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Bavarian SC

Bavarian United win 6th Amateur Cup title, punch ticket to 2023 US Open Cup

August 8, 2022 by Ty Stulo

Bavarian United celebrate the club's 2022 USASA Amatuer Cup title after a 1-0 win over Northern Virginia FC on Aug. 7, 2022. Photo: Bavarian United
Bavarian United celebrate the club's 2022 USASA Amatuer Cup title after a 1-0 win over Northern Virginia FC on Aug. 7, 2022. Photo: Bavarian United
Bavarian United celebrate the club’s 2022 USASA Amatuer Cup title after a 1-0 win over Northern Virginia FC on Aug. 7, 2022. Photo: Bavarian United

In front of their rain-soaked home fans at Heartland Value Fund Stadium in Glendale, Wis., Bavarian United won the 2022 USASA Amateur Cup title on Sunday. They defeated Northern Virginia FC (Eastern Premier Soccer League), 1-0, on a 17th minute goal by Patrick Coleman. The win gives the Bavarians six Amateur Cup titles, which is tied with Ponta Delgada for second-most in history.

By lifting the Fritz Marth Amateur Cup trophy, Bavarian United qualifies for the 2023 Lamar Hunt US Open Cup. Bavarian United, previously known as Bavarian SC before a recent merger with local side Inter Northshore FC, has competed in the US Open Cup numerous times since it was founded in 1929. This includes a runner-up finish in 1994 and a run to the Semifinals in 1993. This will be the club’s ninth time competing in the tournament in the Modern Era (1995-present). The last time the team competed in the tournament in 2019 was as the defending national amateur champions, the first team to earn qualification via that method.

#USASA National Amateur Cup Final: @BavarianSC_Mens (WI) 1:0 @NovaFc (VA) – 17' GOAL BAVARIANS! Patrick Coleman gets the hosts on the board! (Video from @timharvFC) || BROADCAST (ELEVEN SPORTS) >> https://t.co/62vpPlxO1Y pic.twitter.com/MrvmyalS01

— TheCup.us (@usopencup) August 7, 2022

While they had the advantage of playing at home, the Bavarians, led by head coach Tom Zaiss, had a difficult task to lift the trophy. They had to beat Region 4 champions Los Angeles Strikers, 2-0, in the Semifinals on Saturday night, and then turn around and play the championship game on Sunday afternoon. Northern Virginia FC, coached by Kareem Sheta tied Region 3 champ ASC New Stars (TX), 2-2, after 120 minutes and needed a 3-1 penalty kick shootout win to advance to the Sunday’s final.

The Amateur Cup Final between the Region 1 champions NoVa and Region 2 champions Milwaukee Bavarians kicked off at 2 p.m. local time with a packed Bavarian fan base in attendance. The match was a battle of recent champions from sister leagues. NoVa won the 2022 EPSL championship earlier this summer while Bavarian won the Midwest Premier League’s West Conference. Both leagues are connected as amateur affiliates of the professionally sanctioned third division National Independent Soccer Association (NISA).

As the home team came out in a 4-3-3 with a minor adjustment in personnel from the semifinal, with Braden Andryk for Dogara Zamani in that starting 11.

The forecast predicted rain throughout the afternoon, with spurts of rain that brought a chilly and slick surface compared to the scorching heat on Saturday. Bavarians’ theme of the weekend was a tactically sound defensive unit. Augie Rey remained calm and provided the back line with the confidence needed to defend strongly. He ended the weekend with two shutouts.

“Not getting scored on in two games is a great feeling. As a goalkeeper, this is what we dream of,” said Rey, who played his college ball at the University of Milwaukee. “I wouldn’t be as successful without my back line holding it down defensively, they make it easy for me to do my job.”

Jake Streicher, Brett Dietz, and Alex Mirsberger provided the security needed to keep the clean sheets.

Captain Dietz lapping up the victory! #BavNation #9times pic.twitter.com/JHV2AgaUi6

— Bavarian United Men's Team (@BavarianSC_Mens) August 7, 2022

The first 15 minutes were back and forth. The Bavarians’ defensive line took advantage of countering opportunities while NoVa FC dominated possession, swinging the ball from side to side.

The lone goal of the game was scored by Patrick Coleman, assisted by Logan Andryk, in the 17th minute. Coleman was on the end of many excellent Bavarian chances in the final third, and was able to put away the game’s lone goal. NoVa’s Illias Laghjibi, Eric Cavillo, and Johnathan Arguta all had shots on goal in the first half but none were trouble for Rey in net.

After opening the goal, NoVa continued to stay aggressive. Jean Philippe, Eric Cavillo, and Illias Laghjibi attempted to create all the opportunities they could. However the stiff defensive presence of the Bavarians stayed strong throughout the first half. Cavillo created multiple long-distance opportunities for NoVa FC. In the 13th minute, he hit the post with the ball going wide.

Virginia came out in the same 4-3-3 but with seven different starters than the semifinal. Notable missing names include CM Brandon Williamson, forward KJ Nadeau, and forward Vagner Marques, who all scored or assisted in Saturday’s Semifinal.

“It backfired a little bit because the guys that came off the bench didn’t bring too much of a spark, but it’s always tough to play a back to back,” said NoVa FC head coach Kareem Sheta. “We made one mistake and they capitalized on it. I think the ball was pretty much on their end the rest of the game.”

Bavarian United celebrate the club's 2022 USASA Amatuer Cup title after a 1-0 win over Northern Virginia FC on Aug. 7, 2022. Photo: Bavarian United
Bavarian United celebrate the club’s 2022 USASA Amatuer Cup title after a 1-0 win over Northern Virginia FC on Aug. 7, 2022. Photo: Bavarian United

Williamson, Maquis, Desouza, Ahmed, Omar, Ismael, Sheta, Nadeau all checked in for the second half. With the resiliency NoVa has shown throughout the season it seemed as if the game could flip but the Bavarians stiffened up their defensive presence. Jean Philippe’s height, stature, and presence was felt throughout the match. In the 49th minute, he recorded another shot on target. Directly after Nick Wilson’s header over Emmanuel Vargas was cleared De Orio in a save to keep the NoVa side alive.

Coach Zaiss kept the lineup fresh with subs of Buran Huseini, Ivan Cuellar, and Dogara Zomani all entered in the first 15 minutes of the second half. Johnny De Souza had a breakaway opportunity with keeper Augie Rey where the shot was pushed into the side netting.

In the 50th minute, the Bavarians’ greatest opportunity of the second half was Nick Wilson’s header over keeper Emmanuel Vargas which was cleared right before going over the goal line by Franki De Orio.

Ten minutes later, in the 75th minute, NoVa FC had it’s best chance come from Nadeau. Williamson, on a break, drew the defenders in to make it a 3-v-2. He past it off to his right to a waiting Nadeau whose shot hit off the the post. Williamson tried to knock in the rebound but sent the ball over the crossbar.

Northern Virginia continued to press the back line of Bavarians toward the end of the match but their best chances to equalize were behind them. Andryk received a yellow card in the 83th minute after an accumulation of fouls. The last chance for NoVa to tie the game came in the 84th minute after the subsequent free kick from right outside the box was placed into the wall. Bavarians stood their ground and weathered the storm, figuratively and weather wise, after several long balls through the air came threatening into the box were cleared.

I promise you that a few beers were harmed during the filming of this video pic.twitter.com/HLG85u2PZe

— Bavarian United Men's Team (@BavarianSC_Mens) August 7, 2022

The win marks the ninth star above the team’s logo, representing their nine national championships. In addition to the six Amateur Cup titles (1976, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2018, 2022), they have two USASA Open Cup titles (2003 & 2009, known as the Werner Fricker Cup), and a 2018 UPSL title.

There were multiple players involved in Sunday’s Final that were part of the 2018 team that last lifted a trophy: Jake Streicher, Brett Dietz, Logan and Braden Andryk, Nick Wilson, Augie Rey, and Dogara Zamani.

“Today was a battle, you know you need some luck. They had a bit of a longer day yesterday and have been on a run winning three or four titles,” said Zaiss. “It’s always great to win regardless of playing at home, playing in front of your home fans it always means a little more, it would be great to celebrate with friends and family at home.”

