Conference Final against the winner of the Western Conference Final. The MLS Cup winner is awarded the title of league champion.

MLS Cup
Founded1996
RegionMajor League Soccer (CONCACAF)
Current championsColumbus Crew
(3rd title)
Most successful team(s)LA Galaxy
(5 titles)
Television broadcasters
Websitemlssoccer.com
MLS Cup 2023

MLS uses a playoff tournament following the regular season to determine its annual league champion, a method common to every other major North American sports league. This format differs from most football leagues around the world, which consider the club with the most points at the end of the season to be the champion; MLS honors that achievement with the Supporters' Shield.

A U.S.-based team that wins the MLS Cup is awarded one of the country's four berths in the following season's CONCACAF Champions League.[1][2] The three Canadian teams of MLS can only qualify for the Champions League through the Canadian Championship—if any of them should win the MLS Cup, the Champions League berth tied to game is passed on to the highest-placed U.S.-based team in the overall regular season table that did not already qualify.[2]

The inaugural MLS Cup was held on October 20, 1996, in which D.C. United defeated the LA Galaxy. The Galaxy are the most successful team in MLS Cup history, winning a record fifth title in 2014.

Three trophy designs have been used for the MLS Cup: the Alan I. Rothenberg Trophy from 1996 through 1998, a redesigned Alan I. Rothenberg Trophy from 1999 through 2007, and the Philip F. Anschutz Trophy since 2008.[3]

History edit

D.C. United dynasty edit

The MLS Cup's roots trace back to the foundation of Major League Soccer, when the league decided to hold a championship format similar to its contemporary North American sports leagues.[4] The first few editions of the game were dominated by D.C. United, who appeared in the first four MLS Cup finals, winning three.[5]

The inaugural MLS Cup in 1996 featured D.C. United and LA Galaxy.[6][7] The Galaxy went ahead 2–0 early in the second half, but their lead was relinquished towards the end of the match when Tony Sanneh pulled one back in the 72nd minute. Nine minutes later, Shawn Medved tied the match at two, resulting in overtime between the two sides. Four minutes into overtime, Eddie Pope gave United the golden goal victory.[8]

In 1997, the second league cup final was contested at RFK Stadium, where United won back-to-back titles, a feat that would not be accomplished for another decade (when the Houston Dynamo won the 2006 and 2007 finals). The game ended 2–1 in United's favor over the Colorado Rapids, who would not win a championship until 2010. Jaime Moreno was declared Man of the Match for his goal in the 37th minute of play. This season was also the first time in league history any MLS team won the regular season (Supporters' Shield) and postseason title in the same season.

D.C. United's run ended the third year, when they made a third run to the MLS Cup finals, only to lose to the expansion side Chicago Fire by 2–0. However the following year, United repeated their "double" of winning both the Supporters Shield and MLS Cup the same season. This time, it was a 2–0 win over the Galaxy in the 1999 MLS Cup final.

Rise of the California Clásico edit

For the first time since 1997, the 2000 MLS Cup final saw a new club reach the finals along with the Fire. This time the Kansas City Wizards, now known as Sporting Kansas City, won their first MLS Cup with a 1–0 victory over the Fire.

 
Landon Donovan of San Jose defending against Chicago's Carlos Bocanegra in the 2003 MLS Cup.

From 2001 through 2005, the MLS Cup finals saw a rising of the California Clásico when intrastate rivals L.A. Galaxy and the San Jose Earthquakes clashed in the 2001 final. The match also saw the rise of U.S. national Landon Donovan who won a Newcomer of the Year award and tallied the equalizer in the Earthquakes 2–1 championship victory over the Galaxy.

With the largest crowd in MLS Cup history at hand, the New England Revolution took on the Galaxy in the 2002 finals. For the match, over 61,000 fans were in attendance at Gillette Stadium to witness the final. In the second period of sudden-death overtime, the Galaxy nabbed their first MLS Cup title, and sparked the start of a string of MLS Cup losses for the Revolution.

The 2003 final saw the league leaders for that season go head-to-head. Two clubs that had MLS Cup experience, the Fire and Earthquakes, played for the final that year. The two clubs had successful regular season campaigns with the Fire winning their first Supporters' Shield, and the Earthquakes being the Western Conference regular season and post-season champions as well as having the second best overall regular season record. In a hotly contested match, the Earthquakes won with their second MLS Cup title with a 4–2 score making it the highest scoring MLS Cup final in league history (six goals).

After a four-year absence, United made their fifth trip to the MLS Cup final, playing against the Wizards for MLS Cup 2004. The match had four goals scored in the first 25 minutes, with United rallying for a 3–1 lead. Midway through the second half, United had relinquished a penalty kick. Josh Wolff scored for Kansas City, bringing the game within a goal. D.C. United was able to retain the lead, by winning their fourth MLS Cup title, by a score of 3–2.

For the 2005 season, the Earthquakes, as the Supporters' Shield winners, fell to the Galaxy in the Playoffs. The Galaxy went on to win the MLS Cup, matching the Earthquakes at two.

Format changes edit

Until 2005, the MLS Cup championship games had been dominated by clubs that had either won or had come close to winning the Supporters Shield. In the 2005 MLS Cup championship, the match was won by the Los Angeles Galaxy, which won the league title while having a 9th-place overall record.[9] The Wizards had a better record, but did not qualify for the playoffs because they finished 5th in the Eastern Conference, in spite of an 8th-place overall record.[9] The result prompted MLS to create new wild-cards that were used starting in 2006, where a certain number of clubs per conference could qualify, and the next best overall teams regardless of conference would also qualify. That prompted debates about the league switching to a single table and a balanced schedule. The single table has yet been instituted, but in 2010 the league instituted a balanced schedule.[10] During the 2012 season, the league resumed an unbalanced schedule.

Scudetto era edit

 
Second MLS Scudetto (2009–2012)

At the start of the 2006 season, MLS created their version of the scudetto (Italian for "small shield"), a symbol worn on the jersey by the team who won the previous season's Serie A (the top Italian league).

The MLS scudetto was originally a curved, triangular badge featuring a backdrop of the American flag behind a replica of the Alan I. Rothenberg MLS Cup trophy. First worn by Los Angeles Galaxy in 2006, following their 2005 MLS Cup title,[11] the Houston Dynamo wore the same triangular scudettos in 2007 and 2008 during their dual-cup run. It was redesigned after the 2008 season after the change to the MLS Cup trophy. It is now an oval-shaped black badge with the Philip F. Anschutz Trophy in the middle. The MLS scudetto is worn by the winning team the season following the victory. It is only during the subsequent season (two years after winning the championship), that the team adds a star – a common soccer signifier of titles won – above the team logo. The team can display the star on other items beside their jersey in the year after winning the Cup, but only if the scudetto is not shown. The Columbus Crew was the first team to wear the redesigned scudetto. Real Salt Lake wore the scudetto in 2010 after winning their first MLS cup in 2009. A year after the Colorado Rapids also wore it after their cup run in 2010 for the 2011 season. Finally, the Los Angeles Galaxy wore the scudetto after winning the MLS Cup in 2011, ironically, it was the last team to do so. After the 2012 season, MLS decided not to use the scudetto for upcoming season and instead the defending MLS Cup champions would have a gold star above one or more silver stars indication the team's MLS Cup wins, followed by an additional silver star added to the lined stars the following season. The Los Angeles Galaxy were the first to receive the gold star above the team's three silver stars for the 2013 season.

"Buffalo Bills" of MLS edit

While the Galaxy won its second MLS Cup trophy and the Houston Dynamo earned consecutive cups, the New England Revolution went on a run of making three consecutive MLS Cup finals, losing all of them. Two of their three losses were in extra time, while the other was lost on penalty kicks. The infamy gave the club the title of being the Buffalo Bills (an NFL American football team) of MLS.[12] This was in reference to the Buffalo Bills' Super Bowl games in the early 1990s, in which they lost in four consecutive appearances. In the 2005 final, the Revolution lost to the Los Angeles Galaxy, a rematch of 2002, in the final. In a match held at Pizza Hut Park (now Toyota Stadium) in Frisco, Texas, the Galaxy defeated the Revolution by a score of 1–0 thanks to a 105th-minute overtime goal from Galaxy midfielder and Guatemalan international, Guillermo Ramírez. Ramírez's goal sealed the Galaxy's second MLS Cup title, and left the Revs searching once again.

In 2006, the championship was once again played in Frisco at Pizza Hut Park. This time the Revolution took on the Houston Dynamo. Both were coming off a successful season in which they fell short of winning the Supporters' Shield. A sellout crowd of 22,427 attended the match. Revolution forward Taylor Twellman scored an overtime goal in the 113th minute to give the Revolution the 1–0 lead. However, Dynamo captain and forward Brian Ching immediately tied the score following the Revolution's goal. The match went to penalties, in which the Dynamo won 4–3. This left the Revolution for a second consecutive year searching for league glory. It was also the first time in league history that a club made the MLS Cup final and lost consecutively.[13]

In the 2007 final, the Revolution and Dynamo played each other once again for the 2007 cup. Played in Washington, D.C., at RFK Stadium, a crowd just shy of 40,000 witnessed the championship.[13] The announced crowd of 39,859 made it the largest MLS Cup crowd since 2002.[citation needed] The Revolution had a successful season, earning its first U.S. Open Cup title. The Revolution wanted its first MLS Cup crown, and wanted to win its first "Double" in club history. Houston, finishing just shy once again to D.C. United of winning the MLS Supporters' Shield, was determined to finish its second season with some hardware, and to defend its MLS Cup title.[13] The match went in the Revolution's favor early on, as the Revolution's captain, Twellman, netted in the 20th minute to give New England a 1–0 lead. However, midway through the second half, the Dynamo retaliated. Dynamo striker Joseph Ngwenya leveled things at one apiece in the 61st minute, and MLS Cup Man of the Match Dwayne De Rosario gave the Dynamo a 2–1 lead in the 74th.[13] The goal proved to be the winning goal, as the Dynamo earned the first back-to-back MLS Cup titles since D.C. United in 1996 and 1997.[13]

Underdogs winning the cup edit

Early in the 2008 Major League Soccer season, the league announced that the championship would be returning to The Home Depot Center (now known as Dignity Health Sports Park). Throughout the regular season, the league was dominated by the Columbus Crew, who finished the season with 57 points, and secured the Supporters' Shield title with three matches remaining before the 2008 MLS Cup Playoffs. Traditionally, the Shield winners only rarely made it to the league championship, in spite of usually being the heavy favorites going into the playoffs. However, for the first time in eight years, a regular season champion made it to the MLS Cup final. The Sigi Schmid-led club made their first run to the championship, along with their opponents the New York Red Bulls. For the Crew, being the Shield winners, their run to the final was a bit expected. The Red Bulls making the final was seen as a large surprise, possibly even a fluke. The Red Bulls did not qualify for the playoffs until the last day of the season, where they were the weakest team, in terms of regular season record, to qualify for the playoffs. The match ended up being dominated by the Crew as Columbus defeated New York with ease, 3–1. The point gap between the two clubs was the largest in history, and the scoreline between the two clubs made it tied for the largest margin of victory in MLS Cup history. New York's run to the finals was further emphasized as a fluke when the club had the worst record in 2009.

The following championship saw two intra-conference clubs meet in the final for the second consecutive year, this time at Seattle's Qwest Field (later CenturyLink Field and now Lumen Field). The Western Conference regular season and postseason champions, Los Angeles Galaxy took on Real Salt Lake, who finished fifth in the West. Although the Sounders FC management had originally planned on capping the seats available in Qwest Field to 35,700, surging demand led to the release of an additional 10,000 seats, expanding the total capacity to roughly 45,700. The announced crowd was 46,011. The crowd size was the first championship crowd since 2002 to draw over 45,000 spectators. Televised on ESPN, it was the first time that the MLS championship match was televised on the cable network; the first thirteen were carried on ABC. In the 41st minute, Galaxy striker Mike Magee scored, only for Salt Lake's Robbie Findley to make the tying goal in the 61st. The stalemate was not broken in regulation nor overtime, requiring penalty kicks to decide the match. Thanks to a strike from Salt Lake's Robbie Russell, Salt Lake won their first major trophy. By winning the championship, they gained entry into the 2010–11 CONCACAF Champions League. There, they made it to the final, only to lose to Monterrey of Mexico.

