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MLS Cup 1999

MLS Cup 1999 was the fourth edition of the MLS Cup, the championship soccer match of Major League Soccer (MLS), the top-level soccer league of the United States. It took place on November 21, 1999, at Foxboro Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, and was contested by D.C. United and the Los Angeles Galaxy in a rematch of the inaugural 1996 final that had been played at the same venue. Both teams finished atop their respective conferences during the regular season under new head coaches and advanced through the first two rounds of the playoffs.

MLS Cup 1999
EventMLS Cup
DateNovember 21, 1999
VenueFoxboro Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts, US
Man of the MatchBen Olsen
(D.C. United)
RefereeTim Weyland
Attendance44,910
WeatherSunny, 63 °F (17 °C)
1998
2000

United won 2–0 with first-half goals from Jaime Moreno and Ben Olsen for their third MLS Cup victory in four years. Galaxy defender Robin Fraser left the match with a broken collarbone during the opening minutes and goalkeeper Kevin Hartman collided with John Maessner at the end of the half. Olsen was named the most valuable player of the match for his winning goal, which was scored off a misplayed backpass.

The final was played in front of 44,910 spectators—a record for the MLS Cup. It was also the first MLS match to be played with a standard game clock and without a tiebreaker shootout following a rule change approved by the league days earlier. The Galaxy blamed their performance on decisions by referee Tim Weyland and the quality of the pitch at Foxboro Stadium, which had a narrowed width and was damaged by an earlier National Football League game.

Both finalists qualified for the 2000 CONCACAF Champions' Cup, which was hosted in Southern California. The tournament's semifinals featured a rematch of the MLS Cup final and was decided in a penalty shootout that the Galaxy won. The Galaxy went on to win the tournament, becoming the second MLS team to do so.

Venue edit

 
Aerial view of Foxboro Stadium, the host venue of MLS Cup 1999

The 1999 final was played at Foxboro Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, where the inaugural final had been contested in 1996. MLS announced the stadium as the host venue on October 23, 1998, and the match was scheduled three weeks later than previous editions to avoid conflicting with baseball's World Series.[1] The scheduled date of November 14 was later moved back to November 21.[2] The match was originally planned to be hosted at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida, but issues with the Tampa Bay Mutiny's lease at the stadium led to MLS revoking their hosting rights.[3][4] Foxboro was selected ahead of bids from Washington, D.C., and San Jose, California, as well as an unsubmitted speculative bid from Chicago.[5][6]

The match was played six days after a home game for the New England Patriots of the National Football League, necessitating the retention of the stadium's bleacher sections. As a result, the field was narrowed from 72 yards (66 m) to 68 yards (62 m), and had visible dirt patches and yard lines.[7][8] Approximately 30,000 tickets were sold before the finalists were confirmed.[9]

Road to the final edit

The MLS Cup is the post-season championship of Major League Soccer (MLS), a professional club soccer league based in the United States that began playing in 1996. Twelve teams contested the league's fourth season; teams were organized into two conferences, each playing 32 matches during the regular season from March to September.[10] Teams faced opponents from the same conference four times during the regular season, and from outside their conference twice.[11] Before the season began, MLS reduced the number of permitted international players from five to four as a cost-saving measure.[12]

The top four teams from each conference qualified for the playoffs, which were organized into three rounds and played primarily in October.[13] The first two rounds, named the Conference Semifinals and Conference Finals, were home-and-away series organized into a best-of-three format with a hosting advantage for the higher-seeded team. The winners of the Conference Finals advanced to the single-match MLS Cup final, which would be held at a predetermined neutral venue.[14]

MLS Cup 1999 was contested by two-time champions D.C. United and the Los Angeles Galaxy, both of which had played in the inaugural 1996 final, which ended in a 3–2 overtime victory for United. The 1996 final had also been played at Foxboro Stadium, and the 1999 match was the fourth consecutive MLS Cup appearance for United.[15] The 1999 final was the first to be contested by the regular season winners of both conferences.[16] During the regular season, the Galaxy and United met twice, each winning on the road.[15]

Los Angeles Galaxy edit

 
The Galaxy's Kevin Hartman was named Goalkeeper of the Year and set a league record for goals against average.

Since their MLS Cup 1996 appearance, the Los Angeles Galaxy had qualified for the playoffs twice but were eliminated in earlier rounds. During the 1998 regular season, the team finished atop the league standings with a 24–8 record, which included a run of nine consecutive wins and a record 85 goals.[17][18] The Galaxy earned two shootout wins at the start of the 1999 season but then lost three consecutive matches where they scored only three goals in total. The club dismissed Zambrano on April 21 and replaced him with Sigi Schmid, who had managed UCLA Bruins for 19 years and the men's national under-20 team for two years.[18][19] Under Schmid, the Galaxy won a playoff berth by early September and rose to first in the West alongside the Colorado Rapids.[20][21] The team finished the season with a 20–12 record and 54 points, and became the first MLS team to allow an average of less than one goal per match during the regular season with 29 goals in 32 matches.[22][23] Schmid was named Coach of the Year, Hartman earned Goalkeeper of the Year, and Robin Fraser won Defender of the Year for their regular season performances.[23]

In the Western Conference Semifinals, the Galaxy faced the Rapids, who had finished fourth in the conference and failed to score in their last five consecutive matches.[24] The Galaxy hosted the first leg and led with an eighth-minute strike from defender Ezra Hendrickson, but had midfielder Simon Elliott sent off with a red card ten minutes later. The team extended their lead from a penalty scored in the 52nd minute by Greg Vanney and a strike five minutes later by Mathis that Colorado goalkeeper Ian Feuer deflected into the net for a 3–0 victory.[25][26] The Galaxy defeated the Rapids 2–0 at Mile High Stadium in Denver, scoring twice in the final 15 minutes through midfielders Danny Pena and Joe Franchino, to complete a two-match sweep in the series.[27]

The Galaxy advanced to play the Western Conference Final against the Dallas Burn, who had finished second in the conference and eliminated defending champions Chicago.[28] The Galaxy won the first leg, which was played at the Rose Bowl, 2–1 with a goal from Ezra Hendrickson that was scored with 40 seconds remaining in the match.[29] The Galaxy twice took the lead during the second leg at the Cotton Bowl through a brace from Carlos Hermosillo but Dallas equalized to force a tie-breaking shootout. Dallas won 4–3 in the shootout, forcing a deciding third leg at the Rose Bowl.[30] The Galaxy clinched their place in their second MLS Cup final with a 3–1 win, having taken advantage of the Burn's weakened defense in their starting lineup due to an injury and suspension. Greg Vanney scored from a penalty in the second minute, which was followed by goals from Hermosillo and Mauricio Cienfuegos to extend the lead; Jason Kreis scored a late consolation goal for Dallas.[31]

