The Numbers
We’re forced to confront, with heavy heart, certain realities. And while we’re happy to leave most statistics to the newcomers, knowing, as we do, the value of numbers is nothing compared to the lump in your throat as teams throw caution to the wind in a hunt of another tomorrow. But some you can’t ignore. Only two Cupsets tumbled from the Third Round. That’s three less than the same Round last year. And while the 2022 Open Cup’s Round of 32 featured no fewer than five third-tier teams, this year we have none. Easy come, easy go. Yes. But we’re sad for their going. On the brighter side, not a single goalless game darkened our Third Round through regular and extra-time. A full-throated 75 goals were scored – over three per game – and that's a number worth celebrating. And how’s this for a number. 22,423. That’s how many fans in St Louis roared on that city’s MLS debutants. It’s the biggest crowd for a U.S. Open Cup Third Round game since the start of the modern era in 1995. It’s the tenth largest of any round. And here comes the gut punch, folks: 21 USL Championship teams entered the Third Round – 13 of them went out. The big boys of MLS, humbled last year, have an ax to grind.
The Underdogs (Fewer but fierce)
We’ll not panic for our lack of lower-league teams in the Round of 32. We know, as do you, how narrow the margins are in the Open Cup. It’s the breadth of a hair that separates winning and losing. And with that said, we’ll applaud our lower-league raiders – our standard bearers for the cause of belief and right spirit. Monterey Bay F.C., new boys of the USL Championship, knocked out MLS founders San Jose Earthquakes and will host the LA Galaxy in the next round at their cozy Cardenale Stadium. And how about Memphis 901 – with former U.S. National Team man Bill Hamid in goal and his predecessor Tim Howard in the owners’ box. They fairly thundered past our 2019 champions Atlanta United. Naughte Pickering’s winner in extra-time was as graceful a volley as we’ve seen. In all, we’ll have eight second-division (USL Championship) underdogs in the Round of 32, including Sacramento Republic, last year’s sensations and runners-up. There’s also the 2008 Finalists Charleston Battery and Pittsburgh’s Riverhounds, under the old steady hand of Bob Lilley. We have new boys Loudoun United out of Virginia, trying to overhaul their reputation and, of course, our stylish 2019 Quarterfinalists New Mexico United and Birmingham’s plucky Legion.
Tukwila Cup Magic Conjured Again
There’s just something about Starfire. It’s where the Seattle Sounders have chosen to play their early-round Open Cup games going back to 2008. It’s tight and confined and surrounded by dense Pacific Northwest forest. Lush is a word that springs to mind. Another is spooky. It was here that Clint Dempsey lost it and ripped up a ref’s notebook in a 2015 Cup game so littered with indiscretions that it was anointed, later, the Red Card Wedding. This year had much of that energy – but the indiscipline was replaced with a kind of goal-hunger and frenzy. San Diego Loyal – of the second division – pushed their four-time champion hosts all the way to the very edge of elimination. The game ended 5-4 to Seattle. There was too much long-range riflery to recount here – but efforts from Kyle Adams (Loyal) and Reed Baker-Whiting (Sounders) are worth your attention. Veteran U.S. National Team journeyman Joe Corona turned back the clock and was whipping in balls like it was the 2013 Gold Cup (he put the ball directly in the net twice for the Loyal too). In the end, the game gave up nine goals (a record for the Round). And both the equalizer that sent the game to extra-time, and the goal that eventually won in it, came in the madness of frantic stoppage-time…