At the 2010 season's end, six teams from the Western Conference qualified for the playoffs, whereas only two clubs from the East qualified, making it the largest disparity between the two conferences in league history. The league's seeding at the time awarded conference winners earned the top seeds, the two weakest Western Conference teams, San Jose Earthquakes and Colorado Rapids were seeded against the Eastern Conference champion, New York Red Bulls and runner-up Columbus Crew, respectively. Some cited this as an unfair advantage for the Rapids and Earthquakes, as both teams made the semi-finals. In the end, the Rapids played FC Dallas for MLS Cup 2010, winning 2–1 in overtime.

LA Galaxy dynasty edit

 
LA Galaxy captain, Robbie Keane was the 2014 MLS Cup MVP.

Between the 2011 and 2014 MLS Cups, the LA Galaxy appeared in three MLS Cup finals, having the most success in MLS Cup in a short period of time since United's late 1990s dynasty. The only final that the Galaxy did not win, came in 2013, where they lost in the 2013 Western Conference semi-finals to eventual runner-up, Real Salt Lake. During that time, the Galaxy became the first MLS franchise to win five MLS Cups, when they won MLS Cup 2014. These teams contained several high-profile players including Landon Donovan, Robbie Keane, Gyasi Zardes, David Beckham and Omar Gonzalez.

Some claim that the Galaxy's dynasty began in 2009, when they reached the playoffs for the first time since 2005, and marched to the finals, only to lose on penalties to Real Salt Lake. In 2010, and again, in 2011, the Galaxy won consecutive Supporters' Shield, and completed the league double winning both the Shield and MLS Cup in 2011. This was the first time this had been accomplished since the Columbus Crew achieved it in 2008. In the 2011 MLS Cup final, the Galaxy defeated the Houston Dynamo, 1–0 off a 72nd minute Donovan goal. The goal was scored off a Galaxy counter where Beckham fed a through ball to Donovan who slotted it past Hall. The 2012 final featured both the Galaxy and Dynamo again, making it the first since 2007 that an MLS Cup final was a rematch of the previous final. Again, the Galaxy won the final, this time coming from behind to defeat the Dynamo by a 3–1 scoreline. The match was Beckham's final MLS match.

During the 2013 season, the Galaxy's chance to three-peat was thwarted by Real Salt Lake. Salt Lake defeated the Galaxy, 2–1 on aggregate, to advance to the MLS Cup final, where they eventually lost to Sporting Kansas City.

The following season, the Galaxy reached the MLS Cup final again, playing the New England Revolution, making it a rematch of MLS Cup 2002 and MLS Cup 2005. In extra-time a Robbie Keane goal propelled the Galaxy to their fifth MLS match, a victory in the 2014 MLS Cup.

Expansion teams from Cascadia, Canada, and Atlanta edit

 
Osvaldo Alonso of Seattle Sounders FC lifting the MLS Cup trophy in December 2016

The Portland Timbers won the 2015 MLS Cup, defeating the Columbus Crew 2–1. Portland's Diego Valeri scored the fastest goal in MLS Cup history at 27 seconds when Crew goalkeeper Steve Clark made a fundamental error after he miscontrolled his defender's back-pass while Valeri had advanced towards the ball to strike at the opportunity.[14]

The Seattle Sounders FC faced Toronto FC in the 2016 MLS Cup, which was played at BMO Field in Toronto on the evening of December 10, 2016. The temperature at the start of the match was 21 °F (−6 °C) (10 °F (−12 °C), when adjusted for wind chill), with strong winds coming off Lake Ontario. The field was watered shortly before the match, and resultant field was described as icy by players. Seattle Sounders FC defeated Toronto FC 5–4 in a penalty shoot-out after a scoreless match of 90 minutes regular time and 30 minutes overtime. The Sounders did not register a single shot on goal, becoming the first club to do so in an MLS Cup final. The Sounders, despite a very poor start and mid-season managerial change, became the second team from the Pacific Northwest to win the cup, after Portland in 2015.

In the 2017 MLS Cup, Toronto FC and Seattle faced off in a rematch of the previous edition, also at BMO Field. Toronto FC won the match 2–0, and became the first Canadian team to win the MLS Cup, and the first MLS team to complete a domestic treble, after winning the Canadian Championship and Supporters' Shield earlier in the year.[15]

 
Pyrotechnics display during Atlanta United's trophy ceremony following the 2018 MLS Cup final

Atlanta United FC, in their second season as an expansion team, won the 2018 edition of the MLS Cup by defeating the Portland Timbers 2–0. The match, hosted in Atlanta at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, was attended by 73,019 spectators and broke the MLS Cup attendance record set in 2002 by New England.[16] The club became the second-youngest to win an MLS Cup, behind the 1998 Chicago Fire, and brought the first professional sports championship for the city of Atlanta since 1995.[17][18]

In the 2019 MLS Cup, Toronto FC and Seattle Sounders FC both overcame underdog status in their respective conferences to contest a third final in four years, this time playing at Seattle's home ground. Seattle Sounders FC duly won their second MLS Cup, taking the final match 3–1 at CenturyLink Field in front of a Sounders record attendance of 69,274.[19][20]

The 2020 edition, which marked the end of a season dramatically affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, saw the Sounders return to the MLS Cup Final, this time facing Columbus Crew SC at the latter's home of Mapfre Stadium in Columbus, Ohio. The Crew won 3–0 in front of a crowd restricted to 1,500, in the stadium's last playoff game.[21]

Broadcasting edit

United States edit

The MLS Cup Final was aired on English-language networks ABC from 1996 to 2008 and ESPN from 2009 to 2014. ESPN/ABC and Fox alternate as MLS Cup Final broadcasters since 2015, with the MLS Cup 2019[22][23] on ABC, their first MLS match since 2008. ABC also air four playoff matches including the MLS Cup 2021.[24] The MLS Cup has also been aired on Spanish-language networks TeleFutura in 2007 and 2008,[25][26] Galavision from 2009 to 2011,[27][28] TeleFutura/UniMás from 2012 to 2018, and Univision in 2019. ABC previously had Spanish announcers under secondary audio program.

From 2015 to 2022, all MLS Cup playoff games are televised on ESPN, Fox Sports, or Univisión networks. UniMás will air two exclusive playoff matches, while ESPN and its affiliated networks will split the rest of the contests – including MLS Cup – with Fox Sports. Univision, UniMás and TUDN also airs the MLS Cup playoffs in Spanish.[29]

With the new Apple TV deal beginning 2023, FOX Sports will be the only linear broadcaster of MLS, and will carry select MLS Cup playoff matches, and every MLS Cup with no alternate broadcaster starting 2023.[30][31]

Canada edit

MLS Cup coverage in Canada started in 2007, with the addition of Toronto FC to MLS. The MLS Cup bounced around different networks in the first three seasons of the league's presence in Canada; what was then the bold network aired the 2007 Cup Final, with CBC airing the next year's Final and GolTV Canada airing the Final the year after that. Since 2010, TSN has aired the MLS Cup Final on its networks; this includes Toronto FC's victory in 2017.

In French, RDS has exclusive rights to MLS, and thus the MLS Cup.

Format edit

Over the history of the MLS Cup Playoffs, numerous formats have been used.

From 1996 to 1999 and 2003 to 2006, the top four teams per conference qualified for the playoffs.

In 2000 and 2001, the three division winners plus the next five teams with the next best records made the playoffs.

In 2002, the top 8 teams qualified for the playoffs regardless of conference.

In 2007, the top two teams per conference plus the next four teams with the next most points qualified.

At the end of the 2008 season, the top three teams of each conference made the playoffs; in addition, the clubs with the next two highest point totals, regardless of conference, were added to the playoffs. In the first round of this knockout tournament, aggregate goals over two matches determined the winners; the Conference Championships were one match each, with the winner of each conference advancing to the MLS Cup. In all rounds, the tie-breaking method was two 15-minute periods of overtime, followed by penalty kicks if necessary. The away goals rule was not used.

At the end of the 2009 and 2010 seasons, the top two teams of each conference made the playoffs; in addition, the clubs with the next four highest point totals, regardless of conference, were added to the playoffs. In the first round of this knockout tournament, aggregate (total) goals over two matches determined the winners; the Conference Championships were one match each, with the winner of each conference advancing to the MLS Cup. In all rounds, the tie-breaking method was two 15-minute periods of extra time, followed by penalty kicks if necessary. The away goals rule was not used.[32]

At the 2011 season's end, the top three clubs in each of the league's two conferences earned the six automatic spots in the Conference Semifinals.[33] The wild card entrants, seeded seventh through tenth, entered based upon their overall position in the overall league standings.[33] The new format was assembled so that the lowest seed to qualify out of the wild card rounds will play against the Supporters' Shield winner.[33] The highest wild-card seed remaining will play the conference champion that did not win the Shield.[33] The play-in games and Conference Finals were single matches, with the higher-seeded club hosting.[33] The conference semi-finals were a two-leg aggregate series.[33] The MLS Cup was held at a predetermined venue.[33]

From 2012 to 2014, the playoff structure was further tweaked with the elimination of the wild card slots. The ten playoff berths were awarded to the top five teams in each conference. In each conference, the No. 4 seeded hosted the No. 5 seed in a single match for a place in the conference semi-finals against the best team in its conference. The Conference Semifinals remained two-legged while the finals changed from a single match to a two-leg aggregate series. Finally, the MLS Cup was held at the home field of the finalist with the highest point total during the regular season. The away goals rule was used but did not apply after extra time.[34]

From 2015 to 2018, the top six teams per conference qualified for the playoffs (12 total teams). The first round involved each conference's No. 3 seed hosting the No. 6 seed, and the No. 4 hosting No. 5. In the Conference Semifinals, the top seed played the lowest remaining seed, and the No. 2 seed played the next lowest seed.[35][36]

In the 2019, 2021, and 2022 seasons, the top seven teams per conference qualified for the playoffs, with only the best-ranked team in each conference earning a first-round bye. Each round is still single-elimination. The playoff brackets were fixed, as the league abolished re-seeding.[37][38] Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the top ten teams from the Eastern and top eight teams from the Western conference qualified for the playoffs in the 2020 season, with single-elimination remaining intact. The top six Eastern teams earned byes to the first round while teams seeded 7–10 and competed in play-in games. The lowest-ranked team to advance from the play-in round advanced to play the conference's first-placed team while the highest-ranked remaining team from that round advanced to face the conference's runner-up. In the Western Conference, the top eight teams competed in their first round with no byes.[39]

The playoffs will expand to nine teams per conference in 2023 with the re-addition of a best-of-three series. The eighth and ninth seeds play a wild card match, with the winner advancing to face the best-ranked team in their conference in Round One while teams ranked 2–7 face each other, with the higher seed hosting. The Conference Semifinals, Conference Final, and MLS Cup final remain single-elimination matches hosted by the higher-seeded team in late November and early December; as before, without re-seeding.[40][41]

Champions edit

The winner of Major League Soccer's MLS Cup, the final match of the MLS Cup Playoffs, determines that season's league champion. The playoff tournament is organized by the league at the conclusion of the regular season in a format similar to other North American professional sports leagues. The tournament is open to the top nine clubs of the Eastern and Western Conferences.

The first MLS Cup final was played on October 20, 1996. To date, the record for the most championships is held by the Los Angeles Galaxy with five cup titles. The record for the most championships lost is held by the New England Revolution, who lost the game five times during their history. The championship has been won by the same team in two or more consecutive years on three occasions.