D.C. United edit

D.C. United had played in the first three MLS Cup finals, winning in 1996 and 1997 against the Galaxy and Colorado Rapids, respectively.[32] Following their loss in the 1998 final to the Chicago Fire, manager Bruce Arena left the team to join the U.S. men's national team and was replaced by New England head coach Thomas Rongen.[33] During the early part of their season, United played without several injured starting players and reserves, forcing the starting lineup to change several times.[34] The team also lost several players to national team call-ups during the Copa América, but was able to take first place in the Eastern Conference.[35][36][37]

The team lost six starting players to national teams at the FIFA Confederations Cup in July.[38] Rongen turned to a lineup of reserves, including an inexperienced four-man defense, minor-league players, and new acquisitions to secure a playoff berth in late August.[39][40][41] The team also clinched first in the Eastern Conference in mid-September, having amassed a 15-point lead over the second-place Columbus Crew.[42][43] During the regular season, United won 17 of their 20 matches against opponents in the Eastern Conference and finished atop the league with 57 points.[44]

United played Miami Fusion, who had a 13–9 record in the regular season, in the Eastern Conference Semifinals. United won 2–0 in the first leg, which they hosted at RFK Stadium; forward Jaime Moreno scored in the 34th and 88th minutes.[45] The second leg in Florida ended 0–0 after regulation time and was decided in a shootout that United won 3–2. Goalkeeper Tom Presthus, having stopped four goals in regulation time, made four saves during the six-round shootout.[46]

In a repeat of the previous two Eastern Conference Finals, United played the Columbus Crew, who had defeated the Tampa Bay Mutiny.[47] United took a lead in the series at RFK Stadium in the first leg, winning 2–1 with a strike from Moreno in the 15th minute and a volley from Ben Olsen in the 72nd minute.[48] The second leg in Columbus ended in a 5–1 victory for the hosts, giving United their worst playoff defeat and forcing a third match in the series. Roy Lassiter scored early for United in the sixth minute but the Crew responded with first-half goals from Ansil Elcock and Jeff Cunningham, and a hat-trick from Stern John in the second half.[49] United recovered in the third leg to win 4–0 and extended their unbeaten streak at home in the playoffs to 12 matches. Moreno scored in the 17th minute and was joined by a brace from Roy Lassiter on both sides of half-time, the latter coming from a bicycle kick in the penalty area. Marco Etcheverry, who had provided three assists on the earlier goals, scored a free kick from 23 yards (21 m) with four minutes remaining to clinch a MLS Cup final berth for United.[15][50]

Summary of results edit

Regular season edit

Playoffs edit

Note: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away). Playoffs were in best-of-three format with penalty shootout (SO) if scores were tied.
Los Angeles Galaxy Round D.C. United
Opponent 1st leg 2nd leg 3rd leg MLS Cup Playoffs Opponent 1st leg 2nd leg 3rd leg
Colorado Rapids (2–0) 3–0 (H) 2–0 (A) Conference Semifinals[52] Miami Fusion (2–0) 2–0 (H) 0–0 (3–2 SO) (A)
Dallas Burn (2–1) 2–1 (H) 2–2 (3–4 SO) (A) 3–1 (H) Conference Finals[52] Columbus Crew (2–1) 2–1 (H) 1–5 (A) 4–0 (H)

Broadcasting and entertainment edit

The MLS Cup final was broadcast in the United States by ABC with English commentary, and Spanish commentary was available via secondary audio programming. The ABC broadcast was led by play-by-play announcer Phil Schoen and color commentator Ty Keough, who were joined by studio host Rob Stone. MLS players John Harkes and Alexi Lalas joined the pre-game and half-time broadcasts as co-hosts.[53] ABC deployed 18 cameras for the match and added field microphones to capture crowd noise.[54][55] The television broadcast on ABC drew a 1.0 national rating, a 17 percent decline from 1998, partially due to competition from National Football League games.[56] Pop singer Christina Aguilera sang the U.S. national anthem before the match and performed in the half-time show.[57][58]

Match edit

Match rules edit

The MLS Board of Governors, composed of team owners and their representatives, met in Boston before the MLS Cup to revise the league's match rules. Several of the league's experimental rules were eliminated in an effort to match international standards set by the International Football Association Board in the Laws of the Game and to appeal to hardcore fans.[59] The countdown clock that was tracked via the stadium scoreboard was replaced with a normal match clock that was kept by the referee on the field; injury time was added at the end of each half, as displayed by the fourth official.[22] Tiebreaker shootouts were replaced with two periods of sudden-death golden goal overtime that would be followed by a standard penalty shootout if the score remained tied.[59][60] Although the shootout change was planned to take effect at the start of the 2000 season,[61] after consulting with coaches Schmid and Rongen, league commissioner Don Garber announced the revised clock and tiebreaker would be used at MLS Cup 1999.[22][62]

Summary edit

 
United forward Ben Olsen (left) was named MLS Cup MVP for his goal in the first half.

The MLS Cup final was played on November 21 in front of 44,910 spectators at Foxboro Stadium, setting a new attendance record for the MLS Cup and any soccer match played in Massachusetts.[58][63] Approximately 5,000 D.C. United fans, including the club's two largest supporters groups Barra Brava and Screaming Eagles, traveled to the match.[58][64] The match began at 1:30 p.m. Eastern Time under sunny skies with a temperature of 63 °F (17 °C), unlike the cold and rainy conditions of the 1996 final.[64][65] The field was described as "badly scarred" due to a National Football League game at the stadium earlier in the week, which also caused the pitch to be narrowed to 68 yards (62 m).[58][66]

United took early control of the match and challenged the Galaxy defense on several plays. In the seventh minute, Galaxy defender Robin Fraser fell after being pushed from behind by Roy Lassiter on a play while challenging for the ball.[22][58] Fraser left the match with a broken left collarbone and was replaced by Steve Jolley. Schmid adjusted Galaxy's defense into a three-man formation with Paul Caligiuri positioned as sweeper.[67] Fraser later said he had been wearing a shoulder brace that restricted movement of his arm for most of the season, which prevented him from breaking the fall.[68] Referee Tim Weyland did not award a foul for the play, for which Schmid and Galaxy players later criticized him.[69]

