2002 Major League Soccer season explained

Season:2002
Mlscup:Los Angeles Galaxy (1st title)
Shield:Los Angeles Galaxy (2nd shield)
League Topscorer:Carlos Ruiz
Los Angeles Galaxy
Goals: 24
Matches:140
Total Goals:421
Highest Attendance:Colorado Rapids
Season: 289,663
Game Avg.: 20,690
Lowest Attendance:San Jose Earthquakes
Season: 156,104
Game Avg.: 11,150
Attendance:2,215,019
Average Attendance:15,822
Nextseason:2003

The 2002 Major League Soccer season was the seventh season of Major League Soccer. It was also the 90th season of FIFA-sanctioned soccer in the United States, and the 24th with a national first-division league.

According to FC Dallas president Dan Hunt, the entire league nearly folded during the 2001 offseason.[1] The owners agreed to shut down the league on a conference call in November 2001, but within two days Lamar Hunt convinced the other owners to give the league another year.

On January 8, 2002, the league folded two of its teams, both of which were in Florida. The Miami Fusion ceased operations after only four years of existence due to low attendance and an unfavorable stadium deal. The Tampa Bay Mutiny also ceased operations due to the lack of local ownership. Additionally, the league eliminated the Central Division and returned to the original two-conference alignment.

Two new stadiums opened this season. The Colorado Rapids moved into Invesco Field at Mile High and the New England Revolution moved into CMGI Field, which was renamed Gillette Stadium on August 5. Additionally, due to renovations at Soldier Field, the Chicago Fire played at Cardinal Stadium in the western suburb of Naperville.

In an effort to lower costs, the number of games was reduced from 32 to 28, marking the fewest games played in league history. The playoffs were also reformatted as the teams with the 8 highest point totals qualified regardless of conference affiliation.

The regular season began on March 23, and concluded on September 22. The 2002 MLS Cup Playoffs began on September 25, and concluded with MLS Cup 2002 on October 20. After three previous losses in the final, the Los Angeles Galaxy won their first MLS Cup with a victory over the New England Revolution.

Overview

Season format

The season began on March 23 and concluded with MLS Cup on October 20. The 10 teams were split evenly into two conferences. Each team played 28 games that were evenly divided between home and away. Each team played every other team in their conference, and one designated opponent from the opposite conference, four times, and the remaining teams in the opposite conference twice.

The top eight teams regardless of conference qualified for the MLS Cup Playoffs. The first round and conference finals were played as a three game series, and the first team to 5 points advanced. The winners of the conference finals advanced to MLS Cup.

The team with the most points in the regular season was awarded the MLS Supporters' Shield. Additionally, the winner of MLS Cup and the runner-up qualified for the CONCACAF Champions' Cup.

Stadiums and locations

See main article: List of Major League Soccer stadiums.

TeamStadiumCapacity
Chicago FireCardinal Stadium15,000
Colorado RapidsInvesco Field at Mile High76,125
Columbus CrewColumbus Crew Stadium22,555
D.C. UnitedRFK Stadium46,000
Dallas BurnCotton Bowl92,100
Kansas City WizardsArrowhead Stadium81,425
Los Angeles GalaxyRose Bowl92,542
MetroStarsGiants Stadium80,200
New England RevolutionCMGI Field68,756
San Jose EarthquakesSpartan Stadium30,456

Personnel and sponsorships

TeamHead coachCaptainShirt sponsor
Chicago Fire Bob Bradley
Colorado Rapids Tim Hankinson
Columbus Crew Greg AndrulisPepsi
D.C. United Ray Hudson
Dallas Burn Mike Jeffries
Kansas City Wizards Bob Gansler
Los Angeles Galaxy Sigi Schmid
MetroStars Octavio Zambrano Tab Ramos
New England Revolution Fernando Clavijo
San Jose Earthquakes Frank Yallop Jeff AgoosYahoo! Sports

Coaching changes

Standings

Overall standings

MLS Cup Playoffs

Bracket

Quarterfinals

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Semifinals

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MLS Cup

See main article: article and MLS Cup 2002.

Player statistics

Goals

Rank Player Club Goals
1Los Angeles Galaxy24
2New England Revolution23
3Columbus Crew16
4Chicago Fire14
San Jose Earthquakes
6Dallas Burn13
712
MetroStars
9Colorado Rapids11
Colorado Rapids

Assists

Rank Player Club Assists
1MetroStars13
2New England Revolution12
3Kansas City Wizards8
4Colorado Rapids7
Los Angeles Galaxy
Dallas Burn
Colorado Rapids
8San Jose Earthquakes6
San Jose Earthquakes
Dallas Burn
Dallas Burn

Clean sheets

RankPlayerClubClean
sheets
1 Joe CannonSan Jose Earthquakes8
2 Nick RimandoD.C. United7
Zach ThorntonChicago Fire
4 Adin BrownNew England Revolution5
Jon BuschColumbus Crew
Kevin HartmanLos Angeles Galaxy
7 Scott GarlickColorado Rapids4
Tim HowardMetroStars
9 Matt JordanDallas Burn3
Tony MeolaKansas City Wizards

Awards

Individual awards

AwardPlayerClub
Most Valuable Player Carlos RuizLos Angeles Galaxy
Defender of the Year Carlos BocanegraChicago Fire
Goalkeeper of the Year Joe CannonSan Jose Earthquakes
Coach of the Year Steve Nicol
Rookie of the Year Kyle MartinoColumbus Crew
Comeback Player of the Year Chris KleinKansas City Wizards
Scoring Champion Taylor Twellman
Goal of the Year Carlos RuizLos Angeles Galaxy
Fair Play Award Mark ChungColorado Rapids
Humanitarian of the Year Steve JolleyMetroStars

Best XI

Attendance

ClubGames TotalAverage
Colorado Rapids 14 289,663 20,690
14266,664 19,047
MetroStars 14254,174 18,155
14243,999 17,429
14 236,973 16,927
D.C. United 14 231,264 16,519
Dallas Burn 14 183,702 13,122
14 180,908 12,922
14 171,568 12,255
San Jose Earthquakes 14 156,104 11,150
Totals1402,215,01915,822

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: MLS nearly folded in 2001 - FC Dallas president Dan Hunt. April 16, 2016. Saad. Yousuf. ESPN.com.