WASHINGTON (AP) -- Tony Meola has his first championship, and
Lamar Hunt has another one to add to the 1970 Super Bowl.
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| Miklos Molnar, left, and Chris Henderson celebrate their win over the Fire on Sunday. Molnar scored the game's only goal. |
Meola made 10 saves, including three in the final 10 minutes,
and the Kansas City Wizards survived some strange bounces Sunday to
beat the Chicago Fire 1-0 to win their first MLS Cup.
Miklos Molnar, one of three Wizards players to retire after the
game, scored in the 11th minute, while Meola added the game's MVP
award to the season MVP trophy he won Friday. His record fifth
shutout of the playoffs was one of his busiest games ever.
"It's the best because we won the championship while it
happened," Meola said. "I can't tell you how happy it I am. Today
it worked for me."
Meola was the U.S. national team goalkeeper at the 1990 and 1994
World Cups and once tried out with the New York Jets. After a
difficult stint with the New York-New Jersey MetroStars, he was
traded to the Wizards last year and spent most of the season
rehabilitating a knee injury.
This season, he returned to set league records with 16
regular-season shutouts and a scoreless streak of 681 minutes over
eight games.
As Chicago lay siege around the Kansas City net in the waning
minutes, Meola dived right to stop Josh Wolff in the 82nd, cradled
a close-range attempt from Dema Kovalenko in the 83rd and got his
chest in the way of a 13-yard bullet from Hristo Stoitchkov in the
86th.
"The extraordinary for Tony is every day," Kansas City coach
Bob Gansler. "He makes these kinds of saves every day, perhaps a
few more today."
Also in the locker room, wearing a Kansas City championship
T-shirt and a gold medal around his neck, was Hunt. The Wizards
owner passed up the Kansas City Chiefs-Oakland Raiders game to
attend the MLS Cup. Hunt's Chiefs upset the Minnesota Vikings in
Super Bowl IV to even the score between the AFL and NFL.
"There the sport was established. That made everything even,
2-2," Hunt said. "This is a different battle. The battle here is
against the bill collector. Here, the battle is to sell tickets."
The money-losing MLS attracted 39,159 fans to the neutral site
of RFK Stadium. It was the first MLS Cup without three-time
champion D.C. United.
The game pitted the league's best offense against its best
defense. Predictably, Chicago outshot Kansas City 22-6 and hit the
post twice, but the Fire couldn't get a shot past Meola.
"We created a good number of chances," Chicago coach Bob
Bradley said. "We didn't do well in terms of how we took those
chances. Tony made a bunch of saves, but we also hit a bunch of
shots right at him."
Molnar's goal came after Chris Klein made a nice run down the
right wing. Klein's cross was fanned by Kansas City's Preki, then
Chicago's Jesse Marsch had the ball on his foot but didn't clear.
With the ball rolling in the box, Molnar finally half-pushed it off
the right post and into the net for his fifth goal of the playoffs.
"I missed it, but I touched it a little," Molnar said. "I saw
it go in, and that's the most important thing."
Stoitchkov, the Fire's flamboyant Bulgarian star, called for the
ball early and often and argued with the referee when calls didn't
go his way. Heavily marked, he sometimes found space in the wings
and rattled the left post with a left-footer from 12 yards in the
25th minute.
He also went down after being sandwiched in the penalty box
between Meola and defender Nick Garcia in the 60th minute, but no
foul was called.
"Let's not blame the referees," Stoitchkov said. "It's a team
loss."
Unusual near misses highlighted the rest of the game. Meola
backpedalled as he pushed away a close-range shot by Kovalenko in
the 30th minute, set up only because Chris Armas misfired on a
wide-open 18-yarder on a set play.
Four minutes later, Chicago defender Diego Gutierrez fell trying
to keep pace with Klein on the right wing, leaving Klein with only
goalkeeper Zach Thornton to beat. Inexplicably, Klein waited, then
passed up the shot for a weak cross that rolled out of bounds.
The weirdest play occurred in the 54th, when Stoitchkov's free
kick from the top of the box hit the wall and took a strange bounce
toward the net. Gutierrez chased down the ball and lifted it over
Meola, but it hit the crossbar from just 3 yards out.
Three Kansas City veterans retired after the game: Molnar,
captain Mo Johnston and Alex Bunbury.
The ceremonial coin toss was made by Johann Cruyff, the Dutch
great and former North American Soccer League star.
"Little by little, you have to teach to the United States that
this is the best game in the world," Cruyff said. "Otherwise, it
wouldn't be so popular. But people here are the way they are."