United then attempted to take advantage of the weakened Galaxy defense as both teams pushed aggressively for an opening goal, trading several chances.[70] United took the lead in the 19th minute on a long throw-in from Marco Etcheverry that was misplayed by Jolley and fell to Lassiter, whose shot was saved by Kevin Hartman. Caligiuri failed to clear the ball, and Jaime Moreno converted from point-blank range.[22][71] The Galaxy responded with a promising scoring opportunity off a corner kick taken by Greg Vanney in the 32nd minute. Danny Pena's header hit the goalpost and John Maessner deflected it toward the goal but the ball was cleared away by Richie Williams. The Galaxy protested to Weyland that the ball had crossed the line and struck Williams' hand but no foul was given.[72][73]

The Galaxy and United traded more scoring chances as the first half ended; play stopped in the 43rd minute after Maessner, who was clearing the ball, kneed Harman in the head.[74][75] Hartman returned to the match and stopped a 22-yard (20 m) volley from United defender Jeff Agoos at the beginning of stoppage time, which Weyland set at four minutes.[7][71] The Galaxy immediately responded with a counterattack led by Jones, who was clipped in the penalty area by Maessner though Weyland did not award a penalty.[73] In the third minute of stoppage time, Hartman misplayed a backpass from Jolley while under pressure from Lassiter and Moreno.[62] Ben Olsen intercepted Hartman's pass to Caligiuri and scored from just outside the six-yard box to give United a 2–0 lead at half-time.[71][75]

United looked to extend their lead in the second half but were unable to convert an early chance in the 47th minute as Lassiter headed a cross from Agoos wide of the goal. A breakaway chance in the 58th minute for Jones was thwarted by Carlos Llamosa, who tackled away a loose ball in the United penalty area.[70] Galaxy attackers Mauricio Cienfuegos and Carlos Hermosillo were kept in check by United, particularly by defensive midfielder Richie Williams.[22] Jones was left to attack on his own.[58][76] Pena gave Galaxy two chances to score but Agoos blocked his first shot and the second went wide of the goal.[70]

With 20 minutes left to play, the teams traded back-to-back chances that were not finished.[58] In the 71st minute, Olsen received a chipped pass from Etcheverry and shot towards the goal but hit the side netting. A minute later, a volley by Clint Mathis in the penalty area was struck wide of the goal. Williams then attempted a 23-yard (21 m) volley in the 76th minute that struck the post after beating Hartman's outstretched arm.[70] In the match's last major action, Caligiuri attempted a drive from inside the box but his shot went wide of the goal.[70] With six minutes remaining, Olsen was named the MLS Cup most valuable player (MVP).[74] United goalkeeper Tom Presthus made one save during the match, on one of the Galaxy's two shots on goal.[22][73]

Details edit

Los Angeles Galaxy0–2D.C. United
Report
()
  • Moreno   19'
  • Olsen   45+3'
Foxboro Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts
Attendance: 44,910
Referee: Tim Weyland
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Los Angeles Galaxy[76][77]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
D.C. United[76][77]
GK 1   Kevin Hartman
RB 17   Ezra Hendrickson
CB 20   Paul Caligiuri
CB 4   Robin Fraser (c)   9'
LB 3   Greg Vanney
DM 2   Danny Pena   73'
DM 14   Clint Mathis
RW 10   Mauricio Cienfuegos
AM 21   Roy Myers   90'
LW 13   Cobi Jones   24'
CF 27   Carlos Hermosillo
Substitutions:
MF 5   Steve Jolley   9'   80'
MF 7   Zak Ibsen   80'
MF 12   Simon Elliott   73'
Manager:
Sigi Schmid
GK 22   Tom Presthus
RB 3   Carey Talley   69'
CB 23   Eddie Pope
CB 18   Carlos Llamosa   74'
LB 12   Jeff Agoos
RM 14   Ben Olsen   53'
DM 16   Richie Williams
AM 10   Marco Etcheverry (c)
LM 20   John Maessner
FW 9   Jaime Moreno
FW 15   Roy Lassiter   87'
Substitutions:
MF 4   Diego Soñora   74'    76'
MF 5   Geoff Aunger   87'
 
Manager:
Thomas Rongen

MLS Cup Most Valuable Player:
Ben Olsen (D.C. United)[70]

Assistant referees:[70]
Nathan Clement
Craig Lowry
Fourth official:[70]
Brian Hall

Match rules[78]

Post-match edit

After winning three titles in four seasons, D.C. United were hailed as the first MLS dynasty despite the league's attempts to encourage parity among teams.[74] Commissioner Don Garber stated he thought it was "terrific to have a dominant team" when asked whether United's performance would hurt the league but added he would "love some balance".[22][74] United's players celebrated with cigars and champagne in the locker room following the near-collapse of the stage that had been set up for the trophy ceremony.[79] Olsen became the first MLS Cup MVP to have been developed as part of the Project-40 program.[80] On November 23, United were honored with a ten-block parade along Pennsylvania Avenue in Downtown Washington, D.C., which was attended by thousands of fans.[81][82] United went on to miss the playoffs for three consecutive seasons but would win another MLS Cup in 2004 by defeating the Kansas City Wiz.[83][84]

After the match, Hartman attributed his miscue on the second goal to the poor condition of the pitch, which United defender Jeff Agoos also criticized.[85] Galaxy coach Sigi Schmid, along with Jones and Hermosillo, were fined for criticizing referee Tim Weyland's calls; Schmid was also suspended for the first match of the 2000 season.[86][87] Schmid highlighted the lack of calls after Fraser's injury and two potential penalties in the first half, along with fouls throughout the match.[80][88] The Galaxy reached the MLS Cup final in 2001, losing to the San Jose Earthquakes, and won their first title in 2002 against New England at Gillette Stadium, which had replaced Foxboro Stadium.[89] As of 2022, the Los Angeles Galaxy holds the record for the most MLS Cup titles, winning their fifth in 2014 to overtake United's record.[90][91]

As MLS Cup finalists, D.C. United and the Los Angeles Galaxy qualified as the U.S. representatives for the 2000 CONCACAF Champions' Cup, which was hosted in Southern California in January 2001.[92] The two teams met in the semifinals, where the Galaxy defeated United in a penalty shootout following a 1–1 draw.[93] The Galaxy won the tournament, becoming the second US club to win a CONCACAF competition and the last until Seattle Sounders FC in 2022.[94][95] They earned a place in the 2001 FIFA Club World Championship, which was set to be played in Spain but was later cancelled amid a financing scandal.[96][97]

