2008 North American SuperLiga final
Event2008 North American SuperLiga
After extra time
New England won 6–5 on a penalty shootout
DateAugust 5, 2008
VenueGillette Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts
RefereeHoward Webb
Attendance9,242
WeatherPartly Cloudy, 71 °F

The 2008 North American SuperLiga final was played on August 5, 2008, at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts. The match determined the winner of the 2008 North American SuperLiga, a tournament contested by the top four Major League Soccer and Liga MX teams by point totals at the end of the previous season.[1] This was the second edition of the tournament.[1] The match was won by the New England Revolution, who defeated the Houston Dynamo 6–5 on penalties after drawing the match 2–2. Steve Ralston and Shalrie Joseph scored the goals for New England, and the win marked the club's second trophy.

Venue

The 64,628-seat Gillette Stadium hosted four matches during the 2008 North American SuperLiga, including the final.

The final was hosted in Gillette Stadium, the home stadium of the New England Revolution since 2002.[2] It is a multi-purpose stadium located in the town of Foxborough, Massachusetts, which is 22 miles (35 km) southwest of downtown Boston, Massachusetts and 18 miles (29 km) northeast of Providence, Rhode Island.[3][4] The stadium hosted one previous MLS Cup Final, which was the Revolution's 2001 loss to the LA Galaxy.[5] That match drew a crowd of 61,316, the largest MLS post-season crowd until the 2018 MLS Cup in Atlanta.[5] The stadium has also hosted a variety of international soccer matches, including matches in the 2003 Women's World Cup.[6]

In addition to hosting soccer, the stadium is also home to the New England Patriots of the National Football League,[7] and has hosted concerts for artists such as Metallica and The Rolling Stones.[8][9]

Background

The North American SuperLiga was an official North American association football competition between teams from Liga MX of Mexico and Major League Soccer from the United States and Canada.[10] The competition was sanctioned by CONCACAF, U.S. Soccer, the Canadian Soccer Association and Federación Mexicana de Fútbol and served as the sub-regional championship for the North American section of CONCACAF, much like its Central American and Caribbean counterparts, the Copa Interclubes UNCAF and CFU Club Championship respectively.[11] The tournament was first held in 2007 and was canceled in March 2011.[12] The entire 2008 tournament, including the final, was to be broadcast live on TeleFutura in the United States.[10]

The New England Revolution are one of 10 original MLS teams, beginning play in 1996.[13] They had not participated in the only previous edition of the SuperLiga as they were not invited.[14] However, this was not their first foray into continental competition, as they'd participated in the 2003 CONCACAF Champions' Cup and the 2005 CONCACAF Champions' Cup, both times losing to Alajuelense on aggregate.[15] The Revolution had never won MLS Cup, although they'd reached the final on four separate occasions: 2001, 2005, 2006, 2007.[16][17] The first two of those appearances were losses to the LA Galaxy, and the last two were losses to the Houston Dynamo.[16][17] Additionally, the Revolution had played in two US Open Cup finals in 2001 and 2007, losing the first to the Galaxy and winning the second against FC Dallas.[16][18] The win against Dallas marked the club's first ever trophy.[18]

Paul Dalglish celebrates the Dynamo's 2006 MLS Cup win over the Revolution

The Houston Dynamo began MLS play in 2006 after the original incarnation of the San Jose Earthquakes relocated.[19] They found success in their first two seasons, winning the 2006 and 2007 MLS Cups against the Revolution.[20] The Dynamo participated in the 2007 edition of the SuperLiga, losing in the semifinals to Pachuca.[21] Their SuperLiga semifinal was a rematch of their semifinal against Pachuca in the 2007 CONCACAF Champions' Cup, where Pachuca prevailed 5–4 on aggregate.[22]

Both the Houston Dynamo and the New England Revolution qualified for the 2008 tournament based on their performance in the 2007 MLS season. The Dynamo qualified as the winner of the 2007 MLS cup, and the Revolution qualified as the runners-up.[10] This would be the third final between these two teams in three years, as the Dynamo won both the 2006 MLS cup and the 2007 MLS cup against the Revolution.[20][17]

The schedule and the groups for the tournament were announced on March 13 via an MLS press release.[10] The Dynamo were announced to be in Group A, and the Revolution were in Group B.[10] Each group consisted of two teams from MLS, and two teams from Liga MX.[10] The top two teams in each group would face off in semi-final matchups, with the winners of those games advancing to the final.[10]

