Practice done, talk is over. Now healthy with Alonso and Evans doing well, Sounders get to the championship business Saturday in Toronto.
Author: Andrew Harvey
Seattle and Toronto, first-timers to the MLS Cup, share a number of other franchise deeds and storylines, including a NASL heritage and a contemporary boost from a major pro sports enterprise.
MLS Cup week is on in Toronto. Tactics are laid out, Schmetzer is irked at a question about succeeding Schmid, the rival mayors throw down beer bets and a Toronto player is thrilled more than most.
Jordan Morris has transformed from a shy rookie into an offensive weapon, helping lead the Sounders to their first shot at an MLS Cup Sunday in Toronto.
The game was full of oddness: A wardrobe malfunction by Carolina QB Cam Newton, an unexpected sideline visit by Marshawn Lynch and a whole lot of nothin’ from the Panthers.
Stefan Frei’s MLS career started well with Toronto FC. But after two seasons of almost no action, a 2013 trade to the Sounders gave the goalie exactly what he needed to flourish.
A nephew of Cougars great Jack Thompson, Colorado’s Sefo Liufau is a bruising, 230-pound quarterback who loves running between the tackles, something the Huskies defense has not seen.
A 56th-minute goal by Jordan Morris stunned the Rapids, undefeated at home this season, and sent Seattle on to its first appearance in the MLS Cup after a season of tumult and despair.
After a two-week break, a four-day turnaround seems abrupt for what was previously the MLS’s hottest club, especially when the 5,100-foot altitude favors the homestanding Rapids.
Luke Falk and Washington State’s Air Raid offense has bewildered many foes this season, but the Washington Huskies secondary is the best in the Pac-12 Conference.