What happens when the punishment someone gets is pretty much what they wanted in the first place? We can ask Chicago Fire midfielder Cuauhtemoc Blanco -- or, as MLS commissioner Don Garber called him, the "Mexican David Beckham" (Stay classy, Don!) -- about that, now that he's been banned from the U.S. Open Cup for a minimum of two years and six matches for punching Clyde Simms in the gut during Chicago's quarterfinal loss to D.C. United. The incident is shown toward the end of that video.
I suspect MLS is pleased as, uh, punch that Blanco has gotten out of Open Cup duty, thus allowing the league to save one of its biggest assets for league matches only. Besides, it's not like MLS wants anyone to watch the Open Cup, right?
(H/T: Unprofessional Foul)
How long has it been since the city of Boston got to celebrate a championship? A couple weeks, maybe?
It was a night of knockout soccer that saw three games go to extra time, two games go to penalty kicks, and one famous Mexican lose his temper and get sent off. By the time the smoke cleared, the glass slipper still fit for two USL First Division clubs, who had advanced to the
D.C. United and the Chicago Fire meet tonight in the
Crystal Palace supporters still suffering from the loss of that Premier League promotion playoff last May might be taking a little solace in their American counterparts today.
The 3rd round of the
Second-round action in the U.S. Open Cup takes place tonight, and while USL clubs dominate the schedule, the one remaining amateur club has enough star power to steal the spotlight from all of them.
A former Portland Timbers player, who was released from the club before he had a chance to shine, teamed up with a rowdy rabble of washed-up rock stars and actors, waltzed into PGE Park in Portland showed one of the top teams in USL how to play soccer.
It might be the most disrespected cup competition on the planet, but the
Earlier this week, U.S. Soccer Federation president Sunil Gulati told reporters in England that 