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1999, fourth, edition, championship, soccer, match, major, league, soccer, level, soccer, league, united, states, took, place, november, 1999, foxboro, stadium, foxborough, massachusetts, contested, united, angeles, galaxy, rematch, inaugural, 1996, final, tha. MLS Cup 1999 was the fourth edition of the MLS Cup the championship soccer match of Major League Soccer MLS the top level soccer league of the United States It took place on November 21 1999 at Foxboro Stadium in Foxborough Massachusetts and was contested by D C United and the Los Angeles Galaxy in a rematch of the inaugural 1996 final that had been played at the same venue Both teams finished atop their respective conferences during the regular season under new head coaches and advanced through the first two rounds of the playoffs MLS Cup 1999EventMLS CupLos Angeles Galaxy D C United0 2DateNovember 21 1999VenueFoxboro Stadium Foxborough Massachusetts USMan of the MatchBen Olsen D C United RefereeTim WeylandAttendance44 910WeatherSunny 63 F 17 C 19982000 United won 2 0 with first half goals from Jaime Moreno and Ben Olsen for their third MLS Cup victory in four years Galaxy defender Robin Fraser left the match with a broken collarbone during the opening minutes and goalkeeper Kevin Hartman collided with John Maessner at the end of the half Olsen was named the most valuable player of the match for his winning goal which was scored off a misplayed backpass The final was played in front of 44 910 spectators a record for the MLS Cup It was also the first MLS match to be played with a standard game clock and without a tiebreaker shootout following a rule change approved by the league days earlier The Galaxy blamed their performance on decisions by referee Tim Weyland and the quality of the pitch at Foxboro Stadium which had a narrowed width and was damaged by an earlier National Football League game Both finalists qualified for the 2000 CONCACAF Champions Cup which was hosted in Southern California The tournament s semifinals featured a rematch of the MLS Cup final and was decided in a penalty shootout that the Galaxy won The Galaxy went on to win the tournament becoming the second MLS team to do so Contents 1 Venue 2 Road to the final 2 1 Los Angeles Galaxy 2 2 D C United 2 3 Summary of results 2 3 1 Regular season 2 3 2 Playoffs 3 Broadcasting and entertainment 4 Match 4 1 Match rules 4 2 Summary 4 3 Details 5 Post match 6 ReferencesVenue edit nbsp Aerial view of Foxboro Stadium the host venue of MLS Cup 1999 The 1999 final was played at Foxboro Stadium in Foxborough Massachusetts where the inaugural final had been contested in 1996 MLS announced the stadium as the host venue on October 23 1998 and the match was scheduled three weeks later than previous editions to avoid conflicting with baseball s World Series 1 The scheduled date of November 14 was later moved back to November 21 2 The match was originally planned to be hosted at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa Florida but issues with the Tampa Bay Mutiny s lease at the stadium led to MLS revoking their hosting rights 3 4 Foxboro was selected ahead of bids from Washington D C and San Jose California as well as an unsubmitted speculative bid from Chicago 5 6 The match was played six days after a home game for the New England Patriots of the National Football League necessitating the retention of the stadium s bleacher sections As a result the field was narrowed from 72 yards 66 m to 68 yards 62 m and had visible dirt patches and yard lines 7 8 Approximately 30 000 tickets were sold before the finalists were confirmed 9 Road to the final editMain article 1999 Major League Soccer season The MLS Cup is the post season championship of Major League Soccer MLS a professional club soccer league based in the United States that began playing in 1996 Twelve teams contested the league s fourth season teams were organized into two conferences each playing 32 matches during the regular season from March to September 10 Teams faced opponents from the same conference four times during the regular season and from outside their conference twice 11 Before the season began MLS reduced the number of permitted international players from five to four as a cost saving measure 12 The top four teams from each conference qualified for the playoffs which were organized into three rounds and played primarily in October 13 The first two rounds named the Conference Semifinals and Conference Finals were home and away series organized into a best of three format with a hosting advantage for the higher seeded team The winners of the Conference Finals advanced to the single match MLS Cup final which would be held at a predetermined neutral venue 14 MLS Cup 1999 was contested by two time champions D C United and the Los Angeles Galaxy both of which had played in the inaugural 1996 final which ended in a 3 2 overtime victory for United The 1996 final had also been played at Foxboro Stadium and the 1999 match was the fourth consecutive MLS Cup appearance for United 15 The 1999 final was the first to be contested by the regular season winners of both conferences 16 During the regular season the Galaxy and United met twice each winning on the road 15 Los Angeles Galaxy edit nbsp The Galaxy s Kevin Hartman was named Goalkeeper of the Year and set a league record for goals against average Since their MLS Cup 1996 appearance the Los Angeles Galaxy had qualified for the playoffs twice but were eliminated in earlier rounds During the 1998 regular season the team finished atop the league standings with a 24 8 record which included a run of nine consecutive wins and a record 85 goals 17 18 The Galaxy earned two shootout wins at the start of the 1999 season but then lost three consecutive matches where they scored only three goals in total The club dismissed Zambrano on April 21 and replaced him with Sigi Schmid who had managed UCLA Bruins for 19 years and the men s national under 20 team for two years 18 19 Under Schmid the Galaxy won a playoff berth by early September and rose to first in the West alongside the Colorado Rapids 20 21 The team finished the season with a 20 12 record and 54 points and became the first MLS team to allow an average of less than one goal per match during the regular season with 29 goals in 32 matches 22 23 Schmid was named Coach of the Year Hartman earned Goalkeeper of the Year and Robin Fraser won Defender of the Year for their regular season performances 23 In the Western Conference Semifinals the Galaxy faced the Rapids who had