Results edit

Season Date Champions Score Runners-up Venue Attendance U.S. television
1996 October 20 D.C. United  †3–2 * Los Angeles Galaxy Foxboro Stadium 34,643 ABC
1997 October 26 D.C. United 2–1 Colorado Rapids RFK Memorial Stadium 57,431
1998 October 25 Chicago Fire 2–0 D.C. United Rose Bowl 51,350
1999 November 21 D.C. United 2–0 Los Angeles Galaxy Foxboro Stadium 44,910
2000 October 15 Kansas City Wizards 1–0 Chicago Fire RFK Memorial Stadium 39,159
2001 October 21 San Jose Earthquakes 2–1 * Los Angeles Galaxy Crew Stadium 21,626
2002 October 20 Los Angeles Galaxy  †1–0 * New England Revolution Gillette Stadium 61,316
2003 November 23 San Jose Earthquakes 4–2 Chicago Fire Home Depot Center 27,000
2004 November 14 D.C. United 3–2 Kansas City Wizards 25,797
2005 November 13 Los Angeles Galaxy  †1–0 * New England Revolution Pizza Hut Park 21,193
2006 November 12 Houston Dynamo  †1–1 (4–3) New England Revolution Pizza Hut Park 22,427
2007 November 18 Houston Dynamo 2–1 New England Revolution RFK Memorial Stadium 39,859
2008 November 23 Columbus Crew 3–1 New York Red Bulls Home Depot Center 27,000
2009 November 22 Real Salt Lake  †1–1 (5–4) Los Angeles Galaxy Qwest Field 46,011 ESPN
2010 November 21 Colorado Rapids  †2–1 * FC Dallas BMO Field 21,700
2011 November 20 Los Angeles Galaxy 1–0 Houston Dynamo Home Depot Center 30,281
2012 December 1 Los Angeles Galaxy 3–1 Houston Dynamo Home Depot Center 30,510
2013 December 7 Sporting Kansas City  †1–1 (7–6) Real Salt Lake Sporting Park 21,650
2014 December 7 Los Angeles Galaxy 2–1 * New England Revolution StubHub Center 27,000
2015 December 6 Portland Timbers 2–1 Columbus Crew Mapfre Stadium 21,747
2016 December 10 Seattle Sounders FC 0–0 (5–4) Toronto FC BMO Field 36,045 Fox
2017 December 9 Toronto FC 2–0 Seattle Sounders FC BMO Field 30,584 ESPN
2018 December 8 Atlanta United FC 2–0 Portland Timbers Mercedes-Benz Stadium 73,019 Fox
2019 November 10 Seattle Sounders FC 3–1 Toronto FC CenturyLink Field 69,274 ABC
2020 December 12 Columbus Crew 3–0 Seattle Sounders FC Mapfre Stadium 1,500 ^ Fox
2021 December 11 New York City FC 1–1 (4–2) Portland Timbers Providence Park 25,218 ABC
2022 November 5 Los Angeles FC 3–3 (3–0) Philadelphia Union Banc of California Stadium 22,384 Fox
2023 December 9 Columbus Crew 2–1 Los Angeles FC Lower.com Field 20,802
Key
* Match went to extra time
Match decided by a penalty shoot-out after extra time
Bold Team won the MLS Supporters' Shield
Italics Team won the U.S. Open Cup or the Canadian Championship
Both Team won the MLS Supporters' Shield AND U.S. Open Cup or the Canadian Championship
^ Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, seating at the 2020 MLS Cup final match was limited to 1,500 fans.

Records and statistics edit

MLS Cup titles edit

As of the 2023 season, a total of 32 teams have competed in MLS. Nineteen of these teams have appeared in a cup final, with fifteen of these teams having won the MLS Cup. In the table below, teams are ordered first by the number of appearances in an MLS Cup Final, then by the number of wins, and finally by alphabetical order. In the "Years of Appearance" column, bold years indicate a winning MLS Cup appearance.

Apps Years Club Wins Losses Win % Years of appearance (in MLS Cup Finals)
9 28 LA Galaxy 5 4 .556 1996, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2014
5 28 D.C. United 4 1 .800 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2004
4 28 Columbus Crew 3 1 .750 2008, 2015, 2020, 2023
4 18 Houston Dynamo FC 2 2 .500 2006, 2007, 2011, 2012
4 15 Seattle Sounders FC 2 2 .500 2016, 2017, 2019, 2020
3 28 Sporting Kansas City 2 1 .667 2000, 2004, 2013
2 26 San Jose Earthquakes 2 0 1.00 2001, 2003
3 26 Chicago Fire FC 1 2 .333 1998, 2000, 2003
3 17 Toronto FC 1 2 .333 2016, 2017, 2019
3 13 Portland Timbers 1 2 .333 2015, 2018, 2021
2 28 Colorado Rapids 1 1 .500 1997, 2010
2 19 Real Salt Lake 1 1 .500 2009, 2013
2 7 Los Angeles FC 1 1 .500 2022, 2023
1 7 Atlanta United FC 1 0 1.00 2018
1 9 New York City FC 1 0 1.00 2021
5 28 New England Revolution 0 5 .000 2002, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2014
1 28 New York Red Bulls 0 1 .000 2008
1 28 FC Dallas 0 1 .000 2010
1 14 Philadelphia Union 0 1 .000 2022

MLS Cup finalists records in CONCACAF competition edit

For most of the league's history, only U.S. teams were eligible to fill MLS based qualification slots for CONCACAF competitions. Canadian teams, even MLS Cup participants, had to qualify by winning the separate Canadian Championship; as of 2020, the only Canadian winner has been 2017 MLS Cup champion Toronto FC, who also won the Canadian Championship that year. However, starting with the 2024 CONCACAF Champions Cup, Canadian clubs could qualify via MLS slots.

Key
Champions Runners-up Semi-finals or Consolation match
Year MLS Cup Champions Result MLS Cup Runners-up Result
1997 D.C. United CON LA Galaxy F
1998 D.C. United F Colorado Rapids QR1
1999 Chicago Fire CON D.C. United CON
2000 D.C. United CON LA Galaxy F
2002[1] Kansas City Wizards SF did not qualify
San Jose Earthquakes QF Chicago Fire QF
2003 D.C. United SF Kansas City Wizards QF
2006 LA Galaxy QF New England Revolution QF
2007 Houston Dynamo SF did not qualify
2008 Houston Dynamo SF
2008–09 Houston Dynamo QF New England Revolution PR
2009–10 Columbus Crew QF New York Red Bulls PR
2010–11 Real Salt Lake F LA Galaxy PR
2011–12 Colorado Rapids GS FC Dallas GS
2012–13 LA Galaxy SF Houston Dynamo QF
2013–14 LA Galaxy QF Houston Dynamo GS
2014–15 Sporting Kansas City GS Real Salt Lake GS
2015–16 LA Galaxy QF did not qualify
2016–17 Portland Timbers GS
2018 Toronto FC[2] F Seattle Sounders FC[3] QF
2019 Atlanta United FC QF did not qualify
2020 Seattle Sounders FC R16
2021 Columbus Crew QF
2022 New York City FC SF
2023 Los Angeles FC F Philadelphia Union SF
2024 Columbus Crew TBD did not qualify
Notes
  1. ^
    1: The 2001 CONCACAF Champions' Cup was canceled, so both MLS Cup 2000 winner, Kansas City Wizards and the MLS Cup 2001 winner, San Jose Earthquakes qualified for the 2002 CONCACAF Champions Cup.
  2. ^
    2: Toronto FC qualified by winning the 2016 and 2017 editions of the Canadian Championship.
  3. ^
    3: Seattle Sounders FC qualified as the winners of MLS Cup 2016.

Trophies edit

 
 
The Alan I. Rothenberg Trophy, first version (1996–1998) and second version (1999–2007)

Culminating the championship, the winning team is presented with a trophy, known as the Philip F. Anschutz Trophy, named for the contributions and investment to American soccer and MLS by Philip Anschutz. Typically, the award presentation is held on a podium in the center of the field, where the league commissioner will award the team with the cup.

Before the actual award presentation, the finalists are awarded with silver medals with the league's logo imprinted on them. The champions are then presented with gold medals, before the trophy is handed to the winning team's captain.

In cup history, the MLS Cup champions have been awarded with three different trophies. For the first three MLS Cup finals, the winning team was awarded with the Alan I. Rothenberg Trophy, named for Rothenberg's contributions to American soccer. The Rothenberg Trophy was a dark gold trophy that had two handles around a soccer ball, with the league's logo imprinted on the plaque. In 1999, the Rothenberg Trophy was redesigned with a soccer ball placed on a beacon. In 2008, the trophy was redesigned again to its present state and renamed the Philip F. Anschutz Trophy.

Venues edit

 
Dignity Health Sports Park has hosted six MLS Cup finals.

In MLS Cup history, eight matches have been played in the Greater Los Angeles area (once at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, six times at Dignity Health Sports Park (formerly StubHub Center and Home Depot Center) in Carson, California, and once at Banc of California Stadium). Four markets are tied for having hosted the MLS Cup final the second-most number of times, with three matches each: the Greater Boston metro area (twice contested at Foxboro Stadium and once at Gillette Stadium, both in Foxborough, Massachusetts), Washington, D.C. (all played at RFK Stadium), Toronto (all held at BMO Field) and Columbus (all held at the Historic Crew Stadium).

Through the 2011 season every MLS Cup had been played at a predetermined site (i.e., announced before the playoff participants were known). On the day before the 2011 Cup, MLS announced that starting in 2012, Cup finals would be hosted by the participant with the highest point total during the regular season.[42] As is the case with awarding the Supporters' Shield, if the two finalists are tied on points, the team with the most wins hosts the final. For example, at MLS Cup 2022, Los Angeles FC and the Philadelphia Union both finished with 67 points, but LAFC had two more wins and thus hosted the final.

Before the 2012 Cup and the change to awarding the final to the participant with the higher point total, only three teams played the match on their home field. In the 1997 MLS Cup final, D.C. United won the match in their home stadium over Colorado Rapids,[43] RFK Stadium. The same occurrence applied in the 2002 MLS Cup final, where the Los Angeles Galaxy defeated the New England Revolution 1–0, in the Revolution's home stadium Gillette Stadium. As a result, the 1997 and 2002 MLS Cup finals drew the largest crowds in MLS Cup history prior to the 2012 change to the higher seed hosting.[44] In 2011, the LA Galaxy won their 2011 MLS Cup match in their home stadium (Home Depot Center), 1–0, over the Houston Dynamo. The Galaxy became the second team (and first since D.C. United in 1997) to win the Cup at home.

After MLS adopted its current criteria for awarding the MLS Cup match, the first three Cup finals were won by the hosts. The 2012 MLS Cup saw a rematch of the 2011 Cup at the same site, with the Galaxy successfully defending the title with a 3–1 win. In 2013, Sporting Kansas City became the third team to win the cup in their home stadium (Sporting Park) when they beat Real Salt Lake in the penalty kicks, which was the longest shootout in MLS Cup history.[45] Then, in 2014, the Galaxy defeated the New England Revolution 2–1 at the renamed StubHub Center in a match that was also notable as the final competitive match for U.S. national team all-time leading goal scorer Landon Donovan.[46] The pattern was broken in 2015, however, when the Portland Timbers defeated the Columbus Crew in the Crew's home stadium.

Through the 2011 season, MLS typically announced the championship location either prior to the start of its respective season, or even a few weeks into the campaign. For the 2011 championship, the league selected Home Depot Center in Carson, California, making it a fourth time the league's championship had been hosted at the venue.[47]

To date, the coldest MLS Cup final was the 2013 championship game played in Kansas City, Kansas at Sporting Kansas City's Sporting Park where the temperature was 20 °F (−7 °C).[48] The hottest MLS Cup final was the 2005 championship game played in Frisco, Texas at FC Dallas's Pizza Hut Park where the temperature was 75 °F (23 °C).[49][50]

The 2010 edition of the MLS Cup was the first final in league history to be played outside of the United States. The match was played in Canada at Toronto's BMO Field, the home ground of MLS club Toronto FC.

Stadiums edit

 
Pizza Hut Park, now Toyota Stadium, hosted the 2005 and 2006 MLS Cups.

Italics indicate a stadium that is now inactive.

  1. ^ Known as Home Depot Center prior to the 2013 season and StubHub Center in 2014.
  2. ^ Known as Columbus Crew Stadium prior to the 2015 season and MAPFRE Stadium from 2015–2020. The sponsorship contract with MAPFRE did not end until after MLS Cup 2020. The Crew moved its home matches to the new Lower.com Field early in the 2021 season.
  3. ^ Known as Qwest Field in 2009 and CenturyLink Field in 2019.
  4. ^ Known as Pizza Hut Park in 2005 and 2006.
  5. ^ Known as Sporting Park in 2013.
  6. ^ Known as Banc of California Stadium prior to the 2023 season.

Most Valuable Player edit

Following each championship, a player on the winning club is awarded with the title of being the Most Valuable Player (MVP). Usually, but not necessarily, the winner of the award is the player who scores the game-winning goal, or sets up the game-winning goal. This is the case of the 2007, 2008, 2010, 2017, 2019 and 2020 recipients, who all scored game-winning goals, or assisted multiple goals for the winning side.