Filed Under: Amateur Cup, Feature - Main, Feature - Qualifying, Featured Post - Main, Featured Post - US Open Cup Qualifying, US Open Cup, US Open Cup Central, US Open Cup Qualifying Tagged With: 2022 USASA Amateur Cup, 2023 US Open Cup, Bavarian SC, Northern Virginia FC

NoVa FC, Bavarian SC advance to Sunday’s Amateur Cup Final in Milwaukee

August 7, 2022 by Ty Stulo

Fans at Heartland Value Fund Stadium cheer following the Milwaukee Bavarian’s win over LA Strikers in the USASA National Amateur Cup semifinals (Credit: Ty Stulo)

The USASA National Amateur Cup Finals kicked off with the semifinals on Saturday Aug. 6 at Heartland Value Fund Stadium in Glendale, Wisconsin. Winners from each of the four regions gathered to compete for a spot in the USASA National Amateur Final on Sunday. Two quality contests saw Northern Virginia FC and hosts Milwaukee Bavarian Soccer Club inch one step closer to a 2023 US Open Cup spot.

The first semifinal between Region 1 champions Northern Virginia FC (NoVa FC), led by head coach Kareem Sheta and Region 3 champions ASC New Stars (TX), led by head coach Lucas Simon, finished regulation at 2-2. Two team’s with previous US Open Cup experience looked prime to head for penalties as fatigue took over. The scorching 90 degree weather slowed the game down and during extra time neither team had any quality chances to score. After a 2-2 draw after extra time, NoVa FC punched their ticket to Sunday’s final with a 3-1 result in penalties. Northern Virginia will face the Bavarians on their home field in the championship game, who blanked the Los Angeles Strikers 2-0.

The first 20 minutes were evenly matched with possession. ASC continued to press the backline of NoVa, getting called for four offside calls in the first half hour. Despite ASC looking like the more threatening team, their opponent was the first to get on the board. In the 32nd minute, NoVa’s Johnny DeSouza bent in a corner with the inswing of his left foot. Lias Laghjibi got his head to it and gave NoVa the lead, 1-0.

(READ ALSO: 2022 Meet the Underdogs: Northern Virginia FC back in US Open Cup after two decades)

The momentum of the match shifted from there as two minutes later. After a ball was served into the box, ASC’s Miguel Repata gained control of both it and the game, placing it in the net’s corner. The game was tied, 1-1.

The hectic scoring wasn’t over. In the 42nd minute, NoVa’s Vagner Marques sent a shot high into the net from the six yard box. Brandon Williamson beat two defenders and passed it off for the assist.

42’ – GOALLL
Vagner Marques gives us the lead once again after Brandon Williamson finds his late run into the box

2-1 | @USASARegion1 pic.twitter.com/eRLzJ4OCUe

— NoVa Fc (@NovaFc) August 6, 2022

The game headed into halftime with a 2-1 NoVa Fc lead, and as the second half began both teams were fighting for the position as the defensive pressure intensified between each side. A chippy tone fell over the game, combined with the heat affecting team’s rhythm. Despite that the referee only gave out his first yellow card in the 52nd minute to Aaron Etienne of NoVa FC.

Shortly after, in the 61st minute Mohammad Hanif assisted Carl Rasmus Forsten to tie the game, 2-2. A quick restart off a free kick allowed ASC to move the ball around the NoVa backline. Eventually it fell to the right side where it was crossed in towards the opposite post. Hanif headed the ball there back towards the right post, where Forsten slide on the ball to knock it in.

(READ ALSO: 2012 Meet The USASA: ASC New Stars from Houston, TX)

After this the match quickly became defensively-oriented, as each team played a 4-4-2. In this mindset the NoVa side made an emphasis to have a defensive midfielder in front of their backline. Center backs on each side Eric Robertson (ASG) and Franki De Souza (NoVa) had key clearances both laying out their bodies to stop close opportunities.

The final 30 minutes of regulation was filled with stiff defensive emphasis. The end of regulation finished with a prime opportunity for ASC with a 1-v-1 opportunity from Emmanuel Usen that NoVa FC keeper Emmanuel Vargas pushed wide.

After a slow end to regulation, extra time had a five minute span that threatened ASC, after creating two corner kicks in the 94th and 95th minutes. Virginia’s Jean Ayolmjong had the best chance of overtime getting his head on a corner that was saved by Solomon Moctezuma. There were no other shots on goal or scoring opportunities for either side. Right before extra time ended ASG substituted Solomon Moctezuma out and replaced him with Emmanuel Frias for penalty shootout considerations.

The penalty shootout showed its fate quickly.

First was Miguel Repata, the only player from ASC who converted their kick from the spot, opened up the spectacle. Things went downhill after that when Eric Robertson’s penalty was saved by Vargas before Bryan Celis’s attempt went high. On the other side NoVa was clinical. Brandon Williams placed his shot in the bottom left to open the shootout. Both Jonathan Arguta and William Zarco subsequently converted their attempts as well making it 3-1 after three rounds.

Needing to make his Jose Alvarez skied his shot over both the crossbar and field’s fense to give NoVa the win.

that moment, yes THAT moment pic.twitter.com/DQK2SZSV2K

— NoVa Fc (@NovaFc) August 6, 2022

”Our guys did great and fought as much as they could, our opponent gave us a run for our money,” said New Stars head coach Lucas Simon. “Losing in penalty kicks is always tough. We wish them the best.”

NoVa FC moves on to the Final after winning all of their USASA Region I tournament games in penalty kick fashion.

”Honestly we didn’t play our best game today, we just needed to keep the ball, it was hot, hot, hot,” said NoVa FC’s Brandon Williamson, who assisted on the team’s first goal and was a vital part of the success in the midfield. “We were running a lot, create chances and not giving up the ball, we were giving it away a lot toward the end. My emotions the whole time even before penalties, I told everybody to chill out, Eman is going to do this thing he’ll save or two and all we have to do is put it in the back of the net, and it’s game.

Williamson added: “We started progressively getting better and I wish we could have gotten out at the beginning a lot better today. The message to the team for tomorrow but is to hold the team accountable, it’s a final right? The team is going to be better, it’s the final. It’s going to be a big game but we have to get the dub.”

The second Semifinal match between hosts and Region 2 champions Bavarian Soccer Club, coached by Tom Zaiss, and the Region 4 winners Los Ángeles Strikers (CA), coached by Victor Lorenzo, finished 2-0 in favor of the home team. The Bavarians came out victorious with a solid group effort to defend their home soil.

“We have an advantage playing at home, but also a disadvantage because of a loose team environment,” said Bavarians head coach Tom Zaiss before the game. “The first 10-15 minutes are the most important because this is a team we have never played. Handling the emotional impact first and realizing it is win or go home, we have to execute.”

The first half proved to be a feeling out process between the two cross country sides with no shots on goal through 35 minutes played.

The Strikers came out in a 4-4-2 with heavy rotations between their midfielders attempting to find channels through the middle. They held a majority of possession through the first 25 with Axel Mendez, Jonathan Grado, and Jordan Lopez controlling possession and attempting to find scoring opportunities. The Bavarians in their 4-3-3, with their wingers mainly tucked in providing a solid defensive unit, was difficult for the Strikers to penetrate. Bavarian Logan Andryk was crucial in the counter efforts moving forward early in the match. His willingness to take defenders on and make passes through the channels made the Bavarians threatening in the final 3rd. After three yellow cards getting shown to the Bavarian side in the first half (Dogara Zamani 8′, Alex Mirsberger 21′, Logan Andryk 41′) halftime came with a goal scoring chance from BSC’s Patrick Coleman. Dogara Zamani passed it off to Coleman on a 3v2 as his shot went high and wide.

The Bavarians started the second half with urgency as they began pressing the backline of the Strikers looking for scoring opportunities. They finally broke through in the 49th minute with a ball to Nick Wilson near the half line. He turned and played a perfectly weighted ball 40 yards to Zamani who found Wilson again. He sprinted from midfield and placed the ball in the bottom left up the net to go up, 1-0.

“I found the ball in the middle of the park, they gave me a lot of space I was trying to find an option and touch a touch found him on the long ball,” Wilson said after the game. “(Dogara) did a great job facing the guy up, I was screaming for the ball he found me and I slotted it back post. It was instinct, as a striker I have to get involved in that play.”

