The Great Eight Round of 16: Hunting Owls & a Brave Republic Prosper as Two LAs Collide

2022-05-28 03:38:02 By : Ms. Jill Lee

Fans of the 109-year-old Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup (in its 107th edition) live by its magic moments. And the Round of 16 of this 2022 competition tossed up a good few of those on May 25. Join usopencup.com for a look back at eight moments of note from eight games in which 16 teams were evenly split between jubilation and despair. While Louisville City’s run came to an end, those curious third-division owls of Union Omaha are flying high and starting to terrify. So are USL Championship sluggers Sacramento Republic – after a thrilling round that saw worlds collide in LA and New York’s finest get good marks back at school.

Up next, it’s a trip to Sporting Kansas City. And we do recommend the four-time Open Cup champions load their big guns – and keep their eyes on the skies.

Los Angeles, you City of Angels. Home to our national Dream Machine, airbrusher of our rougher American edges. Carson, down in the county, is 25 miles from the Hollywood sign, but it was the site of pure Open Cup drama on Wednesday. Both the Galaxy and LAFC’s top dogs were on from the start. Chicharito went the distance for the home side, though, as Carlos Vela, blunted by injury, lasted only a few minutes. The flash of the moment – huge-money stars, heaving crowds and soccer-specific stadia – found counterpoint in the stands. There Benny Binshtock, Moshe Hoftman, Chon Miranda, Leo Kulinczenko and Avram Cohen watched on and considered how far the American game has come since they won five Open Cups between 1972 and 1981 with Maccabee LA . They were honored at the half, down on the field, and they must have felt a pang of familiarity when a brawl ended the 3-1 Galaxy win. That passion drew a straight line back to the rough and tumble of the old semi-pro days when the Maccabees, founded by Holocaust survivors and proudly wearing the Star of David on their chests, were, for a decade and then some, the best of the best. “What a day,” proclaimed Binshtock, a winner of five national titles who retired at the final whistle of his fifth Open Cup win (at Giants Stadium in 1981). 

DeAndre Yedlin is a hero of the U.S. Open Cup. Check your history books if you’re new to our tournament. He won the 2014 title with the Seattle Sounders (their last of a run of four Cup crowns in six years starting in 2009). Back then he was just a local kid gifted with terrifying pace . One wonders why, now decked in pink and with a heron over his heart at David Beckham’s Inter Miami, he chose to paint his head electric green ahead of the Round of 16 loss to Orlando City. Was it nostalgia for those good old days in the Emerald City – back when the whole world was at his feet? We’ll never know, really, but he sure was easy to find on the pitch, his head matching, to a perfect nuance of shading, the bermudagrass turf of the Exploria Stadium playing surface. And thus there was nowhere to hide when he blazed over the bar from 12 paces and bowed out of the Cup with his debutant Miamians.

We’ll leave your deep-dive hardcore statistical analysis to the pros and their protractors. If you’re interested in who had the most goal-worthy attempts from the left side after a cross-field ball, you’ve come to the wrong place. What we do know, however, is that only eight teams remain alive in this oldest cauldron of American soccer. Two of those, SacRep and the mighty Owls of Union Omaha, are working from significantly smaller pools of cash and far shallower squads than the five Major League Soccer (MLS) survivors. We also know (and delight in the fact) that 22 goals were scored through the eight games of the Round of 16 – close to three goals per contest. And that is, to borrow a technical term, great. Also great is the fact that not one single game went through extra-time without at least one goal being scored. We support all of this – and demand more of the same when we pick up next month.  

Both NYCFC and the New York Red Bulls played their Round of 16 games in the intimate environs of the area’s local colleges. The Red Bulls, with a goal from Long Island’s Dylan Nealis in a 3-1 win, ended Charlotte FC’s dreams at Montclair State University in New Jersey (same venue where FC Motown – top amateur performers of this 2022 competition – played their home games). Reigning MLS champions New York City FC had to endure a stubborn fight at Belson Stadium (on the campus of St John’s University in Queens) from the New England Revolution. It was a homecoming of sorts for the Revs’ assistant coach Shalrie Joseph, who took the school’s Red Storm to the 2001 NCAA Final Four before winning an Open Cup with the Revolution in 2007. Having the fans right up close, involved and invested in the action, seemed to spur both home sides on to victory. They’ll now meet in a Hudson River Derby, graduating up to swanky Red Bull Arena for the Quarterfinal.

But that’s just the fleeting pain of sporting loss. The black armbands and moments of silence – agreed to by all participating teams, leagues and organizers – were a reminder of the senseless tragedy at the Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas that saw 21 people, 19 of them children, lose their lives this week.

Let’s do better, America. Fontela is editor-in-chief of usopencup.com. Follow him at @jonahfontela on Twitter.