2011_MLS_Cup_Playoffs

2011 MLS Cup Playoffs

2011 MLS Cup Playoffs

2011 edition of the MLS playoffs


The 2011 MLS Cup Playoffs was the sixteenth post-season tournament culminating the Major League Soccer regular season. The tournament began on October 26 with the play-in round and concluded on November 20 with the championship match. It was the first playoff series to include ten clubs, two more than the traditional eight. Six of the ten teams earned a direct bye into the conference semifinals, while the four wildcard teams played a single-elimination match to earn a berth into the conference semis. These eight clubs played in a single-elimination tournament en route to playoffs championship MLS Cup 2011, which doubles as the league championship for the 2011 MLS season altogether.

Quick Facts Tournament details, Country ...

The defending MLS Cup champions were the Colorado Rapids, who beat FC Dallas 2–1 in the 2010 championship.

As the preliminary round was eliminated from the CONCACAF Champions League, both finalists directly entered 2012–13 CONCACAF Champions League Group Stage, along with the Supporters' Shield winner for the regular season and the 2011 U.S. Open Cup champion. However, none of these berths were available to the league's two Canadian teams, which instead participated in the Canadian Championship for that country's single berth in the CONCACAF Champions League.

Format

The format for the tournament was announced on February 23, 2011.[1] The top three clubs in each of the league's two conferences will earn the six automatic spots in the quarterfinals.[1] The wild-card entrants, seeded seventh through tenth, will enter based upon their overall position in a single table of the league standings.[1] The new format is assembled so that the weakest seed to qualify out of the wild-card rounds will have to play the Supporters' Shield winner.[1] The other entrant will play the conference champion that did not win the Shield.[1]

The playoffs will begin with the Play-in round, which will contain the wildcard seeds. The first and second-placed wildcard seeds (seventh and eight place, respectively) will host the third and fourth-placed wildcard seeds (ninth and tenth place, respectively). The winners of each play-in proper will earn a berth into the conference semifinals, or the quarterfinals, of the playoffs.

Following the play-in round, will be the conference semifinals, where the two play-in round winners will join the six clubs that earned a direct bye into this round. The conference semifinals, will be a two-legged, aggregate series, in which each team plays their opponent twice: once at home, and once away. The team with the most goals accumulated over the two-match series will win the series and qualify for the conference championship. In this round, the lowest seeded wildcard team to advance will play against the MLS Supporters' Shield winner (regular season champion). The other wildcard seed will play against either the Eastern or Western Conference regular season champion, depending on which conference champion wins the Supporters' Shield. Also in the conference semifinals, feature the conference runners-up and third-place finishes from both the Eastern and Western Conference.[1]

The semifinal round, or the conference championship, will feature the winners from the conference semifinals. This round will be a one-legged affair, in which the higher seeded club will host the lower seed. The winner of these matches earn two berths (one from each conference) into the 2011 MLS Cup championship and a guaranteed berth in the 2012–13 CONCACAF Champions League.

The Eastern Conference and Western Conference bracket winners will meet in the MLS Cup final, which will be held at the pre-determined neutral venue. This year, the final will be held at the Home Depot Center in Carson, California, home of the Los Angeles Galaxy and Chivas USA.[1] The MLS Cup winner will be crowned league champion for the 2011 MLS season.[1]

Qualification

The top three clubs from each conference, based on final point totals, will qualify for the playoffs. From among the remaining clubs, the top 4 qualify as wild cards, entering the play-in round to narrow the field to 8. The Los Angeles Galaxy were the first MLS club to qualify for the playoffs, qualifying with a 1–0 win over Colorado Rapids on September 9.[2]

Conference standings

Eastern table

More information Pos, Pld ...
Source: MLS

Western table

More information Pos, Pld ...
Source: MLS

Overall standings

More information Pos, Pld ...
Source: MLS
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head record; 3) goal difference; 4) number of goals scored
(C) Champions; (S) Supporters' Shield

Tiebreakers

  1. Head-to-Head (Points-per-match average)
  2. Overall Goal Differential
  3. Overall Total Goals Scored
  4. Tiebreakers 1–3 applied only to matches on the road
  5. Tiebreakers 1–3 applied only to matches at home
  6. Fewest team disciplinary points in the League Fair Play table
  7. Coin toss