Exceptions to this occurred in 2000, 2009, 2016, and 2021 where the Most Valuable Player award went to goalkeepers Tony Meola, Nick Rimando, Stefan Frei, and Sean Johnson, respectively. Meola and Frei, with the Kansas City Wizards and Seattle Sounders FC, both earned shutouts for their respective teams in the cup. Rimando and Johnson made two saves in a penalty shoot-out to give Real Salt Lake the title over the Los Angeles Galaxy and New York City FC the title over Portland Timbers, respectively.

List of MVP award recipients edit

Year Winner Position Club
1996   Marco Etcheverry Midfielder D.C. United
1997   Jaime Moreno Forward D.C. United
1998   Peter Nowak Midfielder Chicago Fire
1999   Ben Olsen Midfielder D.C. United
2000   Tony Meola Goalkeeper Kansas City Wizards
2001   Dwayne De Rosario Forward San Jose Earthquakes
2002   Carlos Ruiz Forward Los Angeles Galaxy
2003   Landon Donovan Forward San Jose Earthquakes
2004   Alecko Eskandarian Forward D.C. United
2005   Guillermo Ramírez Midfielder Los Angeles Galaxy
2006   Brian Ching Forward Houston Dynamo
2007   Dwayne De Rosario Midfielder Houston Dynamo
2008   Guillermo Barros Schelotto Midfielder Columbus Crew
2009   Nick Rimando Goalkeeper Real Salt Lake
2010   Conor Casey Forward Colorado Rapids
2011   Landon Donovan Forward Los Angeles Galaxy
2012   Omar Gonzalez Defender Los Angeles Galaxy
2013   Aurélien Collin Defender Sporting Kansas City
2014   Robbie Keane Forward Los Angeles Galaxy
2015   Diego Valeri Midfielder Portland Timbers
2016   Stefan Frei Goalkeeper Seattle Sounders FC
2017   Jozy Altidore Forward Toronto FC
2018   Josef Martínez Forward Atlanta United FC
2019   Víctor Rodríguez Midfielder Seattle Sounders FC
2020   Lucas Zelarayán Midfielder Columbus Crew
2021   Sean Johnson Goalkeeper New York City FC
2022   John McCarthy Goalkeeper Los Angeles FC
2023   Cucho Hernández Forward Columbus Crew

Players with multiple MLS Cup titles edit

At least 40 players have won two MLS Cups, mostly for teams with sequential or near-sequential titles (D.C. 1996–1999, San Jose 2001 and 2003, LA Galaxy 2002 and 2005, and 2011–2012, and Houston 2006–2007). Brian Mullan is the only player to have won the Cup with four different teams, while players that have won it with three different teams include: Craig Waibel, Alejandro Moreno, Ezra Hendrickson, and Darlington Nagbe.

MLS Cups Players (years won)
6 Landon Donovan (2001, 2003, 2005, 2011, 2012, 2014)
5 Jeff Agoos (1996, 1997, 1999, 2001, 2003)
Todd Dunivant (2003, 2005, 2011, 2012, 2014)
Brian Mullan (2002, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2010)
4 Jaime Moreno (1996, 1997, 1999, 2004)
Craig Waibel (2002, 2003, 2006, 2007)
Dwayne De Rosario (2001, 2003, 2006, 2007)
Eddie Robinson (2001, 2003, 2006, 2007)
Josh Saunders (2003, 2005, 2011, 2012)
Darlington Nagbe (2015, 2018, 2020, 2023)
3 Richard Mulrooney (2001, 2003, 2007)
Marco Etcheverry (1996, 1997, 1999)
Brian Kamler (1996, 1997, 1999)
John Maessner (1996, 1997, 1999)
Clint Peay (1996, 1997, 1999)
Eddie Pope (1996, 1997, 1999)
Richie Williams (1996, 1997, 1999)
Chris Albright (1999, 2002, 2005)
Brian Ching (2003, 2006, 2007)
Jesse Marsch (1996, 1997, 1998)
Alejandro Moreno (2002, 2006, 2008)
Ezra Hendrickson (2002, 2004, 2008)
Pat Onstad (2003, 2006, 2007)
Chad Marshall (2008, 2016, 2019)
Juninho (2011, 2012, 2014)
Omar Gonzalez (2011, 2012, 2014)
Robbie Keane (2011, 2012, 2014)
A. J. DeLaGarza (2011, 2012, 2014)
Leonardo (2011, 2012, 2014)
Hector Jiménez (2011, 2012, 2020)

See also edit

Footnotes edit

A. ^ Until 2003, MLS Cup utilized "sudden death" or "golden goal" overtime, i.e. the match ended if a goal were scored at any point in overtime. Beginning in 2004, a 30:00 overtime is played in full; if the match is still tied, it is decided by a Penalty Kick shootout.[51]
B. ^ Sellout crowd
C. ^ Although Real Salt Lake and Colorado Rapids are Western Conference clubs, they qualified to the MLS Cup final through the Eastern Conference bracket, and vice versa for the New York Red Bulls

Notes and references edit

General

  • Dure, Beau (May 31, 2010). Long-Range Goals: The Success Story of Major League Soccer. Potomac Books. ISBN 978-1-59797-509-4.

References

  1. ^ Staff, SI com. "CONCACAF resolves qualifying problem for future CCL". SI.com. Retrieved December 10, 2018.
  2. ^ a b MLS Soccer Staff (October 21, 2018). "2019 CONCACAF Champions League qualifying process clarified". Retrieved December 10, 2018.
  3. ^ Mainka, Jurgen (October 28, 2008). "Breakfast at Tiffany's: New MLS Cup Trophy Unveiled". Red Bulls Reader. Red Bull New York. Retrieved March 28, 2011.
  4. ^ Rushin, Steve (September 16, 1996). "A Real Kick Major League Soccer - Yes, Soccer - has Put Fans in the Stands and U.S. Stars on the Field". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved December 14, 2020.
  5. ^ "Six D.C. United legends named to Major League Soccer's 'The Greatest 25'". NBC Sports. December 11, 2020. Retrieved December 14, 2020.
  6. ^ "D.C. United wins first cup in 1996". Seattle Times. October 20, 1996. Retrieved November 16, 2009.
  7. ^ Nwulu, Mac (April 3, 2020). "ESPN to Celebrate 25 Years of Major League Soccer with Eight-Hour Programming Marathon on Monday". ESPN Press Room. Retrieved December 14, 2020.
  8. ^ "The full story of the former DC United star Eddie Pope's game-winning goal in the 1996 MLS Cup". MLSSoccer.com. December 12, 2020. Retrieved December 14, 2020.
  9. ^ a b Romero, José Miguel (November 17, 2009). . The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on November 25, 2009. Retrieved May 4, 2011.
  10. ^ Straus, Brian. . AOL. Archived from the original on October 6, 2012. Retrieved May 4, 2011.
  11. ^ [1] February 20, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Londono, Taurus (March 16, 2011). . Yahoo! news. Archived from the original on August 4, 2020. Retrieved May 12, 2011.
  13. ^ a b c d e Morrissey, mo (November 18, 2007). "Houston Dynamo: 2007 MLS Cup Champions". Associatedcontent.com. Retrieved May 12, 2011.[permanent dead link]
  14. ^ . Major League Soccer. December 6, 2015. Archived from the original on July 1, 2021. Retrieved November 15, 2016.
  15. ^ "Toronto beats Seattle to win MLS Cup". BBC Sport. December 9, 2017. Retrieved December 9, 2017.
  16. ^ Roberson, Doug (December 8, 2018). "Atlanta United sets MLS Cup attendance record". Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  17. ^ Goff, Steven (December 8, 2018). "Atlanta United captures MLS Cup, beats Portland Timbers, 2-0". The Washington Post. Retrieved December 15, 2018.
  18. ^ Denman, Taylor (December 10, 2018). "Atlanta United wins over the city and takes the MLS Cup in 2018". Gwinnett Daily Post. Retrieved December 15, 2018.
  19. ^ "2019 MLS Cup breaks Seattle Sounders all-time attendance record | MLSsoccer.com".
  20. ^ "Recap: Seattle Sounders FC vs. Toronto FC 11/10/2019 | Matchcenter".
  21. ^ Das, Andrew (December 12, 2020). "Columbus Wins M.L.S. Cup, the Final Stop on a Journey to Stay Put". The New York Times. Retrieved September 5, 2021.
  22. ^ Hipes, Patrick (August 28, 2019). "Major League Soccer's MLS Cup To Air This Year On ABC". Deadline. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  23. ^ mlssoccer. "2019 MLS Cup to Air live on ABC and Univision | MLSSoccer.com". mlssoccer. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  24. ^ mlssoccer. "Thanksgiving Day Match on FOX and Four ABC Broadcasts Highlight MLS Postseason Schedule | MLSSoccer.com". mlssoccer. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  25. ^ Fallas, Bernardo (November 17, 2007). "MLS strives to find place on U.S. sports landscape". Houston Chronicle. p. 1. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
  26. ^ "Angles abound for grand MLS Cup". Sports Illustrated. November 21, 2008. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
  27. ^ Jones, Grahame L. (November 22, 2009). "David Beckham's injury could add twist to MLS final". Los Angeles Times. p. C3. Retrieved November 5, 2018.
  28. ^ MLS Cup viewers on UniMas surpass those on ESPN - Soccer America, December 10, 2013
  29. ^ Tannenwald, Johnathan (December 13, 2015). "MLS, U.S. Soccer officially announce new TV deal with ESPN, Fox, Univision". Philly.com. Retrieved November 30, 2016.
  30. ^ mlssoccer. "MLS on linear TV: FOX Sports, TelevisaUnivision, TSN & RDS reach multi-year deals | MLSSoccer.com". mlssoccer. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  31. ^ Belmont, Steven Boero (December 14, 2022). "MLS Announces Multi-Year Linear TV Deal For Select Matches". The Sports Credential. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  32. ^ [2] October 28, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  33. ^ a b c d e f g mlssoccer. "MLS reveals expanded playoffs structure for 2011 | MLSSoccer.com". mlssoccer. Retrieved October 17, 2022.
  34. ^ mlssoccer. "Big changes for MLS Cup Playoffs format in 2012 | MLSSoccer.com". mlssoccer. Retrieved February 27, 2023.
  35. ^ mlssoccer. "Major League Soccer unveils 2015 schedule, with Decision Day finale and expanded playoff format | MLSSoccer.com". mlssoccer. Retrieved February 27, 2023.
  36. ^ Straus, Brian (November 29, 2014). "MLS to expand playoff field to 12 in 2015, will add extra knockout games". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved February 27, 2023.
  37. ^ "MLS announces new playoff format for 2019 season". December 17, 2018.
  38. ^ "MLS overhauls playoff format, alters league schedule".
  39. ^ mlssoccer. "How the 2020 Audi MLS Cup Playoffs will work: Qualifying and competition format | MLSSoccer.com". mlssoccer. Retrieved February 27, 2023.
  40. ^ "Major League Soccer Announces Audi 2023 MLS Cup Playoffs Format and Schedule" (Press release). Major League Soccer. February 21, 2023. Retrieved February 21, 2023.
  41. ^ Tannenwald, Jonathan. "MLS changes its playoff format again, now guaranteeing home games for more teams". www.inquirer.com. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  42. ^ Freedman, Jonah (November 20, 2011). "Big changes for MLS Cup Playoffs format in 2012". MLSSoccer.com. Retrieved November 28, 2011.
  43. ^ "1997 Season Statistics". MLS. MLSSoccer.com. Retrieved May 7, 2011.
  44. ^ . MLS. MLSSoccer.com. Archived from the original on October 3, 2020. Retrieved May 7, 2011.
  45. ^ . MLSsoccer.com. Major League Soccer. December 7, 2013. Archived from the original on December 9, 2013. Retrieved December 7, 2013.
  46. ^ "LA Galaxy 2, New England Revolution 1: MLS Cup Final Match Recap". Major League Soccer. December 7, 2014. Retrieved October 26, 2015.
  47. ^ "Home Depot Center selected as MLS Cup 2011 host". MLSSoccer.com. May 9, 2011. Retrieved May 11, 2011.
  48. ^ Kaplan, Jonathan (December 8, 2013). "Recap: MLS Cup champions Sporting KC prevail in 10-round penalty shootout after 1-1 draw". Sportingkc.com. Sporting Kansas City. Retrieved December 8, 2013.
  49. ^ . The New England Revolution Archive. The New England Revolution. November 13, 2005. Archived from the original on December 12, 2013. Retrieved July 19, 2012.
  50. ^ Litterer, Dave (April 10, 2010). . The American Soccer Archives. The American Soccer Archives. Archived from the original on November 5, 2015. Retrieved May 7, 2011.
  51. ^ Litterer, Dave (June 19, 2008). . The American Soccer. Sover.net. Archived from the original on April 19, 2014. Retrieved October 9, 2011.