finished fourth in the conference and failed to score in their last five consecutive matches 24 The Galaxy hosted the first leg and led with an eighth minute strike from defender Ezra Hendrickson but had midfielder Simon Elliott sent off with a red card ten minutes later The team extended their lead from a penalty scored in the 52nd minute by Greg Vanney and a strike five minutes later by Mathis that Colorado goalkeeper Ian Feuer deflected into the net for a 3 0 victory 25 26 The Galaxy defeated the Rapids 2 0 at Mile High Stadium in Denver scoring twice in the final 15 minutes through midfielders Danny Pena and Joe Franchino to complete a two match sweep in the series 27 The Galaxy advanced to play the Western Conference Final against the Dallas Burn who had finished second in the conference and eliminated defending champions Chicago 28 The Galaxy won the first leg which was played at the Rose Bowl 2 1 with a goal from Ezra Hendrickson that was scored with 40 seconds remaining in the match 29 The Galaxy twice took the lead during the second leg at the Cotton Bowl through a brace from Carlos Hermosillo but Dallas equalized to force a tie breaking shootout Dallas won 4 3 in the shootout forcing a deciding third leg at the Rose Bowl 30 The Galaxy clinched their place in their second MLS Cup final with a 3 1 win having taken advantage of the Burn s weakened defense in their starting lineup due to an injury and suspension Greg Vanney scored from a penalty in the second minute which was followed by goals from Hermosillo and Mauricio Cienfuegos to extend the lead Jason Kreis scored a late consolation goal for Dallas 31 D C United edit See also 1999 D C United season D C United had played in the first three MLS Cup finals winning in 1996 and 1997 against the Galaxy and Colorado Rapids respectively 32 Following their loss in the 1998 final to the Chicago Fire manager Bruce Arena left the team to join the U S men s national team and was replaced by New England head coach Thomas Rongen 33 During the early part of their season United played without several injured starting players and reserves forcing the starting lineup to change several times 34 The team also lost several players to national team call ups during the Copa America but was able to take first place in the Eastern Conference 35 36 37 The team lost six starting players to national teams at the FIFA Confederations Cup in July 38 Rongen turned to a lineup of reserves including an inexperienced four man defense minor league players and new acquisitions to secure a playoff berth in late August 39 40 41 The team also clinched first in the Eastern Conference in mid September having amassed a 15 point lead over the second place Columbus Crew 42 43 During the regular season United won 17 of their 20 matches against opponents in the Eastern Conference and finished atop the league with 57 points 44 United played Miami Fusion who had a 13 9 record in the regular season in the Eastern Conference Semifinals United won 2 0 in the first leg which they hosted at RFK Stadium forward Jaime Moreno scored in the 34th and 88th minutes 45 The second leg in Florida ended 0 0 after regulation time and was decided in a shootout that United won 3 2 Goalkeeper Tom Presthus having stopped four goals in regulation time made four saves during the six round shootout 46 In a repeat of the previous two Eastern Conference Finals United played the Columbus Crew who had defeated the Tampa Bay Mutiny 47 United took a lead in the series at RFK Stadium in the first leg winning 2 1 with a strike from Moreno in the 15th minute and a volley from Ben Olsen in the 72nd minute 48 The second leg in Columbus ended in a 5 1 victory for the hosts giving United their worst playoff defeat and forcing a third match in the series Roy Lassiter scored early for United in the sixth minute but the Crew responded with first half goals from Ansil Elcock and Jeff Cunningham and a hat trick from Stern John in the second half 49 United recovered in the third leg to win 4 0 and extended their unbeaten streak at home in the playoffs to 12 matches Moreno scored in the 17th minute and was joined by a brace from Roy Lassiter on both sides of half time the latter coming from a bicycle kick in the penalty area Marco Etcheverry who had provided three assists on the earlier goals scored a free kick from 23 yards 21 m with four minutes remaining to clinch a MLS Cup final berth for United 15 50 Summary of results edit Regular season edit 1999 Western Conference table 51 Pos Club Pld W SW L Pts 1 Los Angeles Galaxy 32 20 3 12 54 2 Dallas Burn 32 19 3 13 51 3 Chicago Fire 32 18 3 14 48 4 Colorado Rapids 32 20 6 12 48 5 San Jose Clash 32 19 10 13 37 Key Qualified for playoffs Supporters Shield winner 1999 Eastern Conference table 51 Pos Club Pld W SW L Pts 1 D C United SS 32 23 6 9 57 2 Columbus Crew 32 19 6 13 45 3 Tampa Bay Mutiny 32 14 5 18 32 4 Miami Fusion 32 13 5 19 29 5 New England Revolution 32 12 5 20 26 Key Qualified for playoffs Supporters Shield winner Playoffs edit Note In all results below the score of the finalist is given first H home A away Playoffs were in best of three format with penalty shootout SO if scores were tied Los Angeles Galaxy Round D C United Opponent 1st leg 2nd leg 3rd leg MLS Cup Playoffs Opponent 1st leg 2nd leg 3rd leg Colorado Rapids 2 0 3 0 H 2 0 A Conference Semifinals 52 Miami Fusion 2 0 2 0 H 0 0 3 2 SO A Dallas Burn 2 1 2 1 H 2 2 3 4 SO A 3 1 H Conference Finals 52 Columbus Crew 2 1 2 1 H 1 5 A 4 0 H Broadcasting and entertainment editThe MLS Cup final was broadcast in the United States by ABC with English commentary and Spanish commentary was available via secondary audio programming The ABC broadcast was led by play by play announcer Phil Schoen and color commentator Ty Keough who were joined by studio host Rob Stone MLS players John Harkes and Alexi Lalas joined the pre game and half time broadcasts as co hosts 53 ABC deployed 18 cameras for the match and added field microphones to capture crowd noise 54 55 The television broadcast on ABC drew a 1 0 national rating a 17 percent decline from 1998 partially due to competition from National Football League games 56 Pop singer Christina Aguilera sang the U S national anthem before the match and performed in the half time show 57 58 Match editMatch rules edit The MLS Board of Governors composed of team owners and their representatives met in Boston before the MLS Cup to revise the league s match rules Several of the league s experimental rules were eliminated in an effort to match international standards set by the International