Coach Zaiss from Bavarian started substituting quickly after the first goal. Players like Braden Andryk and Gutierrez replaced the offensive threats Wilson and Zamani. As frustration built for the Strikers Jorge Contreras was shown a yellow card in the 56th minute. After that foul, Alejandro Pacheco placed a freekick back post where Alex Mirsberger headed it home in the 56th minute to make it 2-0.

Los Ángeles responded with a 15 minute window where they continued to stay aggressive, creating chances and holding possession. Larry Lopez shot on goal in the 64th minute but wasn’t able to convert. They continued to swing balls in the middle of the field where the veteran BSC backline of Jake Streicher and Captain Brett Dietz cleared the ball. This combined with excellent goalkeeping by Augie Rey who displayed a perfect clean sheet performance in the evening.

In the 73rd minute the Strikers were still pushing aggressively as Jordan Lopez headed a swinger on frame but was saved by Rey. The game got chippy as the LA side’s frustration poured, drawing a couple corners through the 70th – 76th minutes but all were all cleared by the Bavarians. This culminated with a Strikers’ bench player being shown a red card for verbal altercations.

he backline of Bavarians and tactical approach wore down the Strikers and proved to pay dividends as the final whistle rang out. The hosts advance, 2-0, to Sunday’s final. They look to become the first team to qualify for the US Open Cup as National Amateur Cup champions on two seperate occasions. They were the first team qualify for the tournament as champions after winning the 2018 edition.

The USASA National Amateur Final between NoVa Fc vs Bavarian United is scheduled for Sunday, August 7th at 2:00 p.m Central time. Fans not able to attend in person can watch it live on Eleven Sports. It will be a high level matchup between two of the nations most dominant clubs. High level players on both sides with experience backgrounds and both sides are very well coached between Tom Zaiss and Kareem Sheta.

FULL MATCH BROADCASTS:

  • ASC New Stars (TX) vs Northern Virginia FC (VA)
  • LA Strikers FC (CA) vs Milwaukee Bavarians SC (WI)

Filed Under: Amateur Cup, Feature - Main, Feature - Qualifying, US Open Cup, US Open Cup Central, US Open Cup Qualifying Tagged With: 2022 USASA Amateur Cup, 2023 US Open Cup, ASC New Stars, Bavarian SC, LA Strikers, National Amateur Cup, Northern Virginia FC, NoVa FC

2019 US Open Cup Round 1: Forward Madison overcomes plucky amateurs from Bavarian SC

May 8, 2019 by Matt Schroeder

Players from Forward Madison (right) and Bavarian SC race to the ball in Tuesday's First Round match in the 2019 US Open Cup. Photo: Forward Madison

Players from Forward Madison (right) and Bavarian SC race to the ball in Tuesday's First Round match in the 2019 US Open Cup. Photo: Forward Madison
Players from Forward Madison (right) and Bavarian SC race to the ball in Tuesday’s First Round match in the 2019 US Open Cup. Photo: Forward Madison

Plucky underdog stories are the heart of the Lamar Hunt US Open Cup.

Amateur side Bavarians SC from Milwaukee, with eight stars on their kits and a 90-year history, took that spirit into a first-round matchup with pro side Forward Madison FC from USL League One on Tuesday night in Milwaukee. They were reminded that while plucky is great, often it just is no match for a more polished professional unit.

Forward Madison rode first-half goals from Brandon Eaton and Jiro Barriga Toyama to a comfortable 2-0 victory in chilly, windy conditions at Uihlein Soccer Park before a crowd of about 400. It was just the second time in the Modern Era (1995-present) that two Wisconsin teams had met in the US Open Cup (2003 Round 3: Bavarian SC vs. Milwaukee Wave United).

With the win, Forward Madison visit USL Championship squad El Paso Locomotive at 7 p.m. MDT on May 15 in the second round.

The All-Wisconsin derby proved fairly one-sided. Congrats to @ForwardMSNFC on their first Open Cup win & cheers to @BavarianMajors – we hope to see you all again real soon. ?

0-2 | #USOC2019 – Highlights⤵️ pic.twitter.com/IFezDtPyjQ

— U.S. Open Cup (@opencup) May 8, 2019


Sporting a 2-2-1 record in their debut season, Forward Madison deployed a side without Paulo Junior and three other regular starters who are on loan from Minnesota United of Major League Soccer. Despite that, they controlled possession through the first half, playing with a 20-mph wind at their backs.

The first goal, however, sprung out of very little. Eaton spied some space about 20 yards out in front of goal. His curling shot was not particularly hard, but it just seemed to catch Bavarians keeper Augie Rey leaning the wrong way and the visitors led 1-0 on 9 minutes.

Bavarians avoided big mistakes, but were punished giving the ball away in midfield later in the first half. Don Smart, formerly of Indy Eleven, and Milwaukee native JC Banks worked together to counter, and Smart’s ball across the goal found Toyama, who poked it in for a 2-0 lead in the 36th minute.

A promising spell of second-half possession by Bavarians — who were playing their first competitive match of the season — ultimately yielded nothing. Madison was too organized and too physically and technically superior; the pink-clad team never made the error under pressure in the back that would have led to a chance for the amateur side.

The Bavarians didn’t inconvenience Forward Madison keeper Brian Sylvestre until less than 10 minutes remaining, but then did so twice in two minutes. Logan Andryk battled to find a little space from his defender inside the area, but his effort from a tight angle to the left scooted across the face of goal. Substitute Leki Prpa had a crack from a similarly tight angle on the right in the 83rd minute, but Sylvestre turned it away.

Forward Madison comfortably saw the match out from there, earning their first victory in the US Open Cup. The Bavarians, who are the defending UPSL National Champions, return to league play on Saturday against DeKalb County United.

Filed Under: 2019 US Open Cup, Feature - Main, US Open Cup Tagged With: 2019 US Open Cup, Bavarian SC, Forward Madison FC

2019 Meet the Underdogs: Milwaukee’s Bavarian Soccer Club, proudly amateur since 1929

May 7, 2019 by Eric Anderson

Players from Bavarian SC celebrate the club's 2018 USASA Amateur Cup championship with a 2-0 win over West Chester United. Photo: Matt Schroeder

Players from Bavarian SC celebrate the club's 2018 USASA Amateur Cup championship with a 2-0 win over West Chester United. Photo: Matt Schroeder
Players from Bavarian SC celebrate the club’s 2018 USASA Amateur Cup championship with a 2-0 win over West Chester United. Photo: Matt Schroeder

Call them professionally amateur.

Milwaukee’s Bavarian SC has long been among the country’s top amateur clubs – their crest is packed with eight stars, each representing a national championship won by the club founded by German immigrants in 1929 as Fussball Club Bayern and re-named in 1956.

The two most recent stars were earned last August when the Bavarians won their fifth National Amateur Cup title and then claimed their first United Premier Soccer League (UPSL) championship a week later.

That Amateur Cup championship gave the Bavarians an automatic berth in the first round of the Lamar Hunt US Open Cup, and they will play host to USL League One’s Forward Madison FC on Tuesday night at Uihlein Soccer Park in Milwaukee in what is being billed as the “Dairyland Derby.”

The Bavarians, whose Heartland Fund Value Stadium about 15 minutes away in Glendale didn’t meet all the US Soccer Federation standards for hosting an Open Cup match, embrace their non-professional status.

“Some people shy away from it, but we’re proud to admit that we’re amateur,” coach Patrick Hodgins said. “We’re proud to call ourselves amateur soccer players, and a lot of our guys take that to heart.

“People look at it as a slight to call yourself amateur but it has nothing to do with our quality. I think if you look at the teams we play and the people who have played us, I think they will have the same opinions of us.”

To further that point, the team created a unique hype video ahead of the season. It showcases some players’ day-to-day lives in addition to their passion for soccer – including training outdoors in the snowy Wisconsin weather.

“There’s something to be said about guys who aren’t getting paid who want to show up twice a week and go on road trips and play all these games with each other,” Hodgins said. “There’s a lot to be said about that.”

?2019 HYPE VIDEO ALERT?

Being part of the Bavarian Soccer Club Men’s team means we are profesional…ly amateur. Just a bunch of guys with day jobs that like playing soccer. Come see us play in 2019, we’d like that ? pic.twitter.com/dLxUBRx1Dy

— Bavarians SC Men’s | UPSL (@BavarianMajors) April 4, 2019

Take, for example, two of the Bavarians’ most influential players, brothers Logan and Braden Andryk.

