Fans of the 109-year-old Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup (in its 107th edition) live by its magic moments. And the First Round of the 2022 competition – back after a two-year hiatus caused by Covid-19 – tossed up a good few of those on March 22 and 23. Join usopencup.com for a look back at eight moments of note from the 16 games in which 61 goals were scored, on-field hammers were wielded, Mother Nature had her say and a murder of Crows from Minnesota won and lost in their long-awaited Cup debut.
● Day One Review
● Day Two Review
● First Round Results & Second Round Schedule
Never not weather
Dramatic sunsets and mist-shrouded floodlights could well be mascots of the Open Cup’s early rounds – with all games played midweek (most of an evening) and spring blooming across the vastness of this nation. But the same elements that light the dusks in purples and yellows and the blood-deepest reds also invite harsh weather systems that can wreak havoc on teams and fans. Organizers too. Southern States SC Stars and Georgia Revolution FC barely managed their game in Hattiesburg, Mississippi despite cyclones forming nearby and tearing through the southland. The Lansdowne Bhoys of Yonkers, New York, and their hosts the Ocean City Nor’Easters, were buffeted by lashing Atlantic winds and heavy rain on the Jersey Shore all the way through 120 minutes of play and a penalty shootout.
However Lynchburg FC and Nova FC (both of Virginia), weren’t spared. A heavy weather system, with lightning sparking the sky, produced the Round’s only draw (in a manner of speaking). The contest was halted in the 77th minute with the score tangled at 1-1. The solution? More soccer, of course. The game will be replayed from the start at a time agreed to by the managers of both teams – who’ll surely be keeping an eye on those doppler radar images.
Long wait and a City stunner
Anticipation, and the delay of gratification, has a way of heightening sensation. Thus was the case for Minneapolis City FC. The ‘Mighty Crows’ flocked to Des Moines, Iowa with high hopes, a winning sense of humor and a history of almost playing in the U.S. Open Cup. Disqualifications, quirks of tie-breaker systems and global, once-in-a-century pandemics always seemed to get in the way. They leaned into their self-applied title as ‘undefeated’ in the Open Cup. But when their big day finally came, they met the moment. Lionel Vang stood over a dead ball some 30+ yards from goal – so far out the Menace players opted not to build a proper wall. What everyone with working eyeballs and a sense of decorum saw as an impossibility, Vang saw as an opportunity. His right-footed thunderbolt shook the moisture from the netting, waking the spiders from their slumber in the top corner.
And while Minneapolis City SC finished 4-2 losers on the night, they are officially and forevermore deemed, by the power vested in usopencup.com, still undefeated.
Des Moines’ Menace load the slingshot again?
These amateurs from Iowa have been a club since 1994. It’s true, they have American football lines on their home turf. They have an old-fashioned mascot, the Maniac, who’s a humanoid figure with a soccer ball for a head. That’s true too. But there’s something else that’s true: in their 28 years as a club they’ve excelled at taking down giants. Only one other amateur team (the Flint City Bucks, who were once the Michigan Bucks and before that the Mid-Michigan Bucks) have dropped more professional teams in Open Cup play. Now, after quietly dispatching everyone’s favourite debutants from Minneapolis, the Menace have a chance to punch up again in their 14th Open Cup.
The giant hiding in the shadows is one Union Omaha, professional outfit and reigning USL League One champions. The game’s on the road too. Who else has that old cupset feeling?
Danso the Man for Bhoys
Lansdowne Yonkers manager Sean Kelly, the Irish-born former Arsenal youth who captained the side in the 2019 Open Cup, said about goalkeeper Abdoukarim ‘Kabo’ Danso: “He is the club.” With the Bhoys for nearly a full decade, this giant, who hails from the Gambia in Northwestern Africa, arrived in New York in 2013. He’s won two USASA National Amateur Cups (the Yonkers men are the trophy’s current holder) and been the side’s hero on too many occasions to count. This First Round of the Open Cup was no exception, though it started out terribly for the big man when he bobbled a weird shot early to allow hosts Ocean City Nor'easters an early lead. But in the shootout, after extra-time ended 1-1, the 34-year-old’s massive frame and sharp instincts made all the difference. In the cold rain of the Jersey Shore’s early spring, the club hero, and enduring symbol, kept out Kevin Curran’s attempt to send the Bhoys into the Second Round for the third time in three Open Cup appearances.
While we’re at it, let’s have three-cheers for all the net-minders, those lonely keepers of the gate. In the First Round, with only amateurs in action, you see a wide range of them. All shapes and sizes (and ages). From Park City’s Lukas Tate, just 18, who wore number-zero and looked like he might weigh 100 pounds soaking wet, to Cleveland SC’s Conor Cable. Despite carrying a few extra pounds in the middle, he was a true Open Cup hero. A solid wall of mortar and brick. His save in the dying moments of extra-time in a slim win over Chicago FC United saw him leap and expand in the air (think: starfish) to ensure his side’s debut was one to remember.