Shelby Daily Globe

Crew captures MLS crown

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COLUMBUS (AP) — No matter the absences from the lineup or the opponent, Caleb Porter implored the Columbus Crew to impose themselves.

Porter’s players responded, putting aside the recent history of the defending champion Seattle Sounders and capping the most unpredicta­ble of MLS seasons with one of the league’s original franchises raising a championsh­ip trophy.

“We were not going to let history in the past determine today,” Porter said. “This is our year. This is going to be our year, it was going to be our day, it was going to be our trophy. And that was my message before the game. I don’t care what they’ve done in the past, it’s going to be decided on today.”

Lucas Zelarayán scored midway through the first half and added the clincher in the 82nd minute and the Crew won their second MLS Cup title, beating the defending champion Seattle Sounders 3-0 on Saturday night.

Derrick Etienne Jr. also scored in the first 45 minutes for Columbus. The Crew withstood Seattle’s second-half pressure and finally celebrated after Zelarayán’s second goal.

“I think we took advantage of every single moment that we had,” Zelarayán said through an interprete­r. “We tried to be strong every time we had the ball, and I think we capitalize­d on every single opportunit­y that we had.”

Zelarayán, the MLS newcomer of the year and largest signing in franchise history, was the best player on the field on a night the Crew were playing short-handed. Columbus was without midfielder­s Darlington Nagbe and Pedro Santos after both tested positive for COVID-19 this week.

“Two of our guys went down and we needed to do extra for them because we know what they mean to this team,” Columbus captain Jonathan Mensah said. “We had to do this for them.”

Despite the absences, the Crew were the decidedly better side and Zelarayán was the instigator. Columbus claimed its first title since 2008 and denied Seattle a chance at being just the fourth backto-back champions in league history. The Sounders, playing in their fourth final in five years, were trying to be the first repeat champions since the LA Galaxy in 2011-12.

It was the first appearance in the final for Columbus since 2015 when the Crew were denied a title by the Portland Timbers and current Columbus coach Caleb Porter. The franchise was nearly relocated just a few years ago, but efforts to keep the team in Columbus proved successful and now there is a championsh­ip to celebrate.

The loss of Nagbe and Santos seemed to be the biggest story entering the final.

But their teammates made their absences moot.

“This guy was unbelievab­le,” Porter said. “I don’t think he had a wrong step for 90 minutes. He just got the ball every time. He carved space for himself, all the time.”

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