Hailing from nearby Hartland, both played high school soccer at powerhouse Milwaukee Marquette, club soccer with FC Wisconsin Nationals and starred at NCAA Division III Milwaukee School of Engineering.

Their college coach was former US national team defender Jimmy Banks, who was 54 when he died of cancer April 26. Banks’ son JC is a Forward Madison midfielder who is well known to many of the Bavarians’ players.

Bavarian SC vs Forward MadisonLogan Andryk set program records with 61 goals, 60 assists, 182 points and 15 game-winning goals. Braden Andryk finished his career two years later with 70 goals, 38 assists, 178 points and 17 game-winners. The brothers rank first and second in Raiders history in each of those attacking categories.

But before they head out to the Bavarians’ training sessions twice a week, the Andryk brothers have plenty of other work to do. Logan, 24, is in medical school at the Medical College of Wisconsin, while 22-year-old Braden has nearly completed his master’s degree in engineering at MSOE.

“I might be their coach, but I would put Logan and Braden Andryk up against a lot of players,” Hodgins said. “They’ve focused more on the academic side of things, and that’s good for them, but I think if professional teams were to give them the opportunity that they would succeed at a higher level.

“I think for them, an opportunity to challenge themselves and see, in a one-game situation, how they stack up.”

Braden Andryk was named the 2018 UPSL Spring Season Most Valuable Player after helping lead the Bavarians to a 15-0-0 overall record.

“He’s got great pace,” midfielder Scott Lorenz said of Braden Andryk. “He’s been absolutely crucial for us over the past three years – he leads the team in both goals and assists over the past three years, and it’s not even close … He’s definitely a focal point for our attack.”

Bavarian SC poses for a team photo after defeating West Chester United 2-0 to win the 2018 USASA Amateur Cup championship. Photo: Matt Schroeder
Bavarian SC poses for a team photo after defeating West Chester United 2-0 to win the 2018 USASA Amateur Cup championship. Photo: Matt Schroeder

Hodgins added: “He just has this knack for scoring big goals. He’s always come up big whenever we’ve needed him. He plays with a passion. He just gets after it, he tackles well, he does everything we need him to do, he doesn’t play with an ego – he’s never been a “me” guy, he likes to play for the team.”

According to Hodgins and Lorenz, the Bavarians won’t change their style of play against Forward Madison.

“That’s not being disrespectful to Forward Madison – they’re a good side and they’re coming in as the favorite, and that’s the way it should be,” Hodgins said. “We just feel comfortable playing the way that we play with the guys that play for us … That’s what we feel gives us the best chance to get a result. We don’t train enough, we don’t play enough to put in a new system.”

That means expect to see a 4-3-3 or 4-2-3-1 formation from the hosts.

“We love to go forward. Our team is built with strength on the wing, with speed,” Lorenz said. “We don’t mind defending, but once we create that turnover, we like going as quickly as possible to potentially catch them out. Now, having said that, we’ll see how the game looks. If we had our way, it would be to get it to the wings, create those 1-on-1s and see what happens.”

The 31-year-old Lorenz is one of the former pro players who brings a calming presence to the Bavarians. He spent time with Major League Soccer’s Sporting Kansas City, the second-tier NSC Minnesota Stars and the Fort Lauderdale Strikers in the North American Soccer League – his coach during the 2012 season in Florida was Daryl Shore, now at the helm of Forward Madison.

Bavarian SC celebrates the club's 2003 Amateur Cup title. Photo: Bavarian SC
Bavarian SC celebrates the club’s 2003 Amateur Cup title. Photo: Bavarian SC

“I’m hoping to be in the lineup ,” said Lorenz, who earned a business management degree from the University of Wisconsin in Madison while playing Division I college soccer and now is the development director for a co-working space in downtown Milwaukee. “I’m going to go ahead and give it everything I’ve got. I’m excited to play. I think it’s a great opportunity. And I think it’s going to be a ton of fun for the state of Wisconsin.”

Another ex-pro who figures to be in the lineup is Tighe Dombrowski, whose family has a long history in the Open Cup.

He played with the San Jose Earthquakes in MLS and the Minnesota Thunder in USL First Division and with Swedish club IK Sirius FK before returning to the Milwaukee area. Now 37, Dombrowski usually sits deep in the Bavarians’ midfield.

“Tighe creating that tempo really allows the midfielders ahead of him to be a little more fluid and creative and maybe take some chances,” Lorenz said of his midfield mate, “because he brings such a good presence to the game with his positioning and his communication.”

Tuesday’s Open Cup match will be the first competitive game of the season for the Bavarians, who rescheduled their UPSL Midwest Conference Central Division season opener last Saturday to accommodate a regional Amateur Cup match, only to then end up receiving a forfeit in the game.

A photo from a Bavarian SC game from the 1978 US Open Cup.
A photo from a Bavarian SC game from the 1978 US Open Cup.

As Hodgins mentioned, the Bavarians know they’re not the favorites.

“Despite our recent success – and we had a lot of fun last year getting a couple of trophies – we are, at the end of the day, an amateur team full of guys who have professional careers outside of soccer,” Lorenz said. “We are underdogs. We’re not going to carry that too hard on ourselves, because we do believe that we have talent, but the Madison team, they train every day, they’re getting paid to play the game, their commitment level is so much different than ours. … These guys are professional, they’re out here to play the game as a career, and we’re very aware of that. We’re going to give them our respect, absolutely, and try to make it as fun of a game as we can.

“Let’s go out, let’s have some fun, let’s see what we can do and not hole up in a shell, not sit in the front of the box and let’s see where we stand.”

And, in a one-off cup match, anything can happen, right?

“People like a good underdog story, and this tournament really creates that atmosphere for most of the games – especially the early-round games – there’s going to be a clear favorite and there’s going to be a clear underdog. So you have the opportunity to root for the underdog,” Lorenz said. “And there’s usually one story and one underdog that pushes all the way through. It would be incredible if it’s us – if we can get a result (Tuesday) and continue to go on and play, it would be fantastic.

“If not, we’ll take a look at it, try to learn some things from it and try to better ourselves for the rest of our season in UPSL and Amateur Cup. But you’d better believe that we’ll be rooting for all the underdogs as well – whether we’re still in the tournament or not.”

Filed Under: 2019 US Open Cup, Feature - Main, Feature - Qualifying, Meet the Underdogs, US Open Cup, US Open Cup Qualifying Tagged With: 2019 US Open Cup, Bavarian SC, Meet the Underdogs

Bavarian SC qualify for 2019 US Open Cup by winning Amateur Cup title

August 5, 2018 by Matt Schroeder

Bavarian SC poses for a team photo after defeating West Chester United 2-0 to win the 2018 USASA Amateur Cup championship. Photo: Matt Schroeder

Bavarian SC poses for a team photo after defeating West Chester United 2-0 to win the 2018 USASA Amateur Cup championship. Photo: Matt Schroeder
Bavarian SC poses for a team photo after defeating West Chester United 2-0 to win the 2018 USASA Amateur Cup championship. Photo: Matt Schroeder

Bavarian SC lost the 2017 U.S. Amateur Cup final on their own turf just outside of Milwaukee, as New York’s Lansdowne Bhoys prevailed in a 10-round penalty shootout.

Bavarians starting goalkeeper Jim Jones could only watch that game after picking up a red card in the semifinal.

On Saturday, Jones was back for the 2018 final, again on the Bavarians’ home field, and proved his worth.

Jones’ two larcenous second-half stops backed up a pair of first-half set piece goals as the Bavarians defeated West Chester United (PA) 2-0 for their fifth U.S. Amateur Cup title.

While the US Soccer Federation has not announced the format for the 2019 US Open Cup, United State Adult Soccer Association (USASA) President John Motta confirmed that the 2018 Amateur Cup champion will earn an automatic berth into next year’s Open Cup tournament.

It all begins tonight, who will raise the @USAdultSoccer National Amateur Cup? @West @WCUSC @BavarianMajors, Kickers FC or the San Nicolas FC Club? $15,000 and an automatic slot in the 2019 @usopencup first round. pic.twitter.com/Ls6uqCjXih

— John Paul Motta (@JohnPMotta) August 3, 2018

The Philadelphia area side controlled most of the first half-hour, driven by the skill and energy of Matt Greer and Lucas Hodges in the midfield. Greer took the game’s first swipe on eight minutes, fizzing a low shot wide.