Football Association Board in the Laws of the Game and to appeal to hardcore fans 59 The countdown clock that was tracked via the stadium scoreboard was replaced with a normal match clock that was kept by the referee on the field injury time was added at the end of each half as displayed by the fourth official 22 Tiebreaker shootouts were replaced with two periods of sudden death golden goal overtime that would be followed by a standard penalty shootout if the score remained tied 59 60 Although the shootout change was planned to take effect at the start of the 2000 season 61 after consulting with coaches Schmid and Rongen league commissioner Don Garber announced the revised clock and tiebreaker would be used at MLS Cup 1999 22 62 Summary edit nbsp United forward Ben Olsen left was named MLS Cup MVP for his goal in the first half The MLS Cup final was played on November 21 in front of 44 910 spectators at Foxboro Stadium setting a new attendance record for the MLS Cup and any soccer match played in Massachusetts 58 63 Approximately 5 000 D C United fans including the club s two largest supporters groups Barra Brava and Screaming Eagles traveled to the match 58 64 The match began at 1 30 p m Eastern Time under sunny skies with a temperature of 63 F 17 C unlike the cold and rainy conditions of the 1996 final 64 65 The field was described as badly scarred due to a National Football League game at the stadium earlier in the week which also caused the pitch to be narrowed to 68 yards 62 m 58 66 United took early control of the match and challenged the Galaxy defense on several plays In the seventh minute Galaxy defender Robin Fraser fell after being pushed from behind by Roy Lassiter on a play while challenging for the ball 22 58 Fraser left the match with a broken left collarbone and was replaced by Steve Jolley Schmid adjusted Galaxy s defense into a three man formation with Paul Caligiuri positioned as sweeper 67 Fraser later said he had been wearing a shoulder brace that restricted movement of his arm for most of the season which prevented him from breaking the fall 68 Referee Tim Weyland did not award a foul for the play for which Schmid and Galaxy players later criticized him 69 United then attempted to take advantage of the weakened Galaxy defense as both teams pushed aggressively for an opening goal trading several chances 70 United took the lead in the 19th minute on a long throw in from Marco Etcheverry that was misplayed by Jolley and fell to Lassiter whose shot was saved by Kevin Hartman Caligiuri failed to clear the ball and Jaime Moreno converted from point blank range 22 71 The Galaxy responded with a promising scoring opportunity off a corner kick taken by Greg Vanney in the 32nd minute Danny Pena s header hit the goalpost and John Maessner deflected it toward the goal but the ball was cleared away by Richie Williams The Galaxy protested to Weyland that the ball had crossed the line and struck Williams hand but no foul was given 72 73 The Galaxy and United traded more scoring chances as the first half ended play stopped in the 43rd minute after Maessner who was clearing the ball kneed Harman in the head 74 75 Hartman returned to the match and stopped a 22 yard 20 m volley from United defender Jeff Agoos at the beginning of stoppage time which Weyland set at four minutes 7 71 The Galaxy immediately responded with a counterattack led by Jones who was clipped in the penalty area by Maessner though Weyland did not award a penalty 73 In the third minute of stoppage time Hartman misplayed a backpass from Jolley while under pressure from Lassiter and Moreno 62 Ben Olsen intercepted Hartman s pass to Caligiuri and scored from just outside the six yard box to give United a 2 0 lead at half time 71 75 United looked to extend their lead in the second half but were unable to convert an early chance in the 47th minute as Lassiter headed a cross from Agoos wide of the goal A breakaway chance in the 58th minute for Jones was thwarted by Carlos Llamosa who tackled away a loose ball in the United penalty area 70 Galaxy attackers Mauricio Cienfuegos and Carlos Hermosillo were kept in check by United particularly by defensive midfielder Richie Williams 22 Jones was left to attack on his own 58 76 Pena gave Galaxy two chances to score but Agoos blocked his first shot and the second went wide of the goal 70 With 20 minutes left to play the teams traded back to back chances that were not finished 58 In the 71st minute Olsen received a chipped pass from Etcheverry and shot towards the goal but hit the side netting A minute later a volley by Clint Mathis in the penalty area was struck wide of the goal Williams then attempted a 23 yard 21 m volley in the 76th minute that struck the post after beating Hartman s outstretched arm 70 In the match s last major action Caligiuri attempted a drive from inside the box but his shot went wide of the goal 70 With six minutes remaining Olsen was named the MLS Cup most valuable player MVP 74 United goalkeeper Tom Presthus made one save during the match on one of the Galaxy s two shots on goal 22 73 Details edit November 21 19991 30 p m Los Angeles Galaxy0 2D C UnitedReport Archived Moreno nbsp 19 Olsen nbsp 45 3 Foxboro Stadium Foxborough MassachusettsAttendance 44 910Referee Tim Weyland nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Los Angeles Galaxy 76 77 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp D C United 76 77 GK 1 nbsp Kevin Hartman RB 17 nbsp Ezra Hendrickson CB 20 nbsp Paul Caligiuri CB 4 nbsp Robin Fraser c nbsp 9 LB 3 nbsp Greg Vanney DM 2 nbsp Danny Pena nbsp 73 DM 14 nbsp Clint Mathis RW 10 nbsp Mauricio Cienfuegos AM 21 nbsp Roy Myers nbsp 90 LW 13 nbsp Cobi Jones nbsp 24 CF 27 nbsp Carlos Hermosillo Substitutions MF 5 nbsp Steve Jolley nbsp 9 nbsp 80 MF 7 nbsp Zak Ibsen nbsp 80 MF 12 nbsp Simon Elliott nbsp 73 Manager Sigi Schmid GK 22 nbsp Tom Presthus RB 3 nbsp Carey Talley nbsp 69 CB 23 nbsp Eddie Pope CB 18 nbsp Carlos Llamosa nbsp 74 LB 12 nbsp Jeff Agoos RM 14 nbsp Ben Olsen nbsp 53 DM 16 nbsp Richie Williams AM 10 nbsp Marco Etcheverry c LM 20 nbsp John Maessner FW 9 nbsp Jaime Moreno FW 15 nbsp Roy Lassiter nbsp 87 Substitutions MF 4 nbsp Diego Sonora nbsp 74 nbsp 76 MF 5 nbsp Geoff Aunger nbsp 87 Manager Thomas Rongen MLS Cup Most Valuable Player Ben Olsen D C United 70 Assistant referees 70 Nathan Clement Craig Lowry Fourth official 70 Brian Hall Match rules 78 90 minutes of regulation time Two 5 minute periods of extra time with golden goals to decide a winner Penalty shootout from 35 yards if scores still tied Maximum