Then came a 2-1 extra time win over the Colorado Rapids, Harris assisting on Maxi Urruti’s 96th-minute decider; a 1-0 victory at Houston; and another 2-1 extra time win in the Semifinals at the LA Galaxy, Dallas scoring in the 116th and 120th minutes.
That set up the final at home against the New England Revolution on Sept. 14, 2016. The Hoops were aiming to capture the elusive treble in American soccer – they were on track to win the Supporters’ Shield and would have home-field advantage in the MLS playoffs.
A Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup crown would be the first step. But Harris would not be able to pitch in – he was suspended for an accumulation of yellow cards. “I got there early to be in locker room and in the gym,” Harris recalled of that day. “And the owner [Clark Hunt] was pretty nervous for that game because he wanted to win it, since it was named for his dad. For him, it’s bigger than the money. He said that’s my father’s name on it and we need to have that trophy.”
Doing his Part From the Sidelines
“I told him the guys are ready and we’re going to win it,” Harris remembers. “New England scored first but we stormed back and it was a perfect example of how FC Dallas was under [then coach] Oscar Pareja.”
The Revolution team that day included former FC Dallas midfielder Je-Vaughn Watson, now with OKC. “We talk about it,” Harris said. “He [Watson] says ‘you took that Cup away from me’. So he has extra motivation – revenge against Dallas.”
FC Dallas and the Energy have had mostly cordial relations since the Oklahoma City side was established in 2014. Starting this year, OKC Energy is a member of the USL Championship, American soccer’s second professional tier.
“We were the USL affiliate of theirs [FC Dallas], and I have friends there,” OKC coach Steve Cooke said of the club he’ll look to upset in the Fourth Round. “[Coach] Luchi Gonzalez was part of the [Fédération Français de Football] coaching course I did, Ema Twumasi and Francis Atuahene [former Energy players] are still at Dallas, Je-Vaughn and Atiba, Amer Sasivarevic was a draft pick of FC Dallas and we play each other in preseason. There’s quite a few ties and they are just a couple hours down the freeway.
OKC’s drive to Dallas is a straight shot, some 200 miles down Interstate-35E. And the Energy will arrive as underdogs in a tournament conceived to give underdogs a chance.