FanSided MLS
·26. November 2024
FanSided MLS
·26. November 2024
When Jordan Morris found the back of the net in the 109th minute, it felt like the soccer gods themselves had given the Seattle Sounders a knowing nod. In that flash of instinct and precision, the team that had been haunted for three long years by LAFC turned the page on a storyline that even the most die-hard Black & Gold fans were tired of. An unlikely hero emerged, the script flipped, and the stunned silence at BMO Stadium echoed one simple truth: never underestimate the heart of a champion.
For what felt like an eternity, LAFC was the thorn in Seattle’s side. Ten matches without a win. Ten! That’s not just a stat; it’s the kind of baggage that weighs heavy on any team’s psyche. But somehow, Seattle decided enough was enough, and they pulled it off in the most dramatic way possible.
When Ryan Hollingshead opened the scoring for LAFC in the 50th minute, it looked like just another chapter in the same old story. The hosts had everything going for them, history, talent, the roaring crowd, and home-field advantage. BMO Stadium buzzed like a pressure cooker, and the Sounders seemed on the verge of falling apart.
But then, in the 59th minute, the game took a wild turn,or rather, it was turned by an own goal from Maxime Chanot. If you’re a Sounders fan, you’ll call it relentless pressure; if you’re rooting for LAFC, you might chalk it up to dumb luck. Either way, that moment was like a flick of the universe’s switch, signaling that this night had something extraordinary in store.
Stefan Frei was the man of the hour. At 38, the Sounders’ keeper delivered a performance that bordered on the unreal. Nine crucial saves, each one a reminder that age is just a number when skill and experience are in play. Frei wasn’t just blocking shots; he was defending the pride of a team that refused to go down without a fight.
Denis Bouanga and the rest of LAFC’s firepower will probably have nightmares about Frei for weeks. It was as if he’d built an invisible wall in front of the goal. While he was busy frustrating every LAFC attack, the Sounders were quietly building belief.
And then came the 109th minute. If there’s a way to describe Jordan Morris’s goal, it’s like a perfectly timed punch to the gut of a team that thought they had it all sewn up. In a play that blended sheer grit with finesse, Morris did what great players do, he showed up when his team needed him most.
With that win, the Sounders didn’t just book their spot in the Western Conference final; they reignited hopes of claiming their third MLS Cup title. Brian Schmetzer’s squad now turns its focus to the LA Galaxy, heading into the match with the confidence that they’ve already conquered the impossible.
For LAFC, though, the questions will linger. How did such a dominant team let the game slip away when everything seemed perfectly set up for yet another final? Sure, they can hang their hats on the U.S. Open Cup title, but it’s hard to shake the feeling that they let something much bigger slip through their fingers.
For the Black & Gold, this is a lesson in how even subtle arrogance can backfire. For the Sounders, it’s proof that history belongs to those who refuse to quit, even when the odds are stacked against them.