LA Galaxy to host RBNY for MLS Cup as original franchises meet in final
The Los Angeles Galaxy will host the New York Red Bulls in the MLS Cup final after the pair won their conference championship games on Saturday.
The Red Bulls will have a chance to win their first MLS Cup title after a 1-0 win at Orlando City.
The Galaxy will have home field advantage, as the higher seed, after an 85th-minute goal from Serbian forward Dejan Joveljic earned them a 1-0 win over the Seattle Sounders.
A 47th-minute header from Andres Reyes gave the Red Bulls the victory and sent the New Jersey club into the Dec. 7 final.
The Red Bulls qualified for the playoffs with a seventh-place finish in the regular season, earning them the final automatic spot in the playoffs.
Sandro Schwarz's team then pulled off a major upset by beating defending champion Columbus in the best-of-three first round before eliminating local rivals New York City last week.
Orlando had the early pressure and Red Bulls keeper Carlos Coronel had to be at his best to keep out an effort from Facundo Torres after a counter-attack.
But the Red Bulls threatened themselves when their Swedish playmaker Emil Forsberg floated a free-kick into the box and Belgian Dante Vanzeir flicked the ball just wide.
Two minutes after the interval, New York grabbed the decisive goal when John Tolkin's free-kick was delivered perfectly to the back post, where Reyes arrived to head in.
Orlando grew increasingly desperate in their attacks -- Duncan McGuire got around the back of the Red Bulls defense but fired his shot well wide and then Luis Muriel's rushed effort from a promising position flew harmlessly off-target.
The last chance of the game fell to Ivan Angulo but he too failed to find the target as the Red Bulls, founding members of MLS in 1996, held firm.
"I'm very proud of the whole group. It's amazing to create this atmosphere and also with this fighting spirit. Amazing the last couple of weeks and now we have one week more and it's not done," said German Schwarz, who was the former Mainz and Hertha Berlin coach.
The Galaxy, record five-time MLS champions, will have a chance to extend that mark when they take part in their first MLS Cup final in ten years.
Joveljic had twice seen efforts saved by Seattle keeper Stefan Frei but he kept his composure to settle a dour contest.
Alex Roldan gave the ball away for Seattle and LA's Spanish midfielder Riqui Puig played a deft through ball to Joveljic, who provided an ice cool finish.
HEADLINES
- USWNT draws England as 78K fans pack Wembley for Hayes' homecoming
- Saudi Arabia's 2034 World Cup bid praised by FIFA ahead of Dec. 11 decision
- John Herdman resigns as Toronto FC coach
- The Best Awards: FIFA reveals nominees for 2024 ceremony
- CanMNT climbs to highest spot in newest FIFA ranking, Argentina No. 1