External links edit

  • Official website  

this, article, about, championship, tournament, playoffs, trophy, philip, anschutz, trophy, annual, championship, game, major, league, soccer, culmination, playoffs, game, held, november, december, pits, winner, eastern, conference, final, against, winner, wes. This article is about the championship For the tournament see MLS Cup Playoffs For the trophy see Philip F Anschutz Trophy The MLS Cup is the annual championship game of Major League Soccer MLS and the culmination of the MLS Cup Playoffs The game is held in November or December and pits the winner of the Eastern Conference Final against the winner of the Western Conference Final The MLS Cup winner is awarded the title of league champion MLS CupFounded1996RegionMajor League Soccer CONCACAF Current championsColumbus Crew 3rd title Most successful team s LA Galaxy 5 titles Television broadcastersUnited States MLS Season PassFox Fox DeportesCanada TSN RDSInternational BroadcastersWebsitemlssoccer comMLS Cup 2023MLS uses a playoff tournament following the regular season to determine its annual league champion a method common to every other major North American sports league This format differs from most football leagues around the world which consider the club with the most points at the end of the season to be the champion MLS honors that achievement with the Supporters Shield A U S based team that wins the MLS Cup is awarded one of the country s four berths in the following season s CONCACAF Champions League 1 2 The three Canadian teams of MLS can only qualify for the Champions League through the Canadian Championship if any of them should win the MLS Cup the Champions League berth tied to game is passed on to the highest placed U S based team in the overall regular season table that did not already qualify 2 The inaugural MLS Cup was held on October 20 1996 in which D C United defeated the LA Galaxy The Galaxy are the most successful team in MLS Cup history winning a record fifth title in 2014 Three trophy designs have been used for the MLS Cup the Alan I Rothenberg Trophy from 1996 through 1998 a redesigned Alan I Rothenberg Trophy from 1999 through 2007 and the Philip F Anschutz Trophy since 2008 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 D C United dynasty 1 2 Rise of the California Clasico 1 3 Format changes 1 4 Scudetto era 1 5 Buffalo Bills of MLS 1 6 Underdogs winning the cup 1 7 LA Galaxy dynasty 1 8 Expansion teams from Cascadia Canada and Atlanta 2 Broadcasting 2 1 United States 2 2 Canada 3 Format 4 Champions 4 1 Results 5 Records and statistics 5 1 MLS Cup titles 5 2 MLS Cup finalists records in CONCACAF competition 6 Trophies 7 Venues 7 1 Stadiums 8 Most Valuable Player 8 1 List of MVP award recipients 9 Players with multiple MLS Cup titles 10 See also 11 Footnotes 12 Notes and references 13 External linksHistory editD C United dynasty edit The MLS Cup s roots trace back to the foundation of Major League Soccer when the league decided to hold a championship format similar to its contemporary North American sports leagues 4 The first few editions of the game were dominated by D C United who appeared in the first four MLS Cup finals winning three 5 The inaugural MLS Cup in 1996 featured D C United and LA Galaxy 6 7 The Galaxy went ahead 2 0 early in the second half but their lead was relinquished towards the end of the match when Tony Sanneh pulled one back in the 72nd minute Nine minutes later Shawn Medved tied the match at two resulting in overtime between the two sides Four minutes into overtime Eddie Pope gave United the golden goal victory 8 In 1997 the second league cup final was contested at RFK Stadium where United won back to back titles a feat that would not be accomplished for another decade when the Houston Dynamo won the 2006 and 2007 finals The game ended 2 1 in United s favor over the Colorado Rapids who would not win a championship until 2010 Jaime Moreno was declared Man of the Match for his goal in the 37th minute of play This season was also the first time in league history any MLS team won the regular season Supporters Shield and postseason title in the same season D C United s run ended the third year when they made a third run to the MLS Cup finals only to lose to the expansion side Chicago Fire by 2 0 However the following year United repeated their double of winning both the Supporters Shield and MLS Cup the same season This time it was a 2 0 win over the Galaxy in the 1999 MLS Cup final Rise of the California Clasico edit For the first time since 1997 the 2000 MLS Cup final saw a new club reach the finals along with the Fire This time the Kansas City Wizards now known as Sporting Kansas City won their first MLS Cup with a 1 0 victory over the Fire nbsp Landon Donovan of San Jose defending against Chicago s Carlos Bocanegra in the 2003 MLS Cup From 2001 through 2005 the MLS Cup finals saw a rising of the California Clasico when intrastate rivals L A Galaxy and the San Jose Earthquakes clashed in the 2001 final The match also saw the rise of U S national Landon Donovan who won a Newcomer of the Year award and tallied the equalizer in the Earthquakes 2 1 championship victory over the Galaxy With the largest crowd in MLS Cup history at hand the New England Revolution took on the Galaxy in the 2002 finals For the match over 61 000 fans were in attendance at Gillette Stadium to witness the final In the second period of sudden death overtime the Galaxy nabbed their first MLS Cup title and sparked the start of a string of MLS Cup losses for the Revolution The 2003 final saw the league leaders for that season go head to head Two clubs that had MLS Cup experience the Fire and Earthquakes played for the final that year The two clubs had successful regular season campaigns with the Fire winning their first Supporters Shield and the Earthquakes being the Western Conference regular season and post season champions as well as having the second best overall regular season record In a hotly contested match the Earthquakes won with their second MLS Cup title with a 4 2 score making it the highest scoring MLS Cup final in league history six goals After a four year absence United made their fifth trip to the MLS Cup final playing against the Wizards for MLS Cup 2004 The match had four goals scored in the first 25 minutes with United rallying for a 3 1 lead Midway through the second half United had relinquished a penalty kick Josh Wolff scored for Kansas City bringing the game within a goal D C United was able to retain the lead by winning their fourth MLS Cup title by a score of 3 2 For the 2005 season the Earthquakes as the Supporters Shield winners fell to the Galaxy in the Playoffs The Galaxy went on to win the MLS Cup matching the Earthquakes at two Format changes edit Until 2005 the MLS Cup championship games had been dominated by clubs that had either won or had come close to winning the Supporters Shield In the 2005 MLS Cup championship the match was won by the Los Angeles Galaxy which won the league title while having a 9th place overall record 9 The Wizards had a better record but did not qualify for the playoffs because they finished 5th in the Eastern Conference in spite of an 8th place overall record 9 The result prompted MLS to create new wild cards that were used starting in 2006 where a certain number of clubs per conference could qualify and the next best overall teams regardless of conference would also qualify That prompted debates about the league switching to a single table and a balanced schedule The single table has yet been instituted but in 2010 the league instituted a balanced schedule 10 During the 2012 season the league resumed an unbalanced schedule Scudetto era edit nbsp Second MLS Scudetto 2009 2012 At the start of the 2006 season MLS created their version of the scudetto Italian for small shield a symbol worn on the jersey by the team who won the previous season s Serie A the top Italian league The MLS scudetto was originally a curved triangular badge featuring a backdrop of the American flag behind a replica of the Alan I Rothenberg MLS Cup trophy First worn by Los Angeles Galaxy in 2006 following their 2005 MLS Cup title 11 the Houston Dynamo wore the same triangular scudettos in 2007 and 2008 during their dual cup run It was redesigned after the 2008 season after the change to the MLS Cup trophy It is now an oval shaped black badge with the Philip F Anschutz Trophy in the middle The MLS scudetto is worn by the winning team the season following the victory It is only during the subsequent season two years after winning the championship that the team adds a star a common soccer signifier of titles won above the team logo The team can display the star on other items beside their jersey in the year after winning the Cup but only if the scudetto is not shown The Columbus Crew was the first team to wear the redesigned scudetto Real Salt Lake wore the scudetto in 2010 after winning their first MLS cup in 2009 A year after the Colorado Rapids also wore it after their cup run in 2010 for the 2011 season Finally the Los Angeles Galaxy wore the scudetto after winning the MLS Cup in 2011 ironically it was the last team to do so After the 2012 season MLS decided not to use the scudetto for upcoming season and instead the defending MLS Cup champions would have a gold star above one or more silver stars indication the team s MLS Cup wins followed by an additional silver star added to the lined stars the following season The Los Angeles Galaxy were the first to receive the gold star above the team s three silver stars for the 2013 season Buffalo Bills of MLS edit While the Galaxy won its second MLS Cup trophy and the Houston Dynamo earned consecutive cups the New England Revolution went on a run of making three consecutive MLS Cup finals losing all of them Two of their three losses were in extra time while the other was lost on penalty kicks The infamy gave the club the title of being the Buffalo Bills an NFL American football team of MLS 12 This was in reference to the Buffalo Bills Super Bowl games in the early 1990s in which they lost in four consecutive appearances In the 2005 final the Revolution lost to the Los Angeles Galaxy a rematch of 2002 in the final In a match held at Pizza Hut Park now Toyota Stadium in Frisco Texas the Galaxy defeated the Revolution by a score of 1 0 thanks to a 105th minute overtime goal from Galaxy midfielder and Guatemalan international Guillermo Ramirez Ramirez s goal sealed the Galaxy s second MLS Cup title and left the Revs searching once again In 2006 the championship was once again played in Frisco at Pizza Hut Park This time the Revolution took on the Houston Dynamo Both were coming off a successful season in which they fell short of winning the Supporters Shield A sellout crowd of 22 427 attended the match Revolution forward Taylor Twellman scored an overtime goal in the 113th minute to give the Revolution the 1 0 lead However Dynamo captain and forward Brian Ching immediately tied the score following the Revolution s goal The match went to penalties in which the Dynamo won 4 3 This left the Revolution for a second consecutive year searching for league glory It was also the first time in league history that a club made the MLS Cup final and lost consecutively 13 In the 2007 final the Revolution and Dynamo played each other once again for the 2007 cup Played in Washington D C at RFK Stadium a crowd just shy of 40 000 witnessed the championship 13 The announced crowd of 39 859 made it the largest MLS Cup crowd since 2002 citation needed The Revolution had a successful season earning its first U S Open Cup title The Revolution wanted its first MLS Cup crown and wanted to win its first Double in club history Houston finishing just shy once again to D C United of winning the MLS Supporters Shield was determined to finish its second season with some hardware and to defend its MLS Cup title 13 The match went in the Revolution s favor early on as the Revolution s captain Twellman netted in the 20th minute to give New England a 1 0 lead However midway through the second half the Dynamo retaliated Dynamo striker Joseph Ngwenya leveled things at one apiece in the 61st minute and MLS Cup Man of the Match Dwayne De Rosario gave the Dynamo a 2 1 lead in the 74th 13 The goal proved to be the winning goal as the Dynamo earned the first back to back MLS Cup titles since D C United in 1996 and 1997 13 Underdogs winning the cup edit Early in the 2008 Major League Soccer season the league announced that the championship would be returning to The Home Depot Center now known as Dignity Health Sports Park Throughout the regular season the league was dominated by the Columbus Crew who finished the season with 57 points and secured the Supporters Shield title with three matches remaining before the 2008 MLS Cup Playoffs Traditionally the Shield winners only rarely made it to the league championship