Three minutes later, he danced out of a tackle at midfield and played a through ball that Jones was forced to come out and collect. Greer continued to create havoc through about 20 minutes.

Players from Bavarian SC celebrate the club's 2018 USASA Amateur Cup championship with a 2-0 win over West Chester United. Photo: Matt Schroeder
Players from Bavarian SC celebrate the club’s 2018 USASA Amateur Cup championship with a 2-0 win over West Chester United. Photo: Matt Schroeder

“They’re young guys, and they’re fit,” said Bavarians coach Alex Toth of the West Chester side. “Being college guys, most of them, they’re coming out buzzing around the first 15-20 minutes. We look at it as if we can survive the first 20 minutes without any disasters, everything kind of resets.”

Toth also switched some players around in the formation, and the game leveled out a bit until the Bavarians drew a foul about 45 yards out in the 30th minute. Veteran midfielder Tighe Dombrowski curled a ball into the area, where Dogara Zamani glanced a header inside the far post for the opening goal.

About three minutes later, another free kick from almost exactly on the opposite side of the field was knocked down across the box. Vuk Latinovich got to it first and whipped it past Jonny Paletar to double the lead.

The second half was left to Jones, a Bavarians veteran who played collegiately at Milwaukee-based NAIA school Cardinal Stritch.

Greer pirouetted away from a defender and into the area in the 52nd minute. He rifled a right-footed shot from about 15 yards, but Jones got both hands up and parried it away.

In the 64th, Greer tested Jones further. He ran onto a square ball just outside the 18-yard box and unleashed a screamer. Jones dropped quickly down to his left and again thumped it wide.

“My whole thing this tournament was just trying to see the ball early, that’s what my coach was saying, see the ball early,” Jones said. “I was very confident, I was watching the ball and I was very lucky that where he hit (the second shot) to, I was moving that direction.”

Jones needed the crossbar and a bit of good fortune to preserve the shutout in the 78th. A free kick from about 20 yards caught the underside of the woodwork, ricocheted off Jones’ back and finally was cleared from danger.

West Chester United, which had placed third in the NPSL’s Keystone Division, advanced to the title game with a 2-1 extra time defeat of Kickers FC of Florida on Friday night. Bavarians, which won the USPL Midwest Conference North Division with a 10-0-0 mark, also needed extra time to topple San Nicolas FC of California 2-1.

San Nicolas won Saturday’s third-place match over Kickers FC, 3-1.

Congrats Bavarian Major Team, Coach Hodgins, Toth and Zaiss. YOU are the 2018 #USAmateurCup Champions and claim a 7th Star for our crest!
Thank you to all our supporters young and old that came out and proudly wore your BSC jersey and cheered the team to victory. Go BLUE! pic.twitter.com/XMwwSa9FrR

— Bavarian Soccer Club (@BavarianSoccer) August 5, 2018

Great job Coach Hodgins, you are a class act! pic.twitter.com/rlf6tL82gA

— Bavarian Soccer Club (@BavarianSoccer) August 5, 2018

Filed Under: 2019 US Open Cup, Amateur Cup, Feature - Main, Feature - Qualifying, US Open Cup Qualifying Tagged With: 2019 US Open Cup qualifying, Bavarian SC, West Chester United

Things you should know about the Second Round of the US Open Cup (Modern Era)

May 17, 2016 by Josh Hakala

Kiley Couch of Dallas Roma FC (left) challenges for the ball against Romario of Miami FC during their Second Round match during the 2006 US Open Cup. Photo: Dallas Roma FC

 

FC Cincinnati fans cheer on their team during a Second Round match in the 2018 US Open Cup against Detroit City FC. Photo: Brett Hansbauer | 4th Floor Creative
FC Cincinnati fans cheer on their team during a Second Round match in the 2018 US Open Cup against Detroit City FC. Photo: Brett Hansbauer | 4th Floor Creative

In 2002, no team below the Second Division advanced beyond the Second Round.

The Modern Era (1995-present) record for single-game attendance is held by FC Cincinnati when they had an announced attendance of 12,790 at Nippert Stadium (University of Cincinnati) when they defeated AFC Cleveland (NPSL) 1-0 in extra time on May 17, 2017. The record for average attendance in the Second Round is 3,019 (16 games) from the 2001 tournament.

The El Paso Patriots recorded the biggest rout in the Second Round since 1995, defeating the Arizona Sahuaros 9-1 in 1998. Kirk Wilson scored three times to lead the Patriots. Matching the eight-goal margin, the most lopsided shutout came in 2001 when DC United of MLS trampled the New Jersey Stallions of the D3 Pro League 8-0.

Kiley Couch of Dallas Roma FC (left) challenges for the ball against Romario of Miami FC during their Second Round match during the 2006 US Open Cup. Photo: Dallas Roma FC
Kiley Couch of Dallas Roma FC (left) challenges for the ball against Romario of Miami FC during their Second Round match during the 2006 US Open Cup. Photo: Dallas Roma FC

From 1996-2013, only three Open Division Local clubs won Second Round games. Bavarian SC defeated the Reading Rage (D-3 Pro League) 1-0 in the Second Round of 2003. Dallas Roma FC became the first USASA team to defeat a second division team when they eliminated Miami FC (USL First Division) 1-0 in 2006. Cal FC traveled across the country and upset the Wilmington Hammerheads of USL Pro (Div. 3 pro) 4-0 to reach Round 3 in 2013. However, in 2014, that mark was blown out of the water, as a record five Open Division Local teams reached the Third Round: New York Greek American Atlas (Region I), RWB Adria (Region II), North Texas Rayados (Region III), Des Moines Menace (Region II), and PSA Elite (Region IV) who advanced after the San Diego Flash forfeited. The reason for this increase was due, in large part, to the change in format which saw an increase to 80 teams, and an abbreviated opening round (8 games). Of this group, only RWB Adria and PSA Elite began in the First Round, so the rest of the teams only had to win one game.

Open Division teams winning Second Round games doesn’t happen often, but it’s not unheard of during the Modern Era. 41 USL League Two (formerly PDL) teams have made it to the Third Round in the Modern Era. The Flint City Bucks (formerly Michigan Bucks) have done it more than anyone else, advancing to Round 3 six times. 19 Open Division Local teams have reached the Third Round. The NPSL has had nine teams win Second Round games, with four of them all coming in 2018: Brooklyn Italians (2014), Chattanooga FC (2014, 2015, 2016), Elm City Express (2018), Miami United (2018), FC Wichita (2018), Jacksonville Armada (2018), Orange County FC (2019).

The US Soccer Federation increased the number of teams to 80 in 2014, creating the largest Second Round in the Modern Era (and quite possibly of all time) with 24 games on the schedule. One of the games was forfeited, and one was moved to May 13, leaving a record 22 games to be played on May 14. That record was broken as the tournament continued to expand in 2017 when there were 26 games played, and then again in 2022 when 31 games were on the schedule.

In 2013, a record four Open Division clubs advanced to Round 3. The following year, due to a change in format and an increase in amateur entries, 12 amateur clubs reached the Third Round, which remains a Modern Era record.

1997: Central Coast Roadrunners
1999: Mid-Michigan Bucks
2000: Mid-Michigan Bucks, Chicago Sockers
2001: Seattle Sounders Select
2003: Mid-Michigan Bucks, Fresno Fuego
2004: Chicago Fire Reserves, Cape Cod Crusaders, Boulder Rapids Reserves, Carolina Dynamo
2005: Ocean City Barons, Des Moines Menace
2006: Michigan Bucks, Des Moines Menace, Carolina Dynamo
2009: Ocean City Barons
2011: Chicago Fire PDL, Kitsap Pumas
2012: Michigan Bucks, Ventura County Fusion,
2013: Des Moines Menace, FC Tucson, Ocean City Nor’easters, Reading United AC
2014: Reading United AC, New York Greek American Atlas SC, RWB Adria, Orlando City U23s, Brooklyn Italians, Laredo Heat, North Texas Rayados, Fresno Fuego, PSA Elite, Baltimore Bohemians, Chattanooga FC, Des Moines Menace
2015: Chattanooga FC, Chula Vista FC, Jersey Express, PSA Elite, Ventura County Fusion
2016: Chattanooga FC, Des Moines Menace, Jersey Express, Kitsap Pumas, La Maquina, Lansdowne Bhoys FC, Los Angeles Wolves FC
2017: Chicago FC United, Christos FC, GPS Omens, Los Angeles Wolves FC, Michigan Bucks, Reading United AC
2018: Elm City Express, FC Golden State Force, FC Wichita, Jacksonville Armada FC, Miami United, Mississippi Brilla FC, NTX Rayados, Ocean City Nor’easters, Sporting AZ FC
2019: Florida Soccer Soldiers, Orange County FC