If more than two clubs are tied, once a club advances through any step, the process reverts to Tiebreaker 1 among the remaining tied clubs recursively until all ties are resolved.[3]

Bracket

Play-in round Conference semifinals Conference finals MLS Cup
E1 Sporting Kansas City 2 2
8 Colorado Rapids 1 WC Colorado Rapids 0 0
9 Columbus Crew 0 Eastern ConferenceE1 Sporting Kansas City 0
E2 Houston Dynamo 2
E2 Houston Dynamo 2 1
E3 Philadelphia Union 1 0
E2 Houston Dynamo 0
W1 LA Galaxy 1
W2 Seattle Sounders FC 0 2
7 FC Dallas 0 W3 Real Salt Lake 3 0
10 New York Red Bulls 2 Western ConferenceW3 Real Salt Lake 1
W1 LA Galaxy 3
W1 LA Galaxy 1 2
WC New York Red Bulls 0 1

Note: The LA Galaxy, as MLS Supporters Shield winners, were assured of playing the lower seeded Wild Card series winner (New York Red Bulls) in the Conference Semifinals, while Sporting Kansas City would play the higher seeded Wild Card series winner (Colorado Rapids).

Schedule

Major League Soccer released the schedule for its playoffs on August 9, 2011.[4]

Key
  • SS = MLS Supporters' Shield winner
  • E1/W1 = Eastern or Western Conference winner
  • E2/W2 = Eastern or Western Conference runner-up
  • E3/W3 = Eastern or Western Conference third place
  • WC1 = Top wildcard seed (7th place overall)
  • WC2 = Second wildcard seed (8th place overall)
  • WC3 = Third wildcard seed (9th place overall)
  • WC4 = Fourth wildcard seed (10th place overall)

Play-in round

More information FC Dallas, 0–2 ...
Attendance: 10,017

More information Colorado Rapids, 1–0 ...
Attendance: 7,803
Referee: Jorge Gonzalez

Conference Semifinals

Eastern Conference

More information Colorado Rapids, 0–2 ...
Attendance: 8,601
Referee: Baldomero Toledo
More information Sporting Kansas City, 2–0 ...

Sporting advances 4–0 on aggregate.


More information Philadelphia Union, 1–2 ...
Attendance: 18,539 (SO)
Referee: Jair Marrufo
More information Houston Dynamo, 1–0 ...
Attendance: 24,749
Referee: Ricardo Salazar

Houston advances 3–1 on aggregate.

Western Conference

More information New York Red Bulls, 0–1 ...
Attendance: 22,663
Referee: Alex Prus
More information Los Angeles Galaxy, 2–1 ...
Attendance: 20,000
Referee: Hilario Grajeda

Los Angeles advances 3–1 on aggregate.


More information Real Salt Lake, 3–0 ...
Attendance: 17,067
Referee: Mark Geiger
More information Seattle Sounders FC, 2–0 ...

Real Salt Lake advances 3–2 on aggregate.

Conference Finals

Host will depend on the higher seeded team. Single elimination match.[4]

More information Los Angeles Galaxy, 3–1 ...
Attendance: 23,437
Referee: Jorge Gonzalez

More information Sporting Kansas City, 0–2 ...
Attendance: 20,839
Referee: Mark Geiger

Final

More information Los Angeles Galaxy, 1–0 ...
Attendance: 30,281
Referee: Ricardo Salazar

Post-season statistical leaders

Note: Statistics only for post-season games.[5]

More information Rank, Scorer ...

References

  1. "MLS Releases Format for 2011 MLS Cup Playoffs | Goal.com". www.goal.com. Retrieved August 16, 2021.
  2. Bueno, Luis (September 10, 2011). "Recap: Galaxy dominant in 1-0 home win over Colorado". Major League Soccer. MLSSoccer.com. Retrieved September 10, 2011.
  3. "Playoff Standings: Complete table (UPDATED)". MLSsoccer.com. Retrieved October 24, 2011.
  4. "League announces fixture dates for 2011 MLS Cup Playoffs". MLS Communications. MLSSoccer.com. Retrieved August 9, 2011.
  5. "2011 MLS Cup Playoffs". Archived from the original on November 20, 2011. Retrieved November 21, 2011.

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