in spite of usually being the heavy favorites going into the playoffs However for the first time in eight years a regular season champion made it to the MLS Cup final The Sigi Schmid led club made their first run to the championship along with their opponents the New York Red Bulls For the Crew being the Shield winners their run to the final was a bit expected The Red Bulls making the final was seen as a large surprise possibly even a fluke The Red Bulls did not qualify for the playoffs until the last day of the season where they were the weakest team in terms of regular season record to qualify for the playoffs The match ended up being dominated by the Crew as Columbus defeated New York with ease 3 1 The point gap between the two clubs was the largest in history and the scoreline between the two clubs made it tied for the largest margin of victory in MLS Cup history New York s run to the finals was further emphasized as a fluke when the club had the worst record in 2009 The following championship saw two intra conference clubs meet in the final for the second consecutive year this time at Seattle s Qwest Field later CenturyLink Field and now Lumen Field The Western Conference regular season and postseason champions Los Angeles Galaxy took on Real Salt Lake who finished fifth in the West Although the Sounders FC management had originally planned on capping the seats available in Qwest Field to 35 700 surging demand led to the release of an additional 10 000 seats expanding the total capacity to roughly 45 700 The announced crowd was 46 011 The crowd size was the first championship crowd since 2002 to draw over 45 000 spectators Televised on ESPN it was the first time that the MLS championship match was televised on the cable network the first thirteen were carried on ABC In the 41st minute Galaxy striker Mike Magee scored only for Salt Lake s Robbie Findley to make the tying goal in the 61st The stalemate was not broken in regulation nor overtime requiring penalty kicks to decide the match Thanks to a strike from Salt Lake s Robbie Russell Salt Lake won their first major trophy By winning the championship they gained entry into the 2010 11 CONCACAF Champions League There they made it to the final only to lose to Monterrey of Mexico At the 2010 season s end six teams from the Western Conference qualified for the playoffs whereas only two clubs from the East qualified making it the largest disparity between the two conferences in league history The league s seeding at the time awarded conference winners earned the top seeds the two weakest Western Conference teams San Jose Earthquakes and Colorado Rapids were seeded against the Eastern Conference champion New York Red Bulls and runner up Columbus Crew respectively Some cited this as an unfair advantage for the Rapids and Earthquakes as both teams made the semi finals In the end the Rapids played FC Dallas for MLS Cup 2010 winning 2 1 in overtime LA Galaxy dynasty edit nbsp LA Galaxy captain Robbie Keane was the 2014 MLS Cup MVP Between the 2011 and 2014 MLS Cups the LA Galaxy appeared in three MLS Cup finals having the most success in MLS Cup in a short period of time since United s late 1990s dynasty The only final that the Galaxy did not win came in 2013 where they lost in the 2013 Western Conference semi finals to eventual runner up Real Salt Lake During that time the Galaxy became the first MLS franchise to win five MLS Cups when they won MLS Cup 2014 These teams contained several high profile players including Landon Donovan Robbie Keane Gyasi Zardes David Beckham and Omar Gonzalez Some claim that the Galaxy s dynasty began in 2009 when they reached the playoffs for the first time since 2005 and marched to the finals only to lose on penalties to Real Salt Lake In 2010 and again in 2011 the Galaxy won consecutive Supporters Shield and completed the league double winning both the Shield and MLS Cup in 2011 This was the first time this had been accomplished since the Columbus Crew achieved it in 2008 In the 2011 MLS Cup final the Galaxy defeated the Houston Dynamo 1 0 off a 72nd minute Donovan goal The goal was scored off a Galaxy counter where Beckham fed a through ball to Donovan who slotted it past Hall The 2012 final featured both the Galaxy and Dynamo again making it the first since 2007 that an MLS Cup final was a rematch of the previous final Again the Galaxy won the final this time coming from behind to defeat the Dynamo by a 3 1 scoreline The match was Beckham s final MLS match During the 2013 season the Galaxy s chance to three peat was thwarted by Real Salt Lake Salt Lake defeated the Galaxy 2 1 on aggregate to advance to the MLS Cup final where they eventually lost to Sporting Kansas City The following season the Galaxy reached the MLS Cup final again playing the New England Revolution making it a rematch of MLS Cup 2002 and MLS Cup 2005 In extra time a Robbie Keane goal propelled the Galaxy to their fifth MLS match a victory in the 2014 MLS Cup Expansion teams from Cascadia Canada and Atlanta edit nbsp Osvaldo Alonso of Seattle Sounders FC lifting the MLS Cup trophy in December 2016The Portland Timbers won the 2015 MLS Cup defeating the Columbus Crew 2 1 Portland s Diego Valeri scored the fastest goal in MLS Cup history at 27 seconds when Crew goalkeeper Steve Clark made a fundamental error after he miscontrolled his defender s back pass while Valeri had advanced towards the ball to strike at the opportunity 14 The Seattle Sounders FC faced Toronto FC in the 2016 MLS Cup which was played at BMO Field in Toronto on the evening of December 10 2016 The temperature at the start of the match was 21 F 6 C 10 F 12 C when adjusted for wind chill with strong winds coming off Lake Ontario The field was watered shortly before the match and resultant field was described as icy by players Seattle Sounders FC defeated Toronto FC 5 4 in a penalty shoot out after a scoreless match of 90 minutes regular time and 30 minutes overtime The Sounders did not register a single shot on goal becoming the first club to do so in an MLS Cup final The Sounders despite a very poor start and mid season managerial change became the second team from the Pacific Northwest to win the cup after Portland in 2015 In the 2017 MLS Cup Toronto FC and Seattle faced off in a rematch of the previous edition also at BMO Field Toronto FC won the match 2 0 and became the first Canadian team to win the MLS Cup and the first MLS team to complete a domestic treble after winning the Canadian Championship and Supporters Shield earlier in the year 15 nbsp Pyrotechnics display during Atlanta United s trophy ceremony following the 2018 MLS Cup finalAtlanta United FC in their second season as an expansion team won the 2018 edition of the MLS Cup by defeating the Portland Timbers 2 0 The match hosted in Atlanta at Mercedes Benz Stadium was attended by 73 019 spectators and broke the MLS Cup attendance record set in 2002 by New England 16 The club became the second youngest to win an MLS Cup behind the 1998 Chicago Fire and brought the first professional sports championship for the city of Atlanta since 1995 17 18 In the 2019 MLS Cup Toronto FC and Seattle Sounders FC both overcame underdog status in their respective conferences to contest a third final in four years this time playing at Seattle s home ground Seattle Sounders FC duly won their second MLS Cup taking the final match 3 1 at CenturyLink Field in front of a Sounders record attendance of 69 274 19 20 The 2020 edition which marked the end of a season dramatically affected by the COVID 19 pandemic saw the Sounders return to the MLS Cup Final this time facing Columbus Crew SC at the latter s home of Mapfre Stadium in Columbus Ohio The Crew won 3 0 in front of a crowd restricted to 1 500 in the stadium s last playoff game 21 Broadcasting editUnited States edit The MLS Cup Final was aired on English language networks ABC from 1996 to 2008 and ESPN from 2009 to 2014 ESPN ABC and Fox alternate as MLS Cup Final broadcasters since 2015 with the MLS Cup 2019 22 23 on ABC their first MLS match since 2008 ABC also air four playoff matches including the MLS Cup 2021 24 The MLS Cup has also been aired on Spanish language networks TeleFutura in 2007 and 2008 25 26 Galavision from 2009 to 2011 27 28 TeleFutura UniMas from 2012 to 2018 and Univision in 2019 ABC previously had Spanish announcers under secondary audio program From 2015 to 2022 all MLS Cup playoff games are televised on ESPN Fox Sports or Univision networks UniMas will air two exclusive playoff matches while ESPN and its affiliated networks will split the rest of the contests including MLS Cup with Fox Sports Univision UniMas and TUDN also airs the MLS Cup playoffs in Spanish 29 With the new Apple TV deal beginning 2023 FOX Sports will be the only linear broadcaster of MLS and will carry select MLS Cup playoff matches and every MLS Cup with no alternate broadcaster starting 2023 30 31 Canada edit MLS Cup coverage in Canada started in 2007 with the addition of Toronto FC to MLS The MLS Cup bounced around different networks in the first three seasons of the league s presence in Canada what was then the bold network aired the 2007 Cup Final with CBC airing the next year s Final and GolTV Canada airing the Final the year after that Since 2010 TSN has aired the MLS Cup Final on its networks this includes Toronto FC s victory in 2017 In French RDS has exclusive rights to MLS and thus the MLS Cup Format editSee also MLS Cup Playoffs Over the history of the MLS Cup Playoffs numerous formats have been used From 1996 to 1999 and 2003 to 2006 the top four teams per conference qualified for the playoffs In 2000 and 2001 the three division winners plus the next five teams with the next best records made the playoffs In 2002 the top 8 teams qualified for the playoffs regardless of conference In 2007 the top two teams per conference plus the next four teams with the next most points qualified At the end of the 2008 season the top three teams of each conference made the playoffs in addition the clubs with the next two highest point totals regardless of conference were added to the playoffs In the first round of this knockout tournament aggregate goals over two matches determined the winners the Conference Championships were one match each with the winner of each conference advancing to the MLS Cup In all rounds the tie breaking method was two 15 minute periods of overtime followed by penalty kicks if necessary The away goals rule was not used At the end of the 2009 and 2010 seasons the top two teams of each conference made the playoffs in addition the clubs with the next four highest point totals regardless of conference were added to the playoffs In the first round of this knockout tournament aggregate total goals over two matches determined the winners the Conference Championships were one match each with the winner of each conference advancing to the MLS Cup In all rounds the tie breaking method was two 15 minute periods of extra time followed by penalty kicks if necessary The away goals rule was not used 32 At the 2011 season s end the top three clubs in each of the league s two conferences earned the six automatic spots in the Conference Semifinals 33 The wild card entrants seeded seventh through tenth entered based upon their overall position in the overall league standings 33 The new format was assembled so that the lowest seed to qualify out of the wild card rounds will play against the Supporters Shield winner 33 The highest wild card seed remaining will play the conference champion that did not win the Shield 33 The play in games and Conference Finals were single matches with the higher seeded club hosting 33 The conference semi finals were a two leg aggregate series 33 The MLS Cup was held at a predetermined venue 33 From 2012 to 2014 the playoff structure was further tweaked with the elimination of the wild card slots The ten playoff berths were awarded to the top five teams in each conference In each conference the No 4 seeded hosted the No 5 seed in a single match for a place in the conference semi finals against the best team in its conference The Conference Semifinals remained two legged while the finals changed from a single match to a two leg aggregate series Finally the MLS Cup was held at the home field of the finalist with the highest point total during the regular season The away goals rule was used but did not apply after extra time 34 From 2015 to 2018 the top six teams per conference qualified for the playoffs 12 total teams The first round involved each conference s No 3 seed hosting the No 6 seed and the No 4 hosting No 5 In the Conference Semifinals the top seed played the lowest remaining seed and the No 2 seed played the next lowest seed 35 36 In the 2019 2021 and 2022 seasons the top seven teams per conference qualified for the playoffs with only the best ranked team in each conference earning a first round bye Each round is still