For the first time in years, there genuinely was (a little) buzz about the Revolution, both around New England and even nationally when it came to hardcore MLS fans. What interests me is the fact that people who normally don't pay any attention to the team or league were starting to take notice so of course, the Revs did what they always do in big games, they lost 1-0 this afternoon in the Eastern Conference Finals vs. Columbus at MAPFRE Stadium. Just like that, their great postseason run is over as the Crew advance to host the MLS Cup Final on Saturday night (8, ESPN) against the winner of tomorrow night's (9:30, FS1) Western Conference Finals matchup between Seattle and Minnesota.
I would love to say that I'm surprised by this depressing result but the truth is that I'm not at all. As a longtime Revs supporter (granted many of those years I hate-watch them), I knew that no matter how much success they were having and how everything seemed to be going their way lately, impending doom is always right around the corner for a club that is 0-5 all-time in MLS Cup Finals. I guess we'll never know what kind of bump they would have received in terms of creating new fans since many of them end up going away once you lose. That's the harsh reality, everyone loves a winner and if you cannot do that on a consistent basis, what's the point in watching an inferior product when all the top European soccer leagues are easily viewed with a basic cable package.
Revolution head coach Bruce Arena is the best at his job in league history so if anyone can end this dare I say curse, it should be him. Furthermore, despite my initial tone here, it shouldn't be all doom and gloom since they have a ton of talent returning next season and many young players that hopefully will be here for years to come. Still, the path to their first MLS title was right there for the taking. Columbus is a solid team but they are not better than Philadelphia (who New England beat two rounds ago) and probably about on the same level as Orlando (who they dispatched in the previous playoff game). Ugh.
You got a bad feeling that it wasn't the Revs' day when striker Adam Buksa hit the post with a shot in the 28th minute. He had teammate Gustavo Bou going to the net (mostly covered) but instead of playing it into traffic-where many things could have happened-he chose to take a low-percentage shot that went off the outside of the the post. New England had scored first in all three of its playoff games during this postseason but finding themselves scoreless at halftime was not the worst fate in the world. The home team broke the deadlock in the 59th minute as they scored following a corner kick and some pretty passing: midfielder Artur hit a low one-time shot past Revolution goalkeeper Matt Turner (MLS postseason-high 6 saves) with an assist from defender Jonathan Mensah.
Trailing for the first time all postseason, the Revs never put enough pressure on Columbus' goalkeeper Andrew Tarbell (4 saves). There two best chances in the second half both happened very late as Bou's shot was saved in the 92nd minute and then on essentially the final play of the game, a corner kick bounced to New England midfielder Matt Polster but he lamely kicked it right into Tarbell's chest. The Crew did a nice job bottling up Revs midfielder Carles Gil who is by far their top playmaker that makes most good things happen offensively. With him contained, New England could only manage to earn four corner kicks and take 10 total shots. When they struggled for long stretches in the regular season, goal-scoring was usually the main issue so it's fitting that came up one last fatal time.
Probably the toughest part out of all this was the fact that the Revolution were probably the closest of the five main Boston pro sports teams (Red Sox, Celtics, Bruins, Patriots) to winning a championship. That's not to say that they are the best of that bunch, only that MLS' new one-game format for each playoff round makes it easier to navigate in addition to soccer's utter randomness in big games not to mention few fans at the stadiums due to the pandemic. I know plenty of die-hard Revs fans (haha seriously, they do exist) that will watch them forever no questions asked but I wonder how many more casual fans were ready to jump on the bandwagon with their recent success but now they are already gone. Ultimately, this team didn't reach the MLS Cup Final in 2020 but they still found a way to bum us all out, just what we don't need in this nightmare year on Earth.
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