Route to the final

United States New England Revolution Round United States Houston Dynamo
Opponent Venue Score Opponent Venue Score
Group B Group stage Group A
Mexico Santos Laguna Home1–0 Mexico Atlante Home4–0
Mexico Pachuca Home1–0 Mexico Guadalajara Home0–1
United States Chivas USA Away1–1 United States D.C. United Away1–3
Pos Team Pld Pts
1 United States New England Revolution 3 7
2 Mexico Pachuca 3 4
3 United States Chivas USA 3 4
4 Mexico Santos Laguna 3 1
Source: Livesport
Pos Team Pld Pts
1 United States Houston Dynamo 3 6
2 Mexico Atlante 3 6
3 Mexico Guadalajara 3 6
4 United States D.C. United 3 0
Source: Livesport
Mexico Atlante Home1–0 Semifinals Mexico Pachuca Home2–0

New England Revolution

The Revolution opened their SuperLiga campaign with a 1–0 victory over Santos Laguna on July 8, 2008, at Gillette Stadium.[23] Santos Laguna had won the 2008 Clausura, the most recent championship in Mexico.[24] The Revolution named a largely first-choice starting eleven, but were without Taylor Twellman and Mauricio Castro due to injury.[23] At the start of the match, the Revolution began in a 4-4-2 formation, but would shift to a 3-5-2 in the second half.[25] Late in the first half, Santos Laguna were reduced to 10 men after Juan Pablo Rodríguez was shown red for an elbow to the head of the Revolution's Sainey Nyassi.[23] In the 70th minute, Kheli Dube scored the match's only goal to give the Revolution their first competitive victory against a foreign opponent at Gillette Stadium.[23] This win extended their unbeaten streak to five matches across all competitions.[23]

Their second outing in the SuperLiga was against Pachuca on July 16, and was again hosted at Gillette Stadium.[26] The two teams had never met before.[25] Pachuca were a five-time Mexican champion, and had won back-to-back CONCACAF Champions Cups.[25] This time, the Revolution were missing Steve Ralston, Jeff Larentowicz, Taylor Twellman, Mauricio Castro and Chris Albright, all due to injury.[26] Four Revolution players (Jay Heaps, Pat Phelan, Kheli Dube and Michael Parkhurst) were in danger of suspension if they received a caution in this match because they had received one in their last match against Santos Laguna.[25] Pachuca was without Bruno Marioni for the match. [26] Midfielder Pat Phelan for the Revolution had to be taken off on a stretcher after an injury.[27] Phelan had collided with Sainey Nyassi and was knocked unconscious.[27] He regained consciousness but was brought to Massachusetts General Hospital for general treatment.[27] The score remained level until the eighth minute of stoppage time, when Pachucha's Julio Manzur was called for a handling offense that blocked a shot from Nyassi.[27] Khano Smith stepped up to take his first ever penalty for the Revolution, and converted it to take a 1-0 lead.[27] The result held, leaving the Revolution atop the group with six points.[26]

Their final group stage game was on July 20, against Chivas USA at Titan Stadium in Fullerton, California.[28] The game was played at Titan Stadium rather than the Home Depot Center because the latter was being renovated for the Summer X-games.[29] The Revolution's flight to the match, American Airlines Flight 725, had to be diverted to Oklahoma City after a fellow passenger stripped naked and attempted to open the emergency exit.[29] For the match, Chivas USA were without Paulo Nagamura due to yellow-card accumulation, as well as without head coach Preki, who was tending to a family emergency.[28] It took until the second half for either team to break through, when Chivas's Ante Razov scored on a rebound.[28] This was the sixth consecutive game in which Razov scored.[28] Shalrie Joseph of the Revolution then scored an equalizer, and the game finished 1–1.[28] With this result, the Revolution finished as group winners, and secured a spot in the semifinals.[28] Additionally, the result guaranteed that they would host their semifinal match, as well as a potential final match should they advance.[29]