single elimination The playoff brackets were fixed as the league abolished re seeding 37 38 Due to the COVID 19 pandemic the top ten teams from the Eastern and top eight teams from the Western conference qualified for the playoffs in the 2020 season with single elimination remaining intact The top six Eastern teams earned byes to the first round while teams seeded 7 10 and competed in play in games The lowest ranked team to advance from the play in round advanced to play the conference s first placed team while the highest ranked remaining team from that round advanced to face the conference s runner up In the Western Conference the top eight teams competed in their first round with no byes 39 The playoffs will expand to nine teams per conference in 2023 with the re addition of a best of three series The eighth and ninth seeds play a wild card match with the winner advancing to face the best ranked team in their conference in Round One while teams ranked 2 7 face each other with the higher seed hosting The Conference Semifinals Conference Final and MLS Cup final remain single elimination matches hosted by the higher seeded team in late November and early December as before without re seeding 40 41 Champions editMain article List of MLS Cup finals The winner of Major League Soccer s MLS Cup the final match of the MLS Cup Playoffs determines that season s league champion The playoff tournament is organized by the league at the conclusion of the regular season in a format similar to other North American professional sports leagues The tournament is open to the top nine clubs of the Eastern and Western Conferences The first MLS Cup final was played on October 20 1996 To date the record for the most championships is held by the Los Angeles Galaxy with five cup titles The record for the most championships lost is held by the New England Revolution who lost the game five times during their history The championship has been won by the same team in two or more consecutive years on three occasions Results edit Season Date Champions Score Runners up Venue Attendance U S television1996 October 20 D C United 3 2 Los Angeles Galaxy Foxboro Stadium 34 643 ABC1997 October 26 D C United 2 1 Colorado Rapids RFK Memorial Stadium 57 4311998 October 25 Chicago Fire 2 0 D C United Rose Bowl 51 3501999 November 21 D C United 2 0 Los Angeles Galaxy Foxboro Stadium 44 9102000 October 15 Kansas City Wizards 1 0 Chicago Fire RFK Memorial Stadium 39 1592001 October 21 San Jose Earthquakes 2 1 Los Angeles Galaxy Crew Stadium 21 6262002 October 20 Los Angeles Galaxy 1 0 New England Revolution Gillette Stadium 61 3162003 November 23 San Jose Earthquakes 4 2 Chicago Fire Home Depot Center 27 0002004 November 14 D C United 3 2 Kansas City Wizards 25 7972005 November 13 Los Angeles Galaxy 1 0 New England Revolution Pizza Hut Park 21 1932006 November 12 Houston Dynamo 1 1 4 3 New England Revolution Pizza Hut Park 22 4272007 November 18 Houston Dynamo 2 1 New England Revolution RFK Memorial Stadium 39 8592008 November 23 Columbus Crew 3 1 New York Red Bulls Home Depot Center 27 0002009 November 22 Real Salt Lake 1 1 5 4 Los Angeles Galaxy Qwest Field 46 011 ESPN2010 November 21 Colorado Rapids 2 1 FC Dallas BMO Field 21 7002011 November 20 Los Angeles Galaxy 1 0 Houston Dynamo Home Depot Center 30 2812012 December 1 Los Angeles Galaxy 3 1 Houston Dynamo Home Depot Center 30 5102013 December 7 Sporting Kansas City 1 1 7 6 Real Salt Lake Sporting Park 21 6502014 December 7 Los Angeles Galaxy 2 1 New England Revolution StubHub Center 27 0002015 December 6 Portland Timbers 2 1 Columbus Crew Mapfre Stadium 21 7472016 December 10 Seattle Sounders FC 0 0 5 4 Toronto FC BMO Field 36 045 Fox2017 December 9 Toronto FC 2 0 Seattle Sounders FC BMO Field 30 584 ESPN2018 December 8 Atlanta United FC 2 0 Portland Timbers Mercedes Benz Stadium 73 019 Fox2019 November 10 Seattle Sounders FC 3 1 Toronto FC CenturyLink Field 69 274 ABC2020 December 12 Columbus Crew 3 0 Seattle Sounders FC Mapfre Stadium 1 500 Fox2021 December 11 New York City FC 1 1 4 2 Portland Timbers Providence Park 25 218 ABC2022 November 5 Los Angeles FC 3 3 3 0 Philadelphia Union Banc of California Stadium 22 384 Fox2023 December 9 Columbus Crew 2 1 Los Angeles FC Lower com Field 20 802Key Match went to extra time Match decided by a penalty shoot out after extra timeBold Team won the MLS Supporters ShieldItalics Team won the U S Open Cup or the Canadian ChampionshipBoth Team won the MLS Supporters Shield AND U S Open Cup or the Canadian Championship Due to the COVID 19 pandemic seating at the 2020 MLS Cup final match was limited to 1 500 fans Records and statistics editMLS Cup titles edit As of the 2023 season a total of 32 teams have competed in MLS Nineteen of these teams have appeared in a cup final with fifteen of these teams having won the MLS Cup In the table below teams are ordered first by the number of appearances in an MLS Cup Final then by the number of wins and finally by alphabetical order In the Years of Appearance column bold years indicate a winning MLS Cup appearance Apps Years Club Wins Losses Win Years of appearance in MLS Cup Finals 9 28 LA Galaxy 5 4 556 1996 1999 2001 2002 2005 2009 2011 2012 20145 28 D C United 4 1 800 1996 1997 1998 1999 20044 28 Columbus Crew 3 1 750 2008 2015 2020 20234 18 Houston Dynamo FC 2 2 500 2006 2007 2011 20124 15 Seattle Sounders FC 2 2 500 2016 2017 2019 20203 28 Sporting Kansas City 2 1 667 2000 2004 20132 26 San Jose Earthquakes 2 0 1 00 2001 20033 26 Chicago Fire FC 1 2 333 1998 2000 20033 17 Toronto FC 1 2 333 2016 2017 20193 13 Portland Timbers 1 2 333 2015 2018 20212 28 Colorado Rapids 1 1 500 1997 20102 19 Real Salt Lake 1 1 500 2009 20132 7 Los Angeles FC 1 1 500 2022 20231 7 Atlanta United FC 1 0 1 00 20181 9 New York City FC 1 0 1 00 20215 28 New England Revolution 0 5 000 2002 2005 2006 2007 20141 28 New York Red Bulls 0 1 000 20081 28 FC Dallas 0 1 000 20101 14 Philadelphia Union 0 1 000 2022MLS Cup finalists records in CONCACAF competition edit For most of the league s history only U S teams were eligible to fill MLS based qualification slots for CONCACAF competitions Canadian teams even MLS Cup participants had to qualify by winning the separate Canadian Championship as of 2020 update the only Canadian winner has been 2017 MLS Cup champion Toronto FC who also won the Canadian Championship that year However starting with the 2024 CONCACAF Champions Cup Canadian clubs could qualify via MLS slots KeyChampions Runners up Semi finals or Consolation matchQR1 Qualification First Round PR Preliminary round GS Group stage R16 Round of 16 QF Quarter finals SF Semi finals or Consolation match CON Consolation match F Final Year MLS Cup Champions Result MLS Cup Runners up Result1997 D C United CON LA Galaxy F1998 D C United F Colorado Rapids QR11999 Chicago Fire CON D C United CON2000 D C United CON LA Galaxy F2002 1 Kansas City Wizards SF did not qualifySan Jose Earthquakes QF Chicago Fire QF2003 D C United SF Kansas City Wizards QF2006 LA Galaxy QF New England Revolution QF2007 Houston Dynamo SF did not qualify2008 Houston Dynamo SF2008 09 Houston Dynamo QF New England Revolution PR2009 10 Columbus Crew QF New York Red Bulls PR2010 11 Real Salt Lake F LA Galaxy PR2011 12 Colorado Rapids GS FC Dallas GS2012 13 LA Galaxy SF Houston Dynamo QF2013 14 LA Galaxy QF Houston Dynamo GS2014 15 Sporting Kansas City GS Real Salt Lake GS2015 16 LA Galaxy QF did not qualify2016 17 Portland Timbers GS2018 Toronto FC 2 F Seattle Sounders FC 3 QF2019 Atlanta United FC QF did not qualify2020 Seattle Sounders FC R162021 Columbus Crew QF2022 New York City FC SF2023 Los Angeles FC F Philadelphia Union SF2024 Columbus Crew TBD did not qualifyNotes 1 The 2001 CONCACAF Champions Cup was canceled so both MLS Cup 2000 winner Kansas City Wizards and the MLS Cup 2001 winner San Jose Earthquakes qualified for the 2002 CONCACAF Champions Cup 2 Toronto FC qualified by winning the 2016 and 2017 editions of the Canadian Championship 3 Seattle Sounders FC qualified as the winners of MLS Cup 2016 Trophies editMain article Philip F Anschutz Trophy nbsp nbsp The Alan I Rothenberg Trophy first version 1996 1998 and second version 1999 2007 Culminating the championship the winning team is presented with a trophy known as the Philip F Anschutz Trophy named for the contributions and investment to American soccer and MLS by Philip Anschutz Typically the award presentation is held on a podium in the center of the field where the league commissioner will award the team with the cup Before the actual award presentation the finalists are awarded with silver medals with the league s logo imprinted on them The champions are then presented with gold medals before the trophy is handed to the winning team s captain In cup history the MLS Cup champions have been awarded with three different trophies For the first three MLS Cup finals the winning team was awarded with the Alan I Rothenberg Trophy named for Rothenberg s contributions to American soccer The Rothenberg Trophy was a dark gold trophy that had two handles around a soccer ball with the league s logo imprinted on the plaque In 1999 the Rothenberg Trophy was redesigned with a soccer ball placed on a beacon In 2008 the trophy was redesigned again to its present state and renamed the Philip F Anschutz Trophy Venues edit nbsp Dignity Health Sports Park has hosted six MLS Cup finals In MLS Cup history eight matches have been played in the Greater Los Angeles area once at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena California six times at Dignity Health Sports Park formerly StubHub Center and Home Depot Center in Carson California and once at Banc of California Stadium Four markets are tied for having hosted the MLS Cup final the second most number of times with three matches each the Greater Boston metro area twice contested at Foxboro Stadium and once at Gillette Stadium both in Foxborough Massachusetts Washington D C all played at RFK Stadium Toronto all held at BMO Field and Columbus all held at the Historic Crew Stadium Through the 2011 season every MLS Cup had been played at a predetermined site i e announced before the playoff participants were known On the day before the 2011 Cup MLS announced that starting in 2012 Cup finals would be hosted by the participant with the highest point total during the regular season 42 As is the case with awarding the Supporters Shield if the two finalists are tied on points the team with the most wins hosts the final For example at MLS Cup 2022 Los Angeles FC and the Philadelphia Union both finished with 67 points but LAFC had two more wins and thus hosted the final Before the 2012 Cup and the change to awarding the final to the participant with the higher point total only three teams played the match on their home field In the 1997 MLS Cup final D C United won the match in their home stadium over Colorado Rapids 43 RFK Stadium The same occurrence applied in the 2002 MLS Cup final where the Los Angeles Galaxy defeated the New England Revolution 1 0 in the Revolution s home stadium Gillette Stadium As a result the 1997 and 2002 MLS Cup finals drew the largest crowds in MLS Cup history prior to the 2012 change to the higher seed hosting 44 In 2011 the LA Galaxy won their 2011 MLS Cup match in their home stadium Home Depot Center 1 0 over the Houston Dynamo The Galaxy became the second team and first since D C United in 1997 to win the Cup at home After MLS adopted its current criteria for awarding the MLS Cup match the first three Cup finals were won by the hosts The 2012 MLS Cup saw a rematch of the 2011 Cup at the same site with the Galaxy successfully defending the title with a 3 1 win In 2013 Sporting Kansas City became the third team to win the cup in their home stadium Sporting Park when they beat Real Salt Lake in the penalty kicks which was the longest shootout in MLS Cup history 45 Then in 2014 the Galaxy defeated the New England Revolution 2 1 at the renamed StubHub Center in a match that was also notable as the final competitive match for U S national team all time leading goal scorer Landon Donovan 46 The pattern was broken in 2015 however when the Portland Timbers defeated the Columbus Crew in the Crew s home stadium Through the 2011 season MLS typically announced the championship location either prior to the start of its respective season or even a few weeks into the campaign For the 2011 championship the league selected Home Depot Center in Carson California making it a fourth time the league s championship had been hosted at the venue 47 To date the coldest MLS Cup final was the 2013 championship game played in Kansas City Kansas at Sporting Kansas City s Sporting Park where the temperature was 20 F 7 C 48 The hottest MLS Cup final was the 2005 championship game played in Frisco Texas at FC Dallas s Pizza Hut Park where the temperature was 75 F 23 C 49 50 The 2010 edition of the MLS Cup was the first final in league