Updated after 2019 US Open Cup

Filed Under: US Open Cup, US Open Cup History Tagged With: Arizona Sahuaros, Bavarian SC, Boulder Rapids Reserves, Cape Cod Crusaders, Carolina Dynamo, Central Coast Roadrunners, Chicago Fire PDL, Chicago Sockers, Dallas Roma FC, DC United, Des Moines Menace, El Paso Patriots, Fresno Fuego, Kirk Wilson, Miami FC, Michigan Bucks, New Jersey Stallions, Ocean City Barons/South Jersey Barons, Reading Rage, Seattle Sounders Select, Tampa Bay Mutiny, Things You Should Know, Worcester Wildfire

2013 US Open Cup qualifying: Croatian Eagles repeat as Wisconsin state champions

November 4, 2012 by Eric Anderson

Story originally published at WisconsinSoccerCentral.com, the state of Wisconsin’s premier soccer news website. Follow them on Twitter @WisconsinSoccer

It’s been a fall full of change for longtime rivals Croatian Eagles and Bavarian SC, two of the state’s most successful amateur clubs.

Both teams have new faces in their lineups and the Bavarians have a new manager in Patrick Hodgins, who previously coached the Croatians’ Under-23 team.

With that backdrop, though, perhaps it was fitting that the lone goal in the teams’ Wisconsin Open Cup final Saturday afternoon was scored by a familiar face.

Veteran Jason Willan came through for the Eagles once again, curling in a shot from 14 yards out in the 50th minute as the Eagles got past Bavarian SC 1-0 at Croatian Park in Franklin.

Bryce Boyd (Milwaukee Marquette/UW-Milwaukee) posted the clean sheet for the Croatians, who earned a berth in next spring’s US Adult Soccer Association Region II tournament. The top finishers in the regional event traditionally qualify for the Lamar Hunt US Open Cup.

“It was a pretty even game,” said Eagles manager Alex Toth, whose team won its second straight Wisconsin Open Cup and is the reigning USASA National Open Cup champion. “We played our normal game: Get it down on the ground, get some combinations, try to attack. They sat back, defended really well, were dangerous on set pieces and they were dangerous on the counter. It was an interesting game.”

Willan’s goal capped a sequence that featured six or seven passes, Toth said. Mohammed Sethi (Mequon Homestead) played the final pass to Willan on the left side of the box, and the 41-year-old midfielder sent a shot past Bavarians goalkeeper Matt Schmidt (Racine Horlick/UW-Milwaukee) into the right corner.

“He had a nice, open look and just buried it far post,” Toth said of Willan, in his 14th year with the club. “It was a great finish. He’s done it all year this year, all the things we needed, and he came up big again.”

The goal proved to be enough – but just barely.

The Bavarians, who lost to Croatians 2-0 in a Wisconsin Soccer Leagues Major Division match Sept. 20, came tantalizingly close to finding an equalizer in the final minutes.

A ball was played through traffic across the box and surprisingly found striker Kyle Zenoni (Hartland Arrowhead/UW-Milwaukee) alone inside the 6-yard box with Boyd still on the other side of the goal. However, Zenoni – a UWM assistant who coached the Panthers in their 2-1 win over Valparaiso on Saturday night – didn’t see the ball and couldn’t get a shot off toward the vacant net.
“It just hit him and kind of got caught up in his feet and they cleared it,” Hodgins said.

“We got a little lucky there,” admitted Toth, whose team needed penalty kicks to get past the Milwaukee Kickers in last fall’s state Open Cup final.

Neil Dombrowski (West Allis Hale/UW-Milwaukee) created some chances for the Bavarians in the first half with his service on some set pieces, including free headers off corner kicks that his brother Chad Dombrowski (West Allis Hale/UW-Milwaukee) and Billy Maier (Racine St. Catherine’s/UW-Milwaukee) sent over the crossbar.

“We had plenty of opportunities to score,” said Hodgins, who was coaching just his second match with the club. “Even though we lost, there were definitely positives you can take from it. I think it will give us confidence going forward. I think our guys know that we can play with a team like that.”

The Bavarians are 1-3-1 in the WSL Major Division with two rescheduled matches coming up in the next week. The Croatians lead the league at 4-0-2 with one game left, but Toth has seen a difference in his team this fall.

“It’s been a struggle,” he said. “Last fall, we could usually separate ourselves from the other team in most games, but this fall it’s been a struggle.

“I think one of the biggest factors is that we’ve been playing since March. … Some of the players, you can really tell that they are burnt out.”

Lineups

CROATIAN EAGLES: Bryce Boyd; Scott Widule (Shaun Gallagher), Billy Von Rueden, Aaron Schroeder, Stuart Grable; Cheik Drame (Gustavo Mena), Scott Raymonds; Mohammed Sethi (Mike Vukovic), Jason Willan (Spencer Bursten), Ilya Ksenidi; Aaron Lauber.

BAVARIAN SC: Matt Schmidt; Nate Sabich, Billy Meier, Will Chaney, Jake Taylor (Giovanni Luna 30, Hector Navarro 80); Chad Dombrowski, Craig Posselt; Josh Chamberlain (Dan Stebbins 75), Neil Dombrowski, Jake Provan (Martin Castro 60); Kyle Zenoni.

Filed Under: US Open Cup Tagged With: 2013 US Open Cup qualifying, Bavarian SC, Croatian Eagles, Wisconsin

2013 US Open Cup qualifying: Bavarian SC, Croatian Eagles to battle for Wisconsin title

October 25, 2012 by Eric Anderson

Story originally posted at WisconsinSoccerCentral.com, the state of Wisconsin’s premier soccer news website. Follow them on Twitter @WisconsinSoccer

Only two clubs entered the 2013 Wisconsin Open Cup.

But they’re two clubs with rich histories, both recent and otherwise.

Bavarian SC, one of the most successful amateur clubs in the Modern Professional Era of the Lamar Hunt US Open Cup, will face the Croatian Eagles, the reigning US Adult Soccer Association National Open Cup champions, in the state final Nov. 3.

Kickoff is scheduled for 2 p.m. at Croatian Park in Franklin. The Eagles were awarded home-field advantage for the match as the defending state champions; they outlasted the Milwaukee Kickers 5-4 on penalty kicks following a 1-1 draw in the 2012 final played last October.

The Wisconsin Open Cup champion earns a berth in the USASA Region II tournament.

The Croatians won two matches in the Region II tournament last April, then were awarded a forfeit victory in the regional final in June. They went on to become just the second Wisconsin club to win the USASA National Open Cup, following the Bavarians, who claimed titles in 2003 and ’09.

Bavarian SC, meanwhile, has qualified for the US Open Cup six times since 1995, the most appearances of any USASA team during what is considered the Modern Professional Era of the tournament – the 2013 event will be the 100th US Open Cup.

The Eagles (4-0-2) currently lead the Wisconsin Soccer Leagues Major Division, including a 2-0 victory over Bavarians on Sept. 20. Bavarian SC is off to a slow start in league play this fall at 1-3-1.

Making this match even more intriguing is the fact that Patrick Hodgins, who coached the Croatians’ Under-23 team to the USASA national final last summer, recently took over as manager of the Bavarian SC Majors team. Hodgins replaced Matt Schmidt, who was the team’s interim coach and continues to play for Bavarians.