Shalrie Joseph earned Player of the Match against Atlante in the semifinals

In the semifinals, the Revolution returned to Gillette Stadium to face off against Atlante on July 30.[30] This was the first time the Revolution had reached the semifinal of an international competition, and for Atlante, this was the first international competition they'd played in since 1994.[31] The two teams had met in a friendly match on March 6 of that year, where the Revolution lost 1–0, and three players were ejected.[32][29] The Revolution were without defender Michael Parkhurst, who was on Olympic duty.[30] The Revolution dominated this game, outshooting Atlante 17–8.[33] The Revs took a 1–0 lead in the 30th minute from a Shalrie Joseph header, which would be enough to carry them to the finals.[30] Late in the second half, Atlante forward Luis Gabriel Rey was shown red for striking Joseph in the stomach.[30] Atlante lost another player in stoppage time, when Alan Zamora was issued another red card.[32] After the final whistle, a mass confrontation occurred in the midfield.[30] Federico Vilar, Javier Muñoz Mustafa, and Luis Venegas of Atlante were each show red.[30] Additionally, Jay Heaps of the Revolution was shown red, suspending him for the final match.[30] Shalrie Joseph was named Player of the Match for his contributions.[33] After the game, some Revolution staff and personnel expressed disappointment with Atlante's conduct, with goalkeeper Matt Reis claiming "They have guys on their team, their staff hitting people from behind. You see it all the time, they're always swearing and yelling at the ref. All they wanted to do was come on and fight us."[32] Going into the final, the Revolution had conceded only one goal in four games, and remained the only undefeated team in the tournament.[33]

Houston Dynamo

The Dynamo's first SuperLiga game was a 4–0 win against Atlante played on July 12 at Robertson Stadium at the University of Houston.[34] This was a season high goal total, and the Dynamo were dominant for the entire game.[34] Their first three goals were scored in a nine-minute span, with Dwayne De Rosario scoring in the 20th, and Stu Holden scoring a brace with 21st and 28th-minute goals.[34] In the 44th minute, De Rosario and Atlante's Javier Munoz Mustafa were sent off for violent conduct.[34] In the 54th minute, Brian Mullan scored a fourth goal to seal the win for the Dynamo.[34]

An aerial view of Robertson Stadium, which hosted three games in the 2008 SuperLiga

The Dynamo next played Chivas de Guadalajara on July 15, again at Robertson Stadium.[35] The match was played in front of 29,723 spectators, the fourth-largest crowd ever at the venue.[35] The Dynamo were missing Brian Ching and Stu Holden due to injury, as well as Dwayne De Rosario due to suspension.[35] The lone goal in the contest was scored by Chivas's Omar Arellano in the 71st minute.[35] Chivas won the match 1–0, giving them a perfect record so far in the competition.[35]

The final group stage game for the Dynamo was played on July 19 against DC United.[36] The game was played at United's stadium, RFK Stadium.[36] The Dynamo won comfortably, with goals from Ricardo Clark and Bobby Boswell in the first 28 minutes.[36] While United's Francis Doe scored in the 77th minute, Stu Holden scored in the 84th minute, bringing the final score to 3–1.[36] With the result, it was a near certainty that the Dynamo would advance to the semifinals, as they would only be eliminated if Atlante defeated Chivas by eight goals later that night.[36]

In the semifinal matchup on July 28, the Dynamo beat defending SuperLiga champions Pachuca CF 2–0.[37] The match was played at Robertson Stadium.[37] The Dynamo had faced Pachuca in the previous edition of the SuperLiga, as well as in the 2007 CONCACAF Champions' Cup, losing both competitions in the semifinal stage.[37] In this matchup, the Dynamo were without Richard Mulrooney and Eddie Robinson, who were injured.[37] The first goal was scored by Bobby Boswell.[37] Pachuca had a potential equalizer waved off for offsides in the 60th minute.[37] The Dynamo's Corey Ashe scored on a header in the 87th minute, which secured the Dynamo's place in the SuperLiga final.[37]

Pre-match

Prize money

The first prize for the tournament was $1 million.[10] Under the collective bargaining agreement, the players of that winning team would collect 15% of the total sum, or $150,000 split between a 28-man roster.[38] The players on the runner-up team were set to split $100,000 in prize money.[38] On August 5, the day of the final, the MLS Players Association announced that the teams would be splitting the prize money regardless of the outcome of the match, as they viewed the low prize money as a violation of the Collective Bargaining Agreement.[39]

"The players on the Houston Dynamo and the New England Revolution have agreed in advance of the SuperLiga final that they will split evenly the bonus money at stake in the game. The players have made this decision to show their solidarity and in protest of the league’s violation of the Collective Bargaining Agreement with respect to the negotiation of bonuses for this tournament."