history to be played outside of the United States The match was played in Canada at Toronto s BMO Field the home ground of MLS club Toronto FC Stadiums edit nbsp Pizza Hut Park now Toyota Stadium hosted the 2005 and 2006 MLS Cups Name Location Hosted Years hostedDignity Health Sports Park a Carson California 6 2003 2004 2008 2011 2012 2014RFK Stadium Washington D C 3 1997 2000 2007BMO Field Toronto Ontario 3 2010 2016 2017Historic Crew Stadium b Columbus Ohio 3 2001 2015 2020Lumen Field c Seattle Washington 2 2009 2019Toyota Stadium d Frisco Texas 2 2005 2006Foxboro Stadium Foxborough Massachusetts 2 1996 1999Children s Mercy Park e Kansas City Kansas 1 2013Gillette Stadium Foxborough Massachusetts 1 2002Mercedes Benz Stadium Atlanta Georgia 1 2018Providence Park Portland Oregon 1 2021Rose Bowl Pasadena California 1 1998BMO Stadium f Los Angeles California 1 2022Lower com Field Columbus Ohio 1 2023Italics indicate a stadium that is now inactive Known as Home Depot Center prior to the 2013 season and StubHub Center in 2014 Known as Columbus Crew Stadium prior to the 2015 season and MAPFRE Stadium from 2015 2020 The sponsorship contract with MAPFRE did not end until after MLS Cup 2020 The Crew moved its home matches to the new Lower com Field early in the 2021 season Known as Qwest Field in 2009 and CenturyLink Field in 2019 Known as Pizza Hut Park in 2005 and 2006 Known as Sporting Park in 2013 Known as Banc of California Stadium prior to the 2023 season Most Valuable Player editFollowing each championship a player on the winning club is awarded with the title of being the Most Valuable Player MVP Usually but not necessarily the winner of the award is the player who scores the game winning goal or sets up the game winning goal This is the case of the 2007 2008 2010 2017 2019 and 2020 recipients who all scored game winning goals or assisted multiple goals for the winning side Exceptions to this occurred in 2000 2009 2016 and 2021 where the Most Valuable Player award went to goalkeepers Tony Meola Nick Rimando Stefan Frei and Sean Johnson respectively Meola and Frei with the Kansas City Wizards and Seattle Sounders FC both earned shutouts for their respective teams in the cup Rimando and Johnson made two saves in a penalty shoot out to give Real Salt Lake the title over the Los Angeles Galaxy and New York City FC the title over Portland Timbers respectively List of MVP award recipients edit Year Winner Position Club1996 nbsp Marco Etcheverry Midfielder D C United1997 nbsp Jaime Moreno Forward D C United1998 nbsp Peter Nowak Midfielder Chicago Fire1999 nbsp Ben Olsen Midfielder D C United2000 nbsp Tony Meola Goalkeeper Kansas City Wizards2001 nbsp Dwayne De Rosario Forward San Jose Earthquakes2002 nbsp Carlos Ruiz Forward Los Angeles Galaxy2003 nbsp Landon Donovan Forward San Jose Earthquakes2004 nbsp Alecko Eskandarian Forward D C United2005 nbsp Guillermo Ramirez Midfielder Los Angeles Galaxy2006 nbsp Brian Ching Forward Houston Dynamo2007 nbsp Dwayne De Rosario Midfielder Houston Dynamo2008 nbsp Guillermo Barros Schelotto Midfielder Columbus Crew2009 nbsp Nick Rimando Goalkeeper Real Salt Lake2010 nbsp Conor Casey Forward Colorado Rapids2011 nbsp Landon Donovan Forward Los Angeles Galaxy2012 nbsp Omar Gonzalez Defender Los Angeles Galaxy2013 nbsp Aurelien Collin Defender Sporting Kansas City2014 nbsp Robbie Keane Forward Los Angeles Galaxy2015 nbsp Diego Valeri Midfielder Portland Timbers2016 nbsp Stefan Frei Goalkeeper Seattle Sounders FC2017 nbsp Jozy Altidore Forward Toronto FC2018 nbsp Josef Martinez Forward Atlanta United FC2019 nbsp Victor Rodriguez Midfielder Seattle Sounders FC2020 nbsp Lucas Zelarayan Midfielder Columbus Crew2021 nbsp Sean Johnson Goalkeeper New York City FC2022 nbsp John McCarthy Goalkeeper Los Angeles FC2023 nbsp Cucho Hernandez Forward Columbus CrewPlayers with multiple MLS Cup titles editAt least 40 players have won two MLS Cups mostly for teams with sequential or near sequential titles D C 1996 1999 San Jose 2001 and 2003 LA Galaxy 2002 and 2005 and 2011 2012 and Houston 2006 2007 Brian Mullan is the only player to have won the Cup with four different teams while players that have won it with three different teams include Craig Waibel Alejandro Moreno Ezra Hendrickson and Darlington Nagbe MLS Cups Players years won 6 Landon Donovan 2001 2003 2005 2011 2012 2014 5 Jeff Agoos 1996 1997 1999 2001 2003 Todd Dunivant 2003 2005 2011 2012 2014 Brian Mullan 2002 2003 2006 2007 2010 4 Jaime Moreno 1996 1997 1999 2004 Craig Waibel 2002 2003 2006 2007 Dwayne De Rosario 2001 2003 2006 2007 Eddie Robinson 2001 2003 2006 2007 Josh Saunders 2003 2005 2011 2012 Darlington Nagbe 2015 2018 2020 2023 3 Richard Mulrooney 2001 2003 2007 Marco Etcheverry 1996 1997 1999 Brian Kamler 1996 1997 1999 John Maessner 1996 1997 1999 Clint Peay 1996 1997 1999 Eddie Pope 1996 1997 1999 Richie Williams 1996 1997 1999 Chris Albright 1999 2002 2005 Brian Ching 2003 2006 2007 Jesse Marsch 1996 1997 1998 Alejandro Moreno 2002 2006 2008 Ezra Hendrickson 2002 2004 2008 Pat Onstad 2003 2006 2007 Chad Marshall 2008 2016 2019 Juninho 2011 2012 2014 Omar Gonzalez 2011 2012 2014 Robbie Keane 2011 2012 2014 A J DeLaGarza 2011 2012 2014 Leonardo 2011 2012 2014 Hector Jimenez 2011 2012 2020 See also editMLS Cup Playoffs MLS rivalry cups Campeones Cup CONCACAF Champions League List of MLS Cup broadcasters List of MLS Cup finals List of MLS club post season droughts List of MLS Cup referees List of MLS Cup winning head coachesFootnotes editA Until 2003 MLS Cup utilized sudden death or golden goal overtime i e the match ended if a goal were scored at any point in overtime Beginning in 2004 a 30 00 overtime is played in full if the match is still tied it is decided by a Penalty Kick shootout 51 B Sellout crowd C Although Real Salt Lake and Colorado Rapids are Western Conference clubs they qualified to the MLS Cup final through the Eastern Conference bracket and vice versa for the New York Red BullsNotes and references editGeneral Dure Beau May 31 2010 Long Range Goals The Success Story of Major League Soccer Potomac Books ISBN 978 1 59797 509 4 References Staff SI com CONCACAF resolves qualifying problem for future CCL SI com Retrieved December 10 2018 a b MLS Soccer Staff October 21 2018 2019 CONCACAF Champions League qualifying process clarified Retrieved December 10 2018 Mainka Jurgen October 28 2008 Breakfast at Tiffany s New MLS Cup Trophy Unveiled Red Bulls Reader Red Bull New York Retrieved March 28 2011 Rushin Steve September 16 1996 A Real Kick Major League Soccer Yes Soccer has Put Fans in the Stands and U S Stars on the Field Sports Illustrated Retrieved December 14 2020 Six D C United legends named to Major League Soccer s The Greatest 25 NBC Sports December 11 2020 Retrieved December 14 2020 D C United wins first cup in 1996 Seattle Times October 20 1996 Retrieved November 16 2009 Nwulu Mac April 3 2020 ESPN to Celebrate 25 Years of Major League Soccer with Eight Hour Programming Marathon on Monday ESPN Press Room Retrieved December 14 2020 The full story of the former DC United star Eddie Pope s game winning goal in the 1996 MLS Cup MLSSoccer com December 12 2020 Retrieved December 14 2020 a b Romero Jose Miguel November 17 2009 MLS Cup History Galaxy blanks Revs 1 0 to win 2005 title The Seattle Times Archived from the original on November 25 2009 Retrieved May 4 2011 Straus Brian 2010 MLS Schedule Released Balance Reigns Supreme AOL Archived from the original on October 6 2012 Retrieved May 4 2011 1 Archived February 20 2006 at the Wayback Machine Londono Taurus March 16 2011 For New England Revs fan flashbacks of Buffalo Bills chance for redemption Yahoo news Archived from the original on August 4 2020 Retrieved May 12 2011 a b c d e Morrissey mo November 18 2007 Houston Dynamo 2007 MLS Cup Champions Associatedcontent com Retrieved May 12 2011 permanent dead link Diego Valeri scores fastest goal in MLS Cup history as Portland Timbers take early lead Major League Soccer December 6 2015 Archived from the original on July 1 2021 Retrieved November 15 2016 Toronto beats Seattle to win MLS Cup BBC Sport December 9 2017 Retrieved December 9 2017 Roberson Doug December 8 2018 Atlanta United sets MLS Cup attendance record Atlanta Journal Constitution Retrieved December 13 2018 Goff Steven December 8 2018 Atlanta United captures MLS Cup beats Portland Timbers 2 0 The Washington Post Retrieved December 15 2018 Denman Taylor December 10 2018 Atlanta United wins over the city and takes the MLS Cup in 2018 Gwinnett Daily Post Retrieved December 15 2018 2019 MLS Cup breaks Seattle Sounders all time attendance record MLSsoccer com Recap Seattle Sounders FC vs Toronto FC 11 10 2019 Matchcenter Das Andrew December 12 2020 Columbus Wins M L S Cup the Final Stop on a Journey to Stay Put The New York Times Retrieved September 5 2021 Hipes Patrick August 28 2019 Major League Soccer s MLS Cup To Air This Year On ABC Deadline Retrieved February 22 2023 mlssoccer 2019 MLS Cup to Air live on ABC and Univision MLSSoccer com mlssoccer Retrieved February 22 2023 mlssoccer Thanksgiving Day Match on FOX and Four ABC Broadcasts Highlight MLS Postseason Schedule MLSSoccer com mlssoccer Retrieved February 22 2023 Fallas Bernardo November 17 2007 MLS strives to find place on U S sports landscape Houston Chronicle p 1 Retrieved February 1 2019 Angles abound for grand MLS Cup Sports Illustrated November 21 2008 Retrieved January 7 2019 Jones Grahame L November 22 2009 David Beckham s injury could add twist to MLS final Los Angeles Times p C3 Retrieved November 5 2018 MLS Cup viewers on UniMas surpass those on ESPN Soccer America December 10 2013 Tannenwald Johnathan December 13 2015 MLS U S Soccer officially announce new TV deal with ESPN Fox Univision Philly com Retrieved November 30 2016 mlssoccer MLS on linear TV FOX Sports TelevisaUnivision TSN amp RDS reach multi year deals MLSSoccer com mlssoccer Retrieved February 22 2023 Belmont Steven Boero December 14 2022 MLS Announces Multi Year Linear TV Deal For Select Matches The Sports Credential Retrieved February 22 2023 2 Archived October 28 2010 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f g mlssoccer MLS reveals expanded playoffs structure for 2011 MLSSoccer com mlssoccer Retrieved October 17 2022 mlssoccer Big changes for MLS Cup Playoffs format in 2012 MLSSoccer com mlssoccer Retrieved February 27 2023 mlssoccer Major League Soccer unveils 2015 schedule with Decision Day finale and expanded playoff format MLSSoccer com mlssoccer Retrieved February 27 2023 Straus Brian November 29 2014 MLS to expand playoff field to 12 in 2015 will add extra knockout games Sports Illustrated Retrieved February 27 2023 MLS announces new playoff format for 2019 season December 17 2018 MLS overhauls playoff format alters league schedule mlssoccer How the 2020 Audi MLS Cup Playoffs will work Qualifying and competition format MLSSoccer com mlssoccer Retrieved February 27 2023 Major League Soccer Announces Audi 2023 MLS Cup Playoffs Format and Schedule Press release Major League Soccer February 21 2023 Retrieved February 21 2023 Tannenwald Jonathan MLS changes its playoff format again now guaranteeing home games for more teams www inquirer com Retrieved February 22 2023 Freedman Jonah November 20 2011 Big changes for MLS Cup Playoffs format in 2012 MLSSoccer com Retrieved November 28 2011 1997 Season Statistics MLS MLSSoccer com Retrieved May 7 2011 Team Statistics 2002 season MLS MLSSoccer com Archived from the original on October 3 2020 Retrieved May 7 2011 Sporting Kansas City vs Real Salt Lake MLSsoccer com Major League Soccer December 7 2013 Archived from the original on December 9 2013 Retrieved December 7 2013 LA Galaxy 2 New England Revolution 1 MLS Cup Final Match Recap Major League Soccer December 7 2014 Retrieved October 26 2015 Home Depot Center selected as MLS Cup 2011 host MLSSoccer com May 9 2011 Retrieved May 11 2011 Kaplan Jonathan December 8 2013 Recap MLS Cup champions Sporting KC prevail in 10 round penalty shootout after 1 1 draw Sportingkc com Sporting Kansas City Retrieved December 8 2013 Revolution fall 1 0 in overtime to Los Angeles Galaxy in MLS Cup The New England Revolution Archive The New England Revolution November 13 2005 Archived from the original on December 12 2013 Retrieved July 19 2012 Litterer Dave April 10 2010 The Year in American Soccer 2005 The American Soccer Archives The American Soccer Archives Archived from the original on November 5 2015 Retrieved May 7 2011 Litterer Dave June 19 2008 The Year in American Soccer 2004 Major League Soccer Division 1 The American Soccer Sover net Archived from the original on April 19 2014 Retrieved October 9 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to MLS Cup Official website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title MLS Cup amp oldid 1200623324, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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