[MLS PLAYOFFS: Western Conference] As if it was scripted, the Western Conference’s fiercest rivals wound up facing each other in the first phase that
concludes Thursday. The fifth and final Cascadia Cup clash of the season pairs conference champion Portland against bitter rival Seattle, which trails from the first leg, 2-1, and must somehow prevail
at Jeld-Wen Field to advance. The winner faces either Real Salt Lake or the Los Angeles Galaxy, which takes the field at Rio Tinto Stadium leading, 1-0.
Both games are nationally
televised and will overlap if the RSL-Galaxy game (9 p.m. ET, ESPN2), which kicks off two hours earlier, goes into overtime and thus runs into the Timbers-Sounders contest (11 p.m., NBCSN). However,
there will be no NFL lines or other distracting markings to blight the landscape. Just good old MLS playoff soccer set in two of the league's best venues.
Here are some subplots to ponder
for what promises to be several hours of grand theater.
WILL DEUCE RUN LOOSE? The Sounders didn’t score in their home leg until
Osvaldo Alonso drilled a low, first-time shot in the 90th minute, but they did have their chances before then.
Clint Dempsey
hit the crossbar twice – once with a header, once on a free kick -- and was denied by an excellent flying save by Timbers keeper
Donovan Ricketts.
Eddie Johnson headed a Dempsey free kick wide.
Much pre-game speculation has centered on whether head coach
Sigi
Schmid will give a start to Nigerian striker
Obafemi Martins, who has missed six of the last seven games because of a nagging groin injury. His possible
inclusion is heightened by the absence of
Lamar Neagle, who received his second caution of the playoffs in the first leg and is suspended. Martins' stats are
good, too: eight goals and four assists in 1,466 minutes.
Seattle generated 20 shots in the first leg and even though the Timbers are notoriously stingy at home -- they conceded just 11
goals -- the Sounders are potent enough to get the opportunities. Yet while attention will be centered on Dempsey and Martins, if he plays, the key figure is probably going to be Johnson.
Though he can certainly create on his own, Dempsey is also adept at exploiting space carved out by others. If Johnson can drag defenders and get into threatening positions on and off the ball, Deuce
will capitalize.
STARS VS. TEAM. The Galaxy’s stars,
Landon Donovan and
Robbie Keane, were below-par in the first leg at StubHub Center; instead, right back
Sean Franklin stepped up to nail his first career playoff
goal from more than 30 yards out.
David Beckham has left, yet still the appropriately named Galaxy features two superstars, i.e., Keane and
Donovan. They were the most productive one-two punch in the league, compiling a combined 26 goals and 20 assists, and their uncanny knack for reading each other’s movements while linking with
other teammates gives them a decided edge regardless of the opponent. It’s a much different dynamic than that usually faced by defenders.
“In the world of football, it’s
usually a big man and a small man just playing off him,” said Keane Tuesday in a conference call with reporters. “Me and Landon are a similar size – obviously I’m a little bit
bigger – but I think the way we play together, our movement, the way we play I think we’re on the same wavelength, so we kind of understand each other, where we’re going to go.
“So if I come short, he goes long, and vice versa. I think our understanding’s been very, very good and that’s been obviously the way we’ve combined with each other and
set each other up for goals. It’s been good, so long may that continue.”
For Real Salt Lake, since head coach
Jason Kreis took over in
2007 he’s preached “the team is the star,” and that camaraderie and cohesion is what captain
Kyle Beckerman is counting on to overturn the 1-0
deficit imposed on RSL by Franklin’s long-distance laser. Some sloppy passing plagued RSL in the first leg and while that element must improve, Beckerman cited concentration as a vital
factor.
“We just need to stay focused a bit more,” he said in the conference call. “The effort’s got to be there from every single one of us. We’ve just got
to fight, we’ve got to push through it. That’s all it is. We’ve got to focus more on the passing, but if it doesn’t happen, you’ve got to be willing to get in there and
roll up your sleeves and find a way.”
REVAMPED RSL. The offseason departures of forward
Fabian Espindola
and defender
Jamison Olave (both to New York) and midfielder
Will Johnson (Portland) left some gaping holes in one of
the league’s best teams during the past five seasons, but Kreis re-assembled a team good enough to finish second behind the Timbers in the Western Conference.
Chris Schuler has provided the muscular presence once supplied by Olave and his return to the lineup in the first leg was cited by Kreis as a crucial improvement. As
for Espindola, the return to MLS of
Robbie Findley (eight goals), and the signings of
Olmes Garcia (five goals) and
Joao Plata (eight assists) helped RSL boost its goalscoring total to 57 from 46 last year, even though injuries and national-team duties with Costa Rica limited
striker
Alvaro Saborio to just 16 games. He still managed to score 12 goals. Teenager
Luis Gil (he turns 20 next week)
set career highs for minutes played (2060), starts (24), goals (5), and assists (3) in the wake of Johnson’s departure.
Yet the midfield and the attack flagged for long periods
against the Galaxy. Veteran midfielder
Ned Grabavoy was replaced by
Sebastian Velasquez in the 61st minute, and Saborio
came off in the 79th for
Devon Sandoval.
For the second leg, Kreis might choose to start Findley, who in the first leg entered in the 57th minute
for midfielder
Yordany Alvarez. The move took RSL out of the 4-2-3-1 formation it started with and into its familiar 4-4-2 shaped around a midfield diamond.