MLS Players Union Statement, [39]
Commissioner Don Garber during the 2007 MLS season

League commissioner Don Garber responded to this statement, and rejected the players' decision to split the prize money.[39] Garber claimed that splitting the prize money was prohibited by the CBA.[38] The commissioner stated: "We never implied that the players were going to receive a million dollars. The winner’s the team. The club gets the prize. And then we have an agreement as to what the share would be for the players.”[38]

Columnist Greg Lalas, writing for Sports Illustrated, claimed the tournament was dependent on Mexican clubs for attendance and viewership, and that the all-MLS matchup would be considered a failure by the leagues' marketing teams.[40] In a match preview for The Guardian, writer Shaka Hislop called the league's approach to the bonus system a "blinkered view", and said that the statement from the union "was a move of true solidarity by both clubs in an effort to show MLS commissioner Don Garber that the players and the clubs also have a voice and deserve to be heard."[41]

Match

The 2008 SuperLiga final was played on August 5 at 8 pm at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts.[42][43] The weather was partly cloudy and the temperature was 71 °F.[42] The match drew an attendance of 9,232 people, including Revolution investor/operator Robert Kraft.[43] The Revolution were missing Jay Heaps, who was suspended after the semifinal matchup with Atlante, as well as Michael Parkhurst, who was on the US Olympic team.[42] These players had started every group stage game as centerbacks, which led to Jeff Larentowicz and Amaechi Igwe filling in, despite both having limited experience in that position.[42]

First half

Both sides began the match with early chances to score that were narrowly missed.[42] The scoring opened in the eighteenth minute, when Houston player Nate Jaqua capitalized on a mistake from Igwe, who cleared the ball directly to Jaqua.[44] After stealing the ball, Jaqua had an open shot that he finished in the bottom left of the Revolution's goal.[43] Chris Albright said in a post-match interview: "The goal is a mistake, and Igwe would tell you that. Igwe didn’t hear us calling him off the ball, but he bounced back well from it.”[44] Only a minute later, the Dynamo nearly scored a second goal, when Brian Ching fired a shot into the left post.[42] Late in the half, Dwayne De Rosario and Jaqua came close to scoring, but their shots were cleared off the line by Albright and Chris Tierney.[42] In the 41st minute, Steve Ralston received a cross from Mauricio Castro, and volleyed the ball into the lower left corner of the net to bring the game level.[44][42] [43]

Second half

The second half saw fewer chances for both teams.[42] The Revolution subbed off Kenny Mansally for Taylor Twellman in the 58th minute.[42] This was Twellman's first SuperLiga appearance, and his first appearance for the Revolution since July 4, 2008.[42] In the 71st minute, the Revolution's Mauricio Castro was subbed off for Khano Smith, and a minute later, the Dynamo's goal-scorer Nate Jaqua was subbed off for Kei Kamara.[42] Both teams made one further change in this half, with the Dynamo subbing Corey Ashe in for Brian Mullan in the 79th minute, and the Revolution subbing in Adam Cristman for Kheli Dube.[42] Both the Dynamo and the Revolution failed to score in the second half, which brought the game to extra time.[44]

Extra time

In the 98th minute, Houston striker Kei Kamara scored a header off of Brian Ching's cross to bring the match to 2–1.[45] Kamara rose above Revolution goalkeeper Matt Reis to head the ball into an open net.[42] Four minutes later, a Ralston free kick was headed into the lower corner of Houston's net by Shalrie Joseph to bring the Revolution level again and to ensure the game was decided by a penalty shootout.[44][43] In the 110th minute, Chris Wondolowski subbed on for the Dynamo, replacing Brad Davis.[42]

Shootout

The Revolution took the first kick, with Steve Ralston scoring on his attempt.[42] Houston's Craig Waibel equalized on his attempt.[42] In the second round, Revolution goalkeeper Matt Reis missed his penalty kick, but then had back-to-back saves against Dwayne De Rosario and Brian Ching to give the Revolution the advantage.[42] Khano Smith had a chance to win the game in the fifth round, but Houston goalkeeper Pat Onstad saved it, and Ricardo Clark scored a must-score penalty to bring the shootout to sudden death at 3-3.[42][45] In the sixth and seventh round, Jeff Larentowicz and Chris Tierney scored for the Revolution, and Wade Barrett and Kei Kamara scored for the Dynamo.[45] In the eighth round, Albright scored his penalty to give the Revs the lead.[45] Corey Ashe's attempt was tipped over the bar by Reis to seal a 6-5 win in the penalty shootout.[45][46]