Recent Wisconsin Open Cup champions
2012: Croatian Eagles
2011: No entries (Bavarian SC’s paperwork lost by state association)
2010: Milwaukee Kickers
2009: Bavarian SC
2008: Bavarian SC
2007: Bavarian SC
2006: Croatian Eagles
2005: Milwaukee Kickers
2004: Bavarian SC
2003: Bavarian SC

Filed Under: US Open Cup Tagged With: 2013 US Open Cup qualifying, Bavarian SC, Croatian Eagles, USASA Region II, Wisconsin

Notable Semifinal matches in US Open Cup history

August 27, 2011 by

4/18/14  Pawtucket, Rhode Island
New Bedford FC 1-2 Brooklyn Field Club

New Bedford – Beckton 24’
Brooklyn – Robert Millar (2)
Sent Off – Clark (Brooklyn) 34’, Chadwick (New Bedford) 34’

4/26/14  Olympic Park – Paterson, New Jersey
Brooklyn Celtic 6-2  Niagara Falls Rangers (3-0 HT)

Celtic – O’Hallaran (3), King (Campion), Campion, Lonie
Rangers – Kemp, Wallace

The very first Semifinal round of the US Open Cup (then called the National Challenge Cup) saw a pair of Brooklyn teams reach the Final. On April 18, the Brooklyn Field Club, which finished first in the National Association Football League, defeated New Bedford FC 2-1, on two goals by Hall of Famer Robert Millar, after Beckton had given the New Englanders a 1-0 lead. Both teams played much of the game with ten men each, after Clark of Brooklyn and Chadwick of New Bedford were sent off in the 35th minute for fighting.

In the other Semifinal on April 26 Brooklyn Celtic, eventual winners of the New York State Amateur Foot Ball League, easily defeated the Niagara Falls Rangers 6-2. O’Hallaran lead the way for Celtic with a hat trick.

3/17/29  Sportsman’s Park – St. Louis, Missouri
Madison Kennels 7-4 Sparta A & BA

Madison – Bud Grennon (3), Dinty Moore, Worden, Oster, Eddie Flavin
Sparta – Barger (2), Kratochvil, Oster (og)

St. Louis’s Madison Kennels and Chicago’s Sparta A & BA combine for 11 goals, setting a new Semifinal mark that would later be equaled in 1962. Madison’s Bud Grennon led all scorers with three goals, while Barger led Sparta with two.

3/16/30  Polo Grounds – New York, New York
Bethlehem Steel 1-1 Fall River Marksmen (Match Report)

Bethlehem – Sandy Dick
Fall River – Alex McNab 82’

Bethlehem – Fraser, Finlayson, McGregor, Reid, Carnihan, Pitt, Gillespie, Jaap, Stark, Massie, Dick

Marksmen – Reder, McGill, R. McAuley, McPherson, Priestley, Ballantyne, McNab, Gonsalves (Nilsen), Patenaude, J. McAuley, White

Att – 17,000   Referee – C. E. Creighton. Linesmen – F. DeGroof and M. Hutchinson

3/23/30  Battery Park – New Bedford, Massachusetts
(replay) Fall River Marksmen 3-2 Bethlehem Steel

Fall River – Billy Gonsalves 50’, Dave Priestley 67’, Bobby Ballantyne 71’
Bethlehem – Archie Stark 64’ 70’

Bethlehem Steel makes their final appearance in the National Challenge Cup, losing to the Fall River Marksmen 3-2 and ending the first great dynasty of the Cup. After a 1-1 draw at the Polo Grounds in New York, Fall River took the replay at New Bedford. Billy Gonsalves gave the Marksmen a 1-0 lead after 50 minutes, but Archie Stak put Bethlehem ahead with two goals in the middle of the half. Fall River snatched the lead for good on scored from Dave Priestly and Bobby Ballantine. Effects of the Great Depression forced Bethlehem Steel to stop fielding a team after 1930.

Bethlehem made the Semifinals a total of nine times from 1915-1930, including five in a row from 1915-1919, in which they reached the Final each time.

3/6/32  St. Louis, Missouri
(first leg) Stix, Baer & Fuller 3-2 Bricklayers FC

Stix – McCarthy (2), Willie McLean
Bricklayers – Lillie, Coutis

3/14/32  Sparta Field – Chicago, Illinois
(second leg) Bricklayers FC 2-0 Stix, Baer & Fuller

Bricklayers – Munro, Lillie

3/19/32  Sportsman’s Park – St. Louis, Missouri
(third leg) Stix, Baer & Fuller 1-0 Bricklayers FC

Stix – Jack O’Reilly 1’

Stix, Baer & Fuller, featuring Hall of Famers Billy Gonsalves, William Lehman, Alex McNab, Willie McLean, began their run of six straight appearances in the Open Cup Final by defeating Chicago’s Bricklayers SC over three legs in the 1932 Western Final. The team reached the 1932, 1933 & 1934 Finals under the sponsorship of Stix. Baer and Fuller, a St. Louis department store. The team switched sponsorship for the 1935 season, playing as Central Breweries. Sponsorship changed again, and the team reached the 1936 & 1937 finals under the name Shamrocks. The team finally folded after many of its players left to play for another St. Louis club, St. Patricks.

3/24/35  St. Louis, Missouri
(First leg) Central Brewery 2-1 Weiboldt Wonderbolts

4/1/35  De Paul Field – Chicago, Illinois
(Second leg) Weiboldt Wonderbolts 1-1 (aet) Central Brewery

Weibolt – Littie 28’
Central – McNab 30’

4/6/34  St. Louis, Missouri
(Second leg replay) Central Brewery 3-3 (aet) Weiboldt Wodnerbolts

4/14/35  Sparta Stadium – Chicago, Illinois
(Second leg – second replay) Weiboldt Wonderbolts 3-2(aet) Central Brewery (0-2 HT, 2-2 FT)

Weibolt – Monroe (2 PK), Hill
Central – Billy Gonsalves, Bert Patenaude

4/21/35  St. Louis, Missouri
(third leg) Central Brewery 1-0 Weiboldt Wonderbolts

Central – Bert Patenaude 68′

The longest Semifinal matchup was between Chicago’s Weiboldt Wonderbolts and Central Brewery of St. Louis. The three-leg Western Final actually lasted five games. Central won the first game 2-1 in St. Louis. The second leg in Chicago finished 1-1 after extra time. A week later in St. Louis, the second leg replay finished 3-3, meaning a second replay of the second leg would take place a week later in Chicago. That game also went to extra time, but the Wonderbolts managed to come out on top 3-2. Nearly a month after it started, the series finally ended when Central won the decisive leg 1-0.

4/23/44  Winnemac Park – Chicago, Illinois
(first leg) Viking AA 0-2 Morgan Strasser

Morgan – Elgie Grant 21′ 80′

5/7/44  Bridgeville Park – Bridgeville, Pennsylvania
(second leg) Morgan Strasser 9-0 Viking AA (Chi.) (4-0 HT)

Morgan – Aldo Donelli 15′ (Hart) n/a’ , Felix Mitchell (2), Pucker (2), Urbanic, Grant, Pietersek

The most lopsided Semifinal pairing was in 1944, when Pittsburgh’s Morgan Strasser demolished Chicago’s Viking AA 11-0 over two legs. Morgan won the first leg in Chicago 2-0, but the return leg in Bridgeville, Pennsylvania turned into a rout. Aldo Donelli, Felix Mitchell and Pucker each scored twice as Morgan ran away with a 9-0 win, a mark that still stands as the highest score by a single team in a single Semifinal game.

3/28/54  Rancho la Cienega Stadium – Los Angeles, California
Scots SC 0-1 Kutis SC
Att-4,000

The Scots SC of Los Angeles became the first team West of St. Louis to appear in a US Open Cup Semifinal, losing to Kutis SC 1-0. 1954 was also the first year teams from California participated in the US Open Cup, and the winner between Los Angeles and San Francisco went on to face the survivor between St. Louis and Chicago in the Semifinals.

6/10/62  St. Louis, Missouri
Kutis SC 5-6 (aet) San Francisco Scots 6-5

Scots – Tom Dawkins n/a’ 118′

The Scots and Kutis combine for 11 goals in the 1962 Western Final, equaling a mark set by Madison Kennels and Sparta A & BA in 1929 for the most combined goals in a single Semifinal game. Tom Dawkins scored twice for the Scots, including the winning goal with a minute left in extra time. The game was tied 3-3 after ninety minutes, and also marked the first time a club from San Francisco would reach the Open Cup Final.

3/6/71  Seattle, Washington
(1st Leg) Heidelberg Brewers (Sea.) 1-0 Yugoslav SC

3/14/71  Rancho la Cienega Stadium – Los Angeles, California
(2nd Leg) Yugoslav SC 2-0 Heidelberg Brewers

Yugoslav – Karlo Mertisek, Rade Savic

In the last two-leg Semifinal in Open Cup play, San Pedro, California’s Yugoslav SC edged out Seattle’s Heidelberg Brewers on a 2-1 aggregate.