of three substitutions Post match editAfter winning three titles in four seasons D C United were hailed as the first MLS dynasty despite the league s attempts to encourage parity among teams 74 Commissioner Don Garber stated he thought it was terrific to have a dominant team when asked whether United s performance would hurt the league but added he would love some balance 22 74 United s players celebrated with cigars and champagne in the locker room following the near collapse of the stage that had been set up for the trophy ceremony 79 Olsen became the first MLS Cup MVP to have been developed as part of the Project 40 program 80 On November 23 United were honored with a ten block parade along Pennsylvania Avenue in Downtown Washington D C which was attended by thousands of fans 81 82 United went on to miss the playoffs for three consecutive seasons but would win another MLS Cup in 2004 by defeating the Kansas City Wiz 83 84 After the match Hartman attributed his miscue on the second goal to the poor condition of the pitch which United defender Jeff Agoos also criticized 85 Galaxy coach Sigi Schmid along with Jones and Hermosillo were fined for criticizing referee Tim Weyland s calls Schmid was also suspended for the first match of the 2000 season 86 87 Schmid highlighted the lack of calls after Fraser s injury and two potential penalties in the first half along with fouls throughout the match 80 88 The Galaxy reached the MLS Cup final in 2001 losing to the San Jose Earthquakes and won their first title in 2002 against New England at Gillette Stadium which had replaced Foxboro Stadium 89 As of 2022 update the Los Angeles Galaxy holds the record for the most MLS Cup titles winning their fifth in 2014 to overtake United s record 90 91 As MLS Cup finalists D C United and the Los Angeles Galaxy qualified as the U S representatives for the 2000 CONCACAF Champions Cup which was hosted in Southern California in January 2001 92 The two teams met in the semifinals where the Galaxy defeated United in a penalty shootout following a 1 1 draw 93 The Galaxy won the tournament becoming the second US club to win a CONCACAF competition and the last until Seattle Sounders FC in 2022 94 95 They earned a place in the 2001 FIFA Club World Championship which was set to be played in Spain but was later cancelled amid a financing scandal 96 97 References edit Jones Grahame L October 24 1998 D C s Etcheverry Named MVP Los Angeles Times p B5 Retrieved May 4 2020 via Newspapers com Rusnak Jeff December 6 1998 D C stops Brazilians Sun Sentinel p C17 Retrieved May 4 2020 via Newspapers com McEwen Tom February 10 1998 Tampa Bay looks good for MLS Cup The Tampa Tribune p 5 Retrieved May 4 2020 via Newspapers com Ward Bill July 25 1998 MLS Cup in doubt for Tampa The Tampa Tribune p 1 Retrieved May 4 2020 via Newspapers com Dell Apa Frank October 24 1998 MLS Cup at Foxboro Stadium in 1999 The Boston Globe p G2 Retrieved May 4 2020 via Newspapers com Goff Steven October 16 1998 United Prepares Bid For 1999 Title Game The Washington Post p C3 Retrieved May 4 2020 a b Foltman Bob November 22 1999 New injury time rule plays part in outcome Chicago Tribune sec 3 p 3 Retrieved May 6 2020 via Newspapers com Shoddy playing surface doesn t stop D C United Hanford Sentinel Associated Press November 22 1999 p 13 Retrieved March 1 2021 via Newspapers com Goff Steven November 15 1999 Revived United Makes Run for MLS Title The Washington Post p D2 Davis Steve March 18 1999 Finally on a roll Experience helps league smooth opening bumps Dallas Morning News p B7 Goff Steven March 20 1999 With No Time To Spare in 99 United Kicks Off The Washington Post p D1 Jones Grahame L March 19 1999 Excuse MLS Boss Logan if He Expects Big Things Los Angeles Times p B4 Retrieved May 2 2020 Year of no excuses for MLS exec says The Seattle Times March 19 1999 p D5 Rodriguez Alicia October 21 2015 Audi MLS Cup Playoffs Tracing the evolution of the postseason format since 1996 MLSsoccer com Retrieved May 14 2020 a b c Yannis Alex November 21 1999 Galaxy and United To Battle in Final The New York Times sec 8 p 13 Retrieved October 5 2011 Robledo Fred J November 21 1999 Will this re do be a case of deja vu Galaxy United match has history Los Angeles Daily News p S2 1998 Season in Review LA Galaxy Archived from the original on July 25 2019 Retrieved February 26 2021 a b Galaxy fires Zambrano CNN Sports Illustrated April 22 1999 Archived from the original on June 4 2011 Retrieved May 14 2020 Jones Grahame L April 22 1999 Galaxy Hires Schmid Dumps Zambrano Los Angeles Times p D1 Retrieved February 26 2021 Jones Grahame L September 2 1999 Galaxy Rises Thanks to Myers Los Angeles Times p D3 Retrieved February 26 2021 via Newspapers com Jones Grahame L September 5 1999 Galaxy Grabs the Spotlight in 2 1 Victory Over Fusion Los Angeles Times p D7 Retrieved February 26 2021 via Newspapers com a b c d e f g h Yannis Alex November 22 1999 It s No Contest in M L S As United Takes 3rd Title The New York Times p D3 Retrieved October 5 2011 a b 1999 Season in Review LA Galaxy Archived from the original on November 13 2016 Retrieved February 26 2021 Jones Grahame L October 11 1999 Galaxy Happy to Give Rapids a Run Los Angeles Times p D3 Retrieved February 27 2021 Jones Grahame L October 18 1999 Galaxy Gets a Leg Up 3 0 Los Angeles Times p D1 Retrieved February 27 2021 Galaxy has rapid reversal of fortune Daily Breeze October 18 1999 p C1 Jones Grahame L October 25 1999 Setting High Goals Galaxy Earns Sweep Los Angeles Times p D1 Retrieved February 27 2021 Jones Grahame L October 28 1999 Dramatic Burn Earns Right to Play Galaxy Los Angeles Times p D3 Retrieved February 27 2021 Jones Grahame L November 1 1999 Galaxy Sweats This One Out Los Angeles Times p D1 Retrieved February 27 2021 Jones Grahame L November 8 1999 Galaxy Burned in Shootout Los Angeles Times p D1 Retrieved February 27 2021 Jones Grahame L November 12 1999 Galaxy Ready to Turn on Its Afterburners Los Angeles Times p D1 Retrieved February 27 2021 D C makes its annual trip to MLS title game Democrat and Chronicle Associated Press November 21 1999 p D5 Retrieved February 27 2021 via Newspapers com Goff Steven March 18 1999 For D C United Coach Rongen a Happy Homecoming The Washington Post p D2 Retrieved February 27 2021 Goff Steven May 1 1999 Sickened Roster Depletes Patchwork D C United The Washington Post p D9 Retrieved February 27 2021 Goff Steven June 11 1999 For United It s Six in a Row United 3 Fusion 1 The Washington Post p D8 DeNunzio Jon June 14 1999 United 2 Crew 1 Moreno Scores Twice D C Wins Seventh Straight