The Sounders won Seattle’s second national sports championship in three years. MLSoccer.com

From nowhere in August to the summit in December, the Seattle Sounders, for the first time in eight seasons, are are champions of Major League Soccer.

Outshot and outplayed for much of a cold Canadian evening by homestanding Eastern champion Toronto FC, the Western champio  Sounders prevailed 5-4 on penalty kicks, the game-winner by burly Panamanian center back Roman Torres.

But the hero was GK Stefan Frei, who spent his first five MLS seasons with Toronto, then pitched a 120-minute shutout with seven saves against his old team. He also stopped two in penalties to create the winning margin. He was named game MVP.

Considering that the playoff run was accomplished without three franchise stalwarts who began training camp together — Clint Dempsey, Obafemi Martins and coach Sigi Schmid — the feat bordered on the astounding. And for Frei to be the decider against his first club was extra sweetness.

“I’m so happy for the fans and my team,” a jubilant Frei told KCPQ Ch. 13. “It’s really unfortunate it has to come down to penalties. It’s a team game. For it to be decided like that, it’s brutal.

“To see Roman, a big center back who’s probably not famous for his technique. to come up like that and slot it home, calm and cool. It’s like a dream come true.”

In the shootout, Frei denied Michael Bradley, the U.S. Men’s National Team captain, who struck a poor ball that Frei handled easily. After the first round tied at 3-3 and advanced to sudden death, Justin Morrow of Toronto hit the crossbar straight away.

That opened matters for the Sounders’ sixth kicker, Torres, whose late-season return from injury was a key element in the Sounders’ rise from ninth place in summer. His quick run-up and kick eluded TFC keeper Clint Irwin, ending three hours of tension for a sold-out crowd of 36,045 at BMO Field that was struck silent as a roaring Torres ran down the field trailed by his delighted teammates.

The Sounders were outshot 19-3, including no shots on goal — the first champion in MLS history to do that. But the defense was remarkable, especially on one save by Frei during extras. A well-placed loft by Toronto star Jozy Altidore was denied by Frei when he leaped left and, fully textended, reached slightly behind him to knock the ball away. It was one of four shots by Altidore that barely avoided the frame.

The match featured two teams — third-seeded Toronto entered the league in 2007, the fourth-seeded Sounders in 2009 — that had never been to a Cup final. They played an edgy, taut 90 minutes that had three yellow cards, a few verbal confrontations, a handful of injuries and several near-misses by TFC.

But nothing slipped past Frei, whereas Irwin, his counterpart, had little to do as the night wore on. Whether that made a difference is likely unknowable, but makes little difference to the champion Sounders, who followed last season’s winners, the Portland Timbers, to make the Northwest the axis of the North American pro soccer universe.

For most of the regular season, and for 120 minutes of the final match, the Sounders didn’t look like champions. But they are. Let the party begin.

 

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6 Comments

  1. Astounding result considering the Sounders’ inability to get anything going offensively. Huge kudos to the back line and the extraordinary Frei. We will take it!

    That said, MLS should change the location of the Final to a warm weather, neutral pitch. The weather in Toronto (and Seattle for that matter) this time of year really impedes the quality of play. Given how the game went that was probably to the Sounders’ advantage. But awarding home field in a one game Championship Final based on regular season points would be like holding the Super Bowl on the home field of the team that had the best regular season record.

    • They did that for a while, but attendance and atmosphere suffered, and the fans pushed for the home-field advantage. Every MLS Cup final since has been a sellout.

  2. Someone on Twitter posted side-by-side pictures of Frei’s save — which some call the greatest in Cup history — next to Richard Sherman’s tip in the NFC championship. Eerily identical poses, with identical importance.

    I’ve been a season ticket holder since the APSL days, sat through some games with sparse crowds in crumbling Memorial Stadium, and despite the four lower-level crowns and Open Cup wins, this MLS Cup means more to me than even the Super Bowl. I’ve been hat invested in this team. The only thing that could come close for me would be another Seattle Stanley Cup, but that’s another story.

  3. Frei was like an NBA center, smacking the ball out of the area he was protecting. And at least 3x he tipped it to a teammate rather than letting it go out of bounds and give Toronto a corner kick. His last one will be right there in Seattle sports lore with Sherman’s tip on Crabtree’s reception.

  4. I don’t mind when championship games are won in “ugly” fashion because there is far more to achieving a championship than just the final game itself. No team in any sport should ever have to apologize. You just have to smile, shout, lift the trophy, and remember it for the rest of your life. Congrats to the Sounders.