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Open Cup

2017 US Open Cup Round 3: Orange County SC get revenge with narrow win over Eric Wynalda’s LA Wolves

June 2, 2017 by Omar Avalos

Orange County SC logo

Soccer is referred to as “the beautiful game.” It also can be as cruel as it is beautiful.

For much of the Third Round Lamar Hunt US Open Cup match between the amateur side Los Angeles Wolves and the USL’s Orange County SC, the former were the better team. They held more possession, took more shots on goal, but ultimately, the finishing quality wasn’t there, and Eric Wynalda’s underdogs fell to Orange County SC, 1-0 by the slimmest of margins.

Orange County earn some revenge over the Wolves who in their first Open Cup appearance eliminated them 4-2 on penalty kicks after a 1-1 draw in last year’s Second Round. It was the third straight year that Orange County had been eliminated by an amateur team in the club’s opening round.

Wynalda’s men were deemed the “underdogs” but played nothing like it. It was the Wolves that put the “beautiful” in the game, particularly through their midfield in generating the attack, but their finishing was the opposite. They pressed the game, they were the protagonists, while Orange County waited and waited for a counterattack, or any kind of opportunity.

Orange County did create some dangerous, vertical through ball passes during the match, but their best chance came on a dead ball play. After being fouled just outside the box on the right side, Roy Meeus stood over the ball on a free kick in the 41st minute. Meeus stepped up and fired a low, left-footed shot that slipped through traffic in front of the goal and beat Wolves goalkeeper Lucas Nascimento to the opposite post. The goal gave the USL side the 1-0 lead heading into halftime.

Orange County didn’t produce many opportunities in the second half, in contrast to multiple opportunities created by the Wolves, especially a big push for an equalizer late in the game.

After the game Coach Wynalda had some comments on the goal scoring play and the game overall, attributing the goal to bad positioning by his goalkeeper.

“It wasn’t a fitness issue, it wasn’t a talent issue. It was one play, one mistake and bad positioning. That’s what decided the game tonight,” said Wynalda.

For Eric Wynalda, these LA Wolves form a good foundation upon which to enter a next “phase,” one anticipated to be the launching of the recently announced NASL Orange County expansion project.

“This is the beginning of something. Not everybody’s gonna stay with… the next phase, but we have a really good foundation of guys that can play the game at a high level,” said Eric Wynalda after the match.

Filed Under: US Open Cup Tagged With: 2017 US Open Cup, LA Wolves, Open Cup, Orange County SC

2017 US Open Cup Round 3: Miami FC excel during “hot moments”, eliminate Tampa Bay Rowdies

June 1, 2017 by Neil Blackmon

Miami FC logo

Miami FC broke a scoreless tie with two second half goals to defeat the visiting Tampa Bay Rowdies in the Third Round of the Lamar Hunt US Open Cup Wednesday night. The 2-0 win was the first in the competition for the hosts over the cross-state rival Rowdies and secures the young franchise their first date with a MLS side in the competition.

Miami FC will visit Orlando City SC in Fourth Round action on June 14.

For Miami FC midfielder Michael Lahoud, the victory was a statement about the quality of NASL and the talent on Miami FC.

“As someone who has played in two US Open Cup finals, I love this competition,” Lahoud said. “This tournament is about survive and advance. We beat a very good team, and made a statement for our league , that we’re better than one of the best teams in USL. We earned the right to show we can compete against MLS teams, and hopefully we continue this great run.”

Lahoud, who will represent Sierra Leone in their upcoming African Nations Cup qualifiers, credited his manager, Alessandro Nesta.

“Italians are never satisfied,” he said of the Azzurri great. “Fortunately, and unfortunately, we have a full staff of Italians, and our coach happens to be one of the greatest Italians to ever play the game, which is saying something. He keeps us humble with his demands, and he has a lot of demands, but he’s proud of us tonight” Lahoud said.

With the visitors playing very narrowly through the middle, chances were hard to come by early in the match. In fact, the Rowdies had the best chance of the opening 20 minutes, when following a turnover near midfield, former Chelsea FC star Joe Cole danced through the Miami FC defense and flicked a shot that Daniel Vega saved high.

Miami FC had a chance minutes later, with Lahoud dancing around defenders Luke Boden and Neil Collins and firing a rocket at the far post that was marvelously parried away by Akira Fitzgerald. It was the best chance either side would have in the opening frame.

Miami seized the initiative as the second half began, and nearly went ahead when Roberto Baggio Kcira made a menacing run down the left flank and crossed to an unmarked Poku, who had time to take a touch but shot one time, shanking the ball harmlessly wide.

Nesta credited his team’s patience and mentality for the break through on a night where space and chances were at a premium.

“The largest issue in Florida to play soccer is the heat,” said Nesta. “Finding energy is not easy. Patience is critical. You cannot force balls and you need to keep the ball. The heat and the rest make it harder to invest defensively.”

Lahoud agreed that his team had the right mentality to win a tough and physical game that included 22 Rowdies fouls.

“Nesta talks about moments that define character, what he calls “hot moments”, moments where you really find out what you are all about,” Lahoud said. “Tonight, it was a hot moment, and we were up for it. That’s what it takes to be a good team. A championship team.”

The breakthrough finally came in the 73rd minute, when for the second consecutive round, a Nesta substitution changed the game. Following a Rowdies turnover near midfield, substitute Dylan Mares was fouled in the area by Georgi Hristov. The referee pointed quickly to the spot, and Vincenzo Rennella buried the spot kick to give Miami FC a 1-0 lead.

Miami kept the pressure on after the opener, and added a second goal in the 83rd minute. Mares was involved again, making a powerful run down the left channel and crossing to Jaime Chavez, who was rewarded when Rowdies keeper Akira Fitzgerald mishandled his soft shot.

Miami FC is now unbeaten in eight games in all competition, building confidence that they, like the Fort Lauderdale Strikers of a year ago, can go to Orlando and collect a victory.

“I’m very happy. My first managerial position and we (advance) to play a team in Orlando with Kaka, Nocerino, beautiful players, beautiful new stadium” Nesta said.

Lahoud thinks Miami can win. “For a club like ours, now there’s a feeling of `We can beat Orlando’. We don’t just want to check off that box of playing an MLS team. They have very good players, but I don’t think they’re a team we should fear. We should respect them, but at the end of the day, it’s a soccer game. If this tournament shows anything, it is that over 90 or 120 minutes, anything can happen. We stand an amazing chance.”

Filed Under: US Open Cup Tagged With: 2017 US Open Cup, Miami FC, Open Cup, Tampa Bay Rowdies

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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

How a US Open Cup classic, locker room vandalism inspired fans to create Coffee Pot Cup

It remains one of the greatest games of the US Open Cup’s Modern Era but what happened after the game gets more attention than the instant classic that took place on the field.

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  • Before Lionel Messi’s 2023 US Open Cup impact, Pele changed the 1975 Final in a different way
  • A history of violence against referees in US Open Cup
  • How St. Petersburg Kickers became Florida’s first US Open Cup champion
  • San Francisco Bay Seals, the ‘amateur’ pro team that reached 1997 US Open Cup Semifinals

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