The Washington Post p D1 Retrieved February 27 2021 Wickersham Seth June 20 1999 United Tumbles to Galaxy on a Closing Free Kick The Washington Post p D7 Retrieved February 27 2021 Goff Steven July 25 1999 Short Handed United Calls on Its Reserves The Washington Post p D13 Retrieved February 27 2021 Goff Steven July 26 1999 Though Depleted United Still Wins The Washington Post p D8 Retrieved February 27 2021 Goff Steven August 12 1999 United 4 MetroStars 1 United Gets Job Done The Washington Post p D5 Goff Steven September 4 1999 United Healthy but Not Full Strength The Washington Post p D10 Goff Steven September 13 1999 United Clinches Third Conference Title in Row The Washington Post p D14 Goff Steven October 7 1999 Mutiny Leaves United With Sinking Feeling The Washington Post p D1 1999 in Review D C United Retrieved February 27 2021 Goff Steven October 17 1999 Moreno Boots Fusion The Washington Post p D1 Retrieved February 27 2021 Goff Steven October 25 1999 United Advances With Shootout Win The Washington Post p D1 Retrieved February 27 2021 Goff Steven October 31 1999 United s Columbus Day The Washington Post p D4 Goff Steven November 1 1999 United 2 Crew 1 United Cruises With Flair The Washington Post p D1 Retrieved February 28 2021 Goff Steven November 8 1999 Crew Clamps Down on United to Force Decisive Game 3 The Washington Post p D1 Retrieved February 28 2021 Goff Steven November 14 1999 D C Storms To MLS Final The Washington Post p D1 Retrieved February 28 2021 a b MLS Communications Department Elias Sports Bureau 2022 Fact amp Record Book Major League Soccer p 52 Retrieved October 20 2022 a b 1999 MLS Results MLSnet com Archived from the original on September 29 2000 Retrieved January 7 2023 Kaufman Michelle November 21 1999 Can Galaxy win one for L A The Miami Herald p D2 Retrieved 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Green Jeff November 21 1999 Goalkeeper s blunder puts MLS Cup out of reach CNN Sports Illustrated Archived from the original on August 24 2000 Retrieved June 3 2011 Adande J A November 22 1999 On Galaxy s Disappointing Day the League Becomes a Big Winner Los Angeles Times p D1 Retrieved February 28 2021 a b Green Jeff November 22 1999 MLS championship atmosphere begins early CNN Sports Illustrated Archived from the original on September 29 2000 Retrieved February 28 2021 Jones Grahame L November 21 1999 Pain of Loss Lingers for Galaxy Five Los Angeles Times p D1 Retrieved February 28 2021 Goff Steven November 21 1999 United Galaxy A Sexy Final The Washington Post p D1 Retrieved February 28 2021 Top MLS defender spends game on sidelines CNN Sports Illustrated Associated Press November 21 1999 Archived from the original on November 4 2003 Retrieved June 3 2011 Top 50 MLS Cup Moments 49 Broken Dreams MLSsoccer com October 2 2011 Retrieved October 3 2011 Jones Grahame L November 22 1999 Loss Comes With Territory Los Angeles Times p D1 Retrieved February 28 2021 a b c d e f g h D C United Resumes MLS Dynasty With 2 0 Win Over Los Angeles Galaxy in MLS Cup 99 MLSnet com November 21 1999 Archived from the original on September 29 2000 Retrieved March 1 2021 a b c Goff Steven November 22 1999 D C s Two First Half Goals Doom Galaxy The Washington Post p D1 Retrieved March 1 2021 Robledo Fred J November 22 1999 Galaxy of Regret United rules again as L A shut out Los Angeles Daily News p S5 a b c Ramus Richard November 22 1999 Galaxy comes to bitter end The Press Enterprise p C1 a b c d Wilbon Michael November 22 1999 Nothing Succeeds Like Success The Washington Post p D1 Retrieved March 1 2021 a b Youngman Randy November 22 1999 D C 2 Galaxy 0 United They Stand Orange County Register p D1 a b c Gutierrez Paul November 22 1999 MLS Cup Report The Fast Track Los Angeles Times p D11 Retrieved March 1 2021 via Newspapers com a b 1999 Major League Soccer Nationalities FBref Sports Reference Retrieved January 8 2024 Major League Soccer Bans the Shootout Press release Major League Soccer November 17 1999 Archived from the original on December 17 2000 Retrieved March 1 2021 Lewis Michael November 21 1999 United celebrates victory with cigars CNN Sports Illustrated Archived from the original on January 2 2003 Retrieved March 1 2021 a b Two first half goals lift United to MLS Cup CNN Sports Illustrated November 21 1999 Archived from the original on December 26 2002 Retrieved February 28 2021 Montgomery David November 24 1999 Now We Have the Best D C United Fans Proclaim They re Paying Attention The Washington Post p B1 Retrieved March 1 2021 Nation s capital honors MLS dynasty United CNN Sports Illustrated November 23 1999 Archived from the original on February 9 2002 Retrieved June 3 2011 Goff Steven November 1 2003 United Starts Anew in Playoffs The Washington Post p D1 Wise Mike November 15 2004 United on Top of Its Game The Washington Post p A1 Retrieved March 1 2021 Jones Grahame L November 29 1999 Hartman s Mistake Costly but Doesn t Cheapen Season Los Angeles Times p B6 Retrieved March 1 2021 Reid Scott January 12 2000 Galaxy s Schmid hit with one game ban Orange County Register p D8 Zeigler Mark March 19 2000 Stay put Galaxy starts new season with win San Diego Union Tribune p C15 Gutierrez Paul November 22 1999 Fraser Bitter Dejected Over Roughness Los Angeles Times p D10 Retrieved May 14 2020 Dillman Lisa October 21 2002 Galaxy Is No Longer a Footnote Los Angeles Times p D1 Retrieved March 1 2021 via Newspapers com Straus Brian December 8 2014 Galaxy s unrivaled success continues with MLS Cup win over Revolution Sports Illustrated Retrieved March 1 2021 Reineking Jim November 5 2022 Los Angeles FC vs Philadelphia Union in 2022 MLS Cup Live stream time date odds how to watch USA Today Retrieved November 25 2022 Goff Steven October 27 2000 For D C United Worldly Ambitions The Washington Post p D6 Jones Grahame L January 20 2001 Galaxy Wins Will Take On the World Los Angeles Times p D6 Retrieved March 1 2021 Jones Grahame L January 22 2001 Hendrickson Galaxy Have Champion s Look Los Angeles Times p D1 Retrieved March 1 2021 Seattle Sounders beat Pumas UNAM to win Concacaf Champions League BBC Sport May 5 2022 Retrieved October 18 2022 Jones Grahame L May 19 2001 Galaxy s World Is Rocked Los Angeles Times p D11 Retrieved March 1 2021 French Scott February 19 2016 How a FIFA scandal killed the 2001 LA Galaxy s Club World Cup dreams MLSsoccer com Retrieved December 15 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title MLS Cup 1999 amp oldid 1214223681, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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