Boston Sunday Globe

LAFC tops via Cup classic

Equalize late, win title in shootout

- By Greg Beacham

LAFC 3 (3) Union 3 (0)

LOS ANGELES — Gareth Bale tied the score on a dramatic header in the eighth minute of extra-time stoppage time, backup goalkeeper John McCarthy stopped two Philadelph­ia shots in the shootout, and Los Angeles FC beat the Union, 3-0, on penalty kicks to claim its first MLS Cup championsh­ip Saturday.

After Bale came on as a substitute in extra time and scored to make it 3-3 in the 128th minute for 10-man LA, Denis Bouanga, Ryan Hollingshe­ad, and Ilie Sanchez converted penalty kicks in the shootout, capping the most dramatic of MLS’s 27 title games. LA became the eighth team in MLS history to win both the Supporters’ Shield as regular-season champion and the MLS Cup playoff tournament.

“This place deserves this,” firstyear coach Steve Cherundolo said. “These fans are amazing. They deserve a Cup, and they got it.”

McCarthy, a Philadelph­ia native and former Union keeper who had exactly one previous game of MLS action for LAFC this season, was forced to come on during the second extra period when starter Maxime Crépeau badly injured a leg while committing a red-card foul on Cory Burke.

McCarthy yielded Jack Elliott’s second goal of the game to put Philadelph­ia ahead in the 124th minute — the fourth minute of injury time after 30 minutes of extra time. Bale entered in the 97th minute and the 33-year-old scored in the eighth of a scheduled nine minutes of stoppage time with a thrilling header for the Welsh superstar’s third MLS goal and first in three months.

In the shootout, McCarthy didn’t allow a goal on the Union’s three attempts, watching Dániel Gazdag slip and sky Philadelph­ia’s first attempt over the crossbar, then diving to make saves on José Martínez and Kai Wagner. Sánchez sealed the victory in front of LAFC’s ecstatic home crowd.

“You feel for their goalkeeper when he gets stretchere­d off,” Union coach Jim Curtin said. “[McCarthy is a] great kid, a Philly kid who did great things in Philadelph­ia. Soccer gods have a funny way of working. I half-joked on the bench that I can’t believe Johnny is going to be there, and it’s probably going to go to penalty kicks.”

Elliott also forced extra time by scoring the tying goal in the 85th minute of regulation for the Union, who rallied from a pair of one-goal deficits in their first MLS Cup final appearance. Philadelph­ia then took the lead deep in extra time when their English defender set the record for the latest goal in MLS history.

Elliott held that record for only four minutes, until Bale rose and headed home Diego Palacios’s cross.

Bale, who left Real Madrid during the summer with an eye on preparatio­n for Wales’ World Cup appearance later this month, was getting his first minutes with LA since Oct. 2.

Philadelph­ia rallied twice in regulation to tie it after the hosts went ahead at Banc of California Stadium, which was packed with black-clad fans anticipati­ng the crowning achievemen­t of their high-profile expansion franchise’s impressive first half-decade, which includes two regular-season league titles.

Kellyn Acosta scored in the first half for LAFC, and Philadelph­ia top scorer Gazdag tied it early in the second. Jesús David Murillo headed home a tiebreakin­g goal for LAFC in the 83rd minute off a corner from Carlos Vela, but Elliott evened it again for Philadelph­ia two minutes later.

The MLS Cup final was an appropriat­e postseason matchup between the league’s best teams throughout the regular season and two of its most impressive organizati­ons over the past half-decade. LAFC and Philadelph­ia finished on top of their respective conference­s this year with an identical 67 points before surviving the two-game postseason gauntlet to reach both clubs’ first playoff championsh­ip game.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Carlos Vela hoisted the trophy for Los Angeles FC, which also topped MLS in the regular season.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS Carlos Vela hoisted the trophy for Los Angeles FC, which also topped MLS in the regular season.

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