Troy Lesesne and the U.S. Open Cup have history.
The recently appointed head coach of the New York Red Bulls, a self described second-division guy, has seen his career intertwine with the 110-year-old tournament time and again.
As a player, he battled a Major League Soccer team to the brink. Then, as an assistant coach, he led an expansion USL Championship side deep into the tournament, before doing the same as a head coach. Now at the helm of a first-division club, and eager to revitalize their season, Lesesne knows how important the competition can be.
“I understand what it means to every club that competes in [the U.S. Open Cup], from a different standpoint,” he said of the tournament during his first press conference, a day before pulling off a 1-0 Round-of-32 win against D.C. United. “It’s a special competition.”
An MLS Cup playoff rematch from last season now awaits against FC Cincinnati in the Round of 16 – as the Red Bulls aim to get past the Semifinal stage they reached last year.
Familiar Surroundings
Lesesne’s early years were centered in the Carolinas
He didn’t leave his home state to attend the College of Charleston, where he won a Southern Conference men's championship in 2004 as a player and joined the local professional outfit, the Charleston Battery, after graduating.
Of his four assists in a pro playing career that lasted only two seasons, two were in the 2006 Open Cup with the Battery. One came in the tournament’s Second Round against the Sonoma County Sol and one more against an MLS side.
The Third Round match against FC Dallas went to extra-time tied (2-2) in South Carolina. In the 114th minute, Lesesne controlled a long cross-field ball and sent it, like a dagger, back to the opposite post, where Luc Harrington put in the go-ahead goal.
Dallas found an equalizer with seconds to play and Charleston eventually fell in a shootout (with Lesesne converting his third-round shot).