It’s a season that Landon Donovan probably never wants to end, but luckily for him, he’s got one more game to play. Donovan’s LA Galaxy eliminated the Seattle Sounders last weekend on an away-goals tiebreaker after a 2-2 draw across two legs of competition, setting up a date with the New England Revolution this Sunday in the MLS Cup final. The final will be Donovan’s last game as a professional footballer, as he announced his retirement from soccer in August.
The Galaxy took a 1-0 lead into Seattle for the second leg but quickly fell into a hole. After Brad Evans scored early for the Sounders to tie the aggregate score at one, World Cup hero Clint Dempsey put a weak dribbler past LA keeper Jaime Penedo six minutes later to put Seattle on top.
Brazilian midfielder Juninho leveled the score at two apiece with a low rocket from outside the box that tied the aggregate score at two and gave LA the advantage by virtue of its away goal. Seattle tried desperately to find a late winner, but the Galaxy held on to advance to their record ninth MLS Cup final.
In the East, the New England Revolution faced the New York Red Bulls and another retiring legend in Thierry Henry. The Revs took a 2-1 lead into the second leg at Gillette Stadium and went through to the final behind two Charlie Davies goals, winning the two-legged tie 4-3 on aggregate and dashing any hopes of Henry and Donovan facing off for the Cup.
There are plenty of storylines to be gleaned from Sunday’s matchup. The Galaxy are seeking an MLS record fifth championship, while the Revolution are looking to claim their first title despite having already competed in four finals. The two franchises have met in the Cup final twice before, in 2002 and 2005, with the Galaxy claiming both titles.
But there’s also Donovan, who is probably the biggest storyline of all. He has decided to hang up his cleats at the relatively young age of 32, and throughout his career he has accumulated five league titles and pretty much every major scoring record in the MLS. It is puzzling that he is retiring now, as he’s still a prolific player. This season alone he posted 13 goals and 15 assists.
Donovan is a complex character. He has publicly acknowledged the role that soccer has played in perpetuating his depression. He’s stated many times during this playoff run that he would quit when the game was no longer fun and when it “felt right.” In that sense, retiring now is Donovan’s career in a nutshell; it’s him doing things on his own terms, whether that is leaving England for the MLS, taking a sabbatical from soccer during World Cup qualifying, or quitting with miles left in the tank.
Standing in the way of a Hollywood ending for Donovan’s career is a red-hot Revolution team featuring MVP finalist Lee Nguyen and U.S. national team phenom Jermaine Jones. The Revs won 10 out of their last 12 matches of the regular season to climb to the No. 2 seed in the East heading into the playoffs.
The difference for the Revs was definitely the acquisition of Jones late in the season from Turkish club Besiktas. Manager Jay Heaps has built a strong, scrappy team by compiling castoffs from other teams like Nguyen and Davies, while trading for and drafting players like Teal Bunbury and Andrew Farrell.
Davies is a great story on his own, because he has returned to strong form after a near-fatal car crash in 2010. New England are surely the underdogs going in, but are peaking at the right time to battle for their first Cup.
The Galaxy are a veritable juggernaut, holding the statistically most productive offense and stingiest defense in the league. LA is home to many of MLS’ flashy names to complement its gaudy stats. The attacking trio of Donovan, newly crowned MLS MVP Robbie Keane and Gyasi Zardes combined for a ridiculous 48 goals and 29 assists this season, making them the most electrifying attack in the league. Anchoring the backline are Omar Gonzalez and Robbie Rogers, two of MLS’s best defenders.
It’s hard to pick against this Galaxy team. The image of Donovan leaving on top in front of a home crowd at the StubHub Center is certainly compelling, and his team will surely have extra motivation to cap off his legendary career.
The Galaxy also waxed the Revs 5-1 in their only other meeting this season, with Keane and Zardes both scoring twice. If New England can pull off the upset, it will be on the back of Nguyen, who has carried the Revs all season, and Jones, who will need to be massive in front of the backline to stall the prolific LA attack.
As hot the Revs have been lately, I don’t think even they can stop destiny: Donovan will retire a champion as the Galaxy claim their fifth title.