Details

New England Revolution2 – 2 (a.e.t.)Houston Dynamo
Ralston 41'
Joseph 102' Yellow card 82'
Report Davis Yellow card 14'
Jaqua 18'
Kamara 98'
Penalties
Ralston soccer ball with check mark
Reis soccer ball with red X
Joseph soccer ball with check mark
Twellman soccer ball with check mark
Smith soccer ball with red X
Larentowicz soccer ball with check mark
Tierney soccer ball with check mark
Albright soccer ball with check mark
6–5 soccer ball with check mark Waibel
soccer ball with check mark Wondolowski
soccer ball with red X De Rosario
soccer ball with red X Ching
soccer ball with check mark Clark
soccer ball with check mark Barrett
soccer ball with check mark Kamara
soccer ball with red X Ashe
Attendance: 9,232
Referee: Howard Webb (England)
New England Revolution
Houston Dynamo [47]
GK1United States Matt Reis
DF8United States Chris Tierney
DF2United States Amaechi Igwe
DF13United States Jeff Larentowicz
DF3United States Chris Albright
MF16Honduras Mauricio Castrodownward-facing red arrow 71'
MF21Grenada Shalrie JosephYellow card 79'
MF14United States Steve Ralston (c) 
MF31The Gambia Sainey Nyassi
FW9The Gambia Kenny Mansallydownward-facing red arrow 58'
FW29Zimbabwe Kheli Dubedownward-facing red arrow 90'
Substitutes:
GK12United States Doug Warren
MF28United States Pat Phelan
MF30United States Brandon Tyler
DF22United States Rob Valentino
MF18Bermuda Khano Smithupward-facing green arrow 71'
FW20United States Taylor Twellmanupward-facing green arrow 58'
FW7United States Adam Cristmanupward-facing green arrow 90'
Manager:
Scotland Steve Nicol
GK18Canada Pat Onstad
DF24United States Wade Barrett (c) 
DF32United States Bobby Boswell
DF16United States Craig Waibel
MF11United States Brad DavisYellow card 14'downward-facing red arrow 110'
MF13United States Ricardo Clark
MF20United States Geoff Cameron
MF9United States Brian Mullandownward-facing red arrow 79'
MF14Canada Dwayne De Rosario
FW25United States Brian Ching
FW21United States Nate Jaquadownward-facing red arrow 72'
Substitutes:
GK1United States Tony Caig
FW5United States Kyle Brown
MF17United States Mike Chabala
MF19United States John Michael Hayden
FW7United States Chris Wondolowskiupward-facing green arrow 110'
MF26United States Corey Asheupward-facing green arrow 79'
FW10Sierra Leone Kei Kamaraupward-facing green arrow 72'
Manager:
United States Dominic Kinnear

Assistant referees:
Hector Vergara
Greg Barkey
Fourth official:
Jorge González

Match rules

Post-match

"To be honest, had we not [won], it would have been a complete and utter disaster."

Steve Nicol, New England Revolution Head Coach,

The Revolution were named 2008 SuperLiga champions after their victory.[44] The win was the club's second-ever trophy.[48] It would take until the 2021 Supporters' Shield for the club to win another.[48] Of the three finals in three years between the Revolution and the Dynamo, it was the only one won by the Revolution.[44] Revolution investor/operator Robert Kraft, who attended the match, stated afterward that he hoped the title was one of many future championships.[43]

On November 21, 2008, MLS announced that for the 2009 tournament, the top four teams in the 2008 MLS regular season standings not competing in the CONCACAF Champions League in 2009–10 would qualify for SuperLiga 2009.[49] That ruling means that the Houston Dynamo, who had already qualified for the 2009–10 CONCACAF Champions League, were not eligible to participate in the Superliga 2009.[49] The Revolution did qualify for the 2009 SuperLiga, and were eliminated in the semifinals after a 2–1 loss to the Chicago Fire.[50] Both the Dynamo and the Revolution qualified for the 2010 Superliga.[51] The Dynamo reached the semifinals of that tournament, losing 1–0 to Atlético Morelia.[52] The Revolution reached the finals, losing 2–1 to Morelia.[53] The tournament was discontinued after the 2010 edition, with MLS commissioner Don Garber stating that “SuperLiga was a great tournament which served its purpose during its time. CONCACAF got more and more committed to a continental tournament with the Champions League, which we’re very supportive of. It has delivered the value we intended in SuperLiga to put our teams against the best competition in this region.”[54] The Revolution were the only MLS club to win the SuperLiga over its four editions.[55]

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