Los Angeles Times

Cup is David versus Goliath

But the Galaxy can’t overlook Sacramento in the quarterfin­als of the U.S. Open Cup.

- By Kevin Baxter

Imagine a duffer beating a PGA Tour player at the local pro-am. Or a barnstormi­ng semi-pro baseball team pounding the New York Yankees.

Those are the kind of scenarios the U.S. Open Cup, the oldest national soccer competitio­n in the country, was made to generate.

“That’s kind of the beauty and the curse of the U.S. Open Cup,” Galaxy coach Greg Vanney said. “When lower-division teams are playing arguably their biggest game of their season or career or whatever, they certainly are going to be looking for the best version of themselves that day. And nothing else is going to matter.”

Domestic Cup competitio­ns around the world are modeled on the same David

versus Goliath structure, with amateur, semipro and top-tier profession­al teams competing against one another for the same prize.

On Tuesday, in the tournament quarterfin­als at Dignity Health Sports Park, Vanney will be managing Goliath — the five-time MLS champion Galaxy, the winningest profession­al team in U.S. history — against Sacramento Republic FC, which haven’t made it past the quarterfin­als of the secondtier USL Championsh­ip playoffs in eight years, and haven’t had a winning record the last three seasons.

But David — a.k.a the Republic — will show up, slingshot in hand, just the same.

“Anything,” Sacramento President and general manager Todd Dunivant said, “can happen on a given day.”

Especially since there’s more than just winning or losing at stake for the Republic. Beating the mighty Galaxy would prove what people in Sacramento have long believed: that the city deserves to be in MLS.

In fact, three years ago the Republic, with the financial backing of billionair­e businessma­n Ron Burkle, were awarded an MLS expansion berth that would have added them to the league this season. But when Burkle abruptly pulled out of the deal 16 months ago, MLS rescinded its offer and Sacramento has been stuck in limbo since, never really giving up on MLS yet with no clear path to get there, either.

“We’re not going to put that on our players to say, ‘Hey, go prove that we’re an MLS club by beating all these MLS teams,’ ” Dunivant said. “We think of it as an opportunit­y to really test ourselves against the best.”

The team, after all, already has beaten MLS teams, upsetting Salt Lake,

Seattle and San Jose in U.S. Open Cup play since 2017. But a win on the road over the Galaxy would be something extra, both for Sacramento and for Dunivant, who in nine seasons as a Galaxy defender won four MLS titles and the 2005 U.S. Open Cup.

The team has been back to the tournament final just once since.

“It’s a special opportunit­y. We’ve never played the Galaxy in their stadium in a real game,” Dunivant said. “It’s a special place for me.”

For Vanney, managing in the Open Cup for the first time, the tournament provides an opportunit­y to win a trophy, something the Galaxy haven’t done in eight years, the longest drought in franchise history.

“The mentality we want to build in the Galaxy is that playing for trophies is kind of what we do,” he said. “You come to the Galaxy because you play for championsh­ips.”

The Republic are one of two non-MLS teams in the final eight of the Open Cup. Union Omaha, which plays in the third tier USL League One, made it to the quarterfin­als by beating Minnesota United.

It will meet Sporting Kansas City on Wednesday.

Yet both teams face long odds going forward. Since MLS entered the tournament in 1996, it has failed to win the Open Cup just once, in 1999, when the Rochester Raging Rhinos of the second-tier A League won. That puts the pressure Tuesday squarely on the shoulders of the Galaxy, who are expected to win.

“There’s no question we’re going to be heavy underdogs,” Dunivant said. “We understand that, embrace that. That’s the beauty of our sport and the beauty of a Cup tournament.

“We’re playing with house money.”

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