Luquinhas the Magic Man
But it wasn't just blood and thunder at Red Bull Arena. There was magic in the air too. Victim of some rough early treatment in midfield, it was no certainty that the 25-year-old Brazilian sorcerer Luquinhas (Lucas Lima Linhares) would finish the game on his feet. When it all seemed certain to descend into a chaos of bad blood and desperation, it was this Ceilândia-born schemer’s velvet feet that brought a touch of the much-needed divine to proceedings. Things were far from settled for the home side just past the hour mark, even with a one-goal edge thanks to Lewis Morgan and one player more after Thiago Andreade saw red. That’s when Luquinhas raised a leg above his head to tame a bouncing ball. He waded into a churning eddy of blue-shirts at the heart of the NYCFC penalty area and wriggled this way and that before creating, finally, the bit of space needed to pave the way to victory.
The Numbers
Numbers don’t lie, except when they do. So we’ll keep it simple for you. We saw 14 goals fall in four games. Now, admittedly, six of those came from Sporting Kansas City in their lopsided rout of third-division heroes Union Omaha. But that still leaves us with three and a half goals per game on the average and a level of net-bulging worthy of celebration. Only two teams of the participating eight (Union Omaha and defending MLS champions New York City FC) failed to get on the scoresheet and only one game – the high-drama affair between Orlando City and Nashville SC – needed a penalty shootout to settle the score. Another number to consider is 55,382 – the new record attendance for a Quarterfinal round of the U.S. Open Cup (up from 46,098, the last time the tournament was played in 2019 before a two-year hiatus caused by COVID-19). Kansas City, aiming for a record-tying fifth crown, had the highest single-game number of fans (18,552).
Gallese and a Game of Tomorrows
Geoff Hurst, legend of the English game, coined an instructive phrase:
football is a game of tomorrows. Pedro Gallese and his victorious Orlando City get it. So too do Nashville SC, for opposite reasons. It was only a little over two weeks ago that Gallese, Peru’s No1 net-minder, saved the first penalty of a shootout with a place in this year’s FIFA World Cup on the line. He’d put one foot in Qatar. But the fates interfered, as they tend to, and the evening ended with he and his mates in tears and the other team’s keeper, Andrew Redmayne, grabbing global headlines for his circus act and final-kick heroics. Then came tomorrow, and another shootout. This time in Gallese’s first-ever Open Cup. Rodrigo Schlegel’s equalizer deep into stoppage time saw Orlando City pull back from the brink and force a shootout for a place in the 2022 Semifinals. The Peruvian keeper, unwilling to let his tomorrow slip away, saved the day. His howl of victory after saving the final kick from Eric Miller was exorcism to all those demon yesterdays.
Nashhville, seconds from a Semifinal spot and so close to a first trophy they could taste it, will have to find their tomorrow somewhere down the road. Soon may it come.