5/27/73  Metropolitan Oval – Queens, New York
New York Greek Americans 1-3 Inter-Italia SC

NYGA – Joe Ognajac 31’
Inter – Valentino Stavole 3’, Vito Colonna 40’, Gianpietro Gasparin 41’)

Cleveland’s Inter-Italia SC halted a six-year streak of New York/New Jersey clubs appearing in the US Open Cup Final, thanks to a 3-1 victory over New York Greek Americans. Inter dominated play for the most part, and were lead by Gianpietro Gasparini, a priest by trade, who played a part in all three of Inter’s goals.

Cleveland started off right away, as Gasparini fed a pass to Valentino Stavole, who beat G-A goalkeeper Joe Canal from 15 yards out after just two minutes of play. The Greeks managed to draw the match level after 31 minutes however, as Joe Ognajac put in a header from close range.  Cleveland took the lead for good just before halftime, as Vito Colonna scored in the 40th minute, and Gasparini scored just a minute later. Cleveland kept up the pressure, but missed several chances to further grow the scoreline.

6/3/79  Norton Park – St. Petersburg, Florida
H. Brooks Dodge Chargers 0-3 Brooklyn Dodgers

The St. Petersburg, Florida-based Chargers are the first team from the Southern US to make an appearance in the Semifinals of the US Open Cup. By this time the tournament was split into four regions, and only three teams entered from the southern region.

6/20/87  St. Louis Soccer Park – Fenton, Missouri
Mitre Eagles 5-4(aet) Busch SC  (2-2 FT)

Eagles – John Klein 119’ (2), Eddie Kruger, Peter Klein, Andy Churlin
Busch- Steve Trittschuh 85’

St. Louis’s Busch SC tried the game at 2-2 in the 85th minute on a goal from Steve Tritschuh. The teams traded goals in extra time to make it 4-4, and John Klein sent the Eagles to the final with a 25-yard shot in the 119th minute.

6/25/94
Bavarian Leinekugel w/o McCormick Kickers

The Kickers are forced to forfeit since most of the team held tickets to a World Cup game in Orlando that fell on the same day. The team had purchased the tickets well in advance, and were assured the dates for the Open Cup would not conflict.

9/2/97  Stagg Memorial Stadium – Stockton, California
San Francisco Bay Seals 1-2 DC United

The Cinderella run of the San Francisco Bay Seals comes to an end with their Semifinal loss to DC United. The D3 Pro League Seals had upset two MLS teams (Kansas City and San Jose) on their way to becoming the only team from the third tier of US soccer to reach the Semifinals in the Professional Era (1995-present).

9/1/99  Virginia Beach Sportsplex – Virginia Beach, Virginia
Rochester Raging Rhinos 3-2 Columbus Crew

Rochester – Darren Tilley 68’, Scott Schweitzer 86’, Tom Hardy 90’
Columbus – Robert Warzycha 56’, Brian West 77’

9/1/99  Virginia Beach Sportsplex – Virginia Beach, Virginia
Colorado Rapids 3-0 Charleston Battery

Colorado – Jorge Daly Valdes 55’ 87’, Paul Bravo 82’

For the first time in Pro Era history, two non-MLS teams reach the Semifinals. Rochester’s 3-2 triumph over Columbus paved the way for the only time a lower league club would win the Open Cup title in the Pro Era. While Charleston fell 3-0 to Colorado, their run was catapulted by their famous 4-3 sudden death extra time win over DC United in the Fourth Round. Both games were played in Virginia Beach, Virginia due to the fact that they were scheduled to host the 1998 Open Cup Final, but a hurricane forced a venue change.

8/12/08  Blackbaud Stadium – Charleston, South Carolina
Charleston Battery 1-1 (aet) Seattle Sounders
Charleston advance on penalty kicks, 4-3

Charleston – Randi Patterson 32’
Seattle – Osvaldo Alonso 20’ (og)

For the only time in the Pro Era, a Semifinal match is contested between two lower league teams, ensuring the Final would feature at least one non-MLS team.

7/21/09 Starfire Sports Complex – Tukwila, Washington
Seattle Sounders FC 2:1 (aet) Houston Dynamo

The Seattle Sounders, in their inaugural season in Major League Soccer, advanced to the Final in dramatic fashion. Houston’s Ade Akinbiyi put the Dynamo up in the 32nd minute, but the home team wasn’t able to equalize until the 89th minute when Nate Jaqua sent the game into extra time. With all the momentum and the home crowd behind them at the Starfire Sports Complex in Tukwila, Wash., Stephen King scored what would prove to be the game-winner in the 95th minute on an assist from Sebastien Le Toux and the club would hold on to the 2-1 lead throughout extra time, despite defender Jhon Hurtado being sent off in the 110th minute. The Sounders become the first Seattle-based team to reach the Open Cup Final since the Mitre Eagles did it in 1987.

Filed Under: US Open Cup, US Open Cup History Tagged With: Baer & Fuller, Bavarian SC, Bethlehem Steel FC, Bricklayers FC, Brooklyn Celtic, Brooklyn Dodgers, Brooklyn Field Club, Busch SC, Central Brewery, Charleston Battery, Colorado Rapids, Columbus Crew, DC United, Fall River Marksmen, H. Brooks Dodge Chargers, Heidelberg Brewers, Houston Dynamo, Inter-Italia SC, Kutis SC, Madison Kennels, McCormick Kickers, Mitre Eagles, Morgan Strasser, New Bedford FC, New York Greek Americans, Niagara Falls Rangers, Rochester Rhinos, San Francisco Bay Seals, San Francisco Scots, Scots SC, Seattle Sounders MLS, Seattle Sounders USL, Sparta A & BA, Stix, Viking AA, Weiboldt Wonderbolts, Yugoslav SC

2010 Qualifying: Ingold, Kickers boot Bavarian SC to win Wisconsin

October 22, 2009 by

Kyle Ingold scored with about 15 minutes remaining to snap a tie, then added an insurance goal by drawing and converting a last-minute penalty kick as the Milwaukee Kickers knocked off Bavarian SC 3-1 in the 2010 Wisconsin Open Cup final on Wednesday night in Milwaukee.Wisconsin Adult Soccer Association

With the win, the Kickers — who had lost to Bavarian SC in the state final each of the past three years — earned the state championship, plus a berth in next spring’s USASA Region II tournament, which also is a qualifier for the US Open Cup.

Nick Walls gave the Kickers (4-1-2 overall) the early lead on an odd play about 5 minutes into the match. A long throw-in sailed into the box and took a big bounce over the Bavarian SC goalkeeper, and the one-time Chicago Fire player beat a defender to the ball and fired home for a quick 1-0 advantage.

The Kickers were forced to use two of their four substitutes for injuries around the 35th minute, with two defenders coming off, and Bavarian SC seized control of the match.

The Bavarians, who have qualified for the U.S. Open Cup six times since 1995 — a record for an amateur team during the tournament’s “professional era” — got the equalizer about 5 minutes before halftime when Dave Treblinski made a good run to the far post and one-touched a volley into the net off a cross.

The teams, who played a 0-0 draw in a Wisconsin Adult Soccer Association Major League opener on Sept. 13, went back and forth with the score 1-1 until Ingold’s first goal. A corner kick was knocked around the box and popped out to Ingold, who half-volleyed in a shot from about 12 yards out to break the tie.

The Bavarians (2-4-1) responded by pushing numbers forward in search of another equalizer — “They put up a fierce attack,” Kickers manager John Sweeney said — but goalkeeper Nick Farrell was up to the task.

Ingold’s late penalty iced the match for the Kickers, who also beat Bavarian SC 2-1 in the 2006 Wisconsin Open Cup semifinals (held in fall 2005), but were eliminated by the Croatian Eagles 5-4 on penalty kicks following a 1-1 tie in the final.

Filed Under: US Open Cup Tagged With: 2010 USASA Qualifying, Bavarian SC, Dave Treblinski, Kyle Ingold, Milwaukee Kickers, Nick Farrell, USASA Region II

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U.S. Open Cup History

Jim Gregory, president of Charleston Battery supporters group The Regiment (right), presents the Coffee Pot Cup to Sachin Shah after D.C. United's 2-0 win in the 2004 Carolina Challenge Cup. Photo: Mike Buytas

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