Story courtesy USL Public Relations
Reading Rage versus Laredo Heat
Laredo will be seeking to become the first team to reach the PDL Championship game three straight years after becoming the first team to reach the semifinals in three consecutive, besting Orange County’s run of three semifinal appearances in four years. But the Heat will have to get past the Reading Rage, who in their first playoff appearance since 1998 knocked off the defending Eastern Conference champion Brooklyn Knights.
Reading enters the contest tied for the league’s second-best defense with Chicago, having allowed only 12 goals in 16 games. The Rage posted seven shutouts on the season and added another in their 1-0 victory over Brooklyn a week ago in the conference final.
Laredo, however, boasts a defense that only gave up three more goals on the year and an offense that ranked close to Reading with 33 scored to Reading’s 32. The Heat, however, arguably have the upper hand beyond home field advantage, having defeated the league’s top defense in the postseason with division rival Austin having allowed just 11 goals on the year.
The 8-4-4 Heat had tough outings during the season against Austin with a 1-0 loss at home and 3-1 defeat in Austin, but when the postseason pressure was on in the conference final, they avenged the two losses by eliminating the Aztex 3-1 with a pair of goals from US U-20 international and 2007 PDL Championship MVP Felix Garcia.
The Heat and Rage have drastically different franchise and playoff histories. Laredo has found immediate success in the league in its first four official seasons of play by reaching the playoffs each year and the past two league finals for a postseason record of 9-2-1 heading into the semifinal Saturday.
Reading, on the other hand, has been in USL since 1996, but is in the playoffs for the first time in seven years. The former USL Second Division franchise made the playoffs in its first six seasons with a record of 2-6-0, but moved to the PDL in 2004 after two losing seasons. The club posted its first winning mark last year (7-5-4) before improving to 11-3-2 this season.
In addition to Garcia, the Southern Conference Champions are led by 2008 All-Conference selection Juan Ibarra in the midfield. Ibarra set up both of Garcia’s goals in the conference final and finished the regular season with five goals and eight assists. In addition to the three postseason tallies, Garcia scored 11 times in the 2008 campaign to finish tied for 10th in points and tied for seventh in goals.
After a fantastic championship performance last year that would have left him as the leading contender for the conference’s best goalkeeper, Ryan Cooper found himself in the shadow of Austin’s Miguel Gallardo, who took the league’s GAA Championship at 0.615. Cooper was not far behind, finishing fifth in the league with a mark of 0.883.
Reading also had two representatives on the All-Conference team with forward James Taranto and midfielder Adam Gazda receiving honors. Gazda led the team in points with a balanced effort of six goals and six assists, and was also second in minutes played. Taranto led the team in goals with seven on the season. Taranto notched a goal and assist in the club’s 4-2 overtime conference semifinal win over Newark. Barbados international Tyrell Burgess, looking to erase the memories of his nation’s World Cup qualifying series drubbing at the hands of the United States with a PDL championship, added to his three regular season goals with a pair of penalty conversions in the playoffs, the second proving to be the 1-0 game-winner against Brooklyn.
Vancouver Whitecaps Residency versus Thunder Bay Chill
With the first-ever all-Canadian semifinal in PDL history, there will be a guaranteed Canadian finalist for the first time since the Calgary Storm of 2001, who won the regular season title with a record of 18-2 and would advance to the title game before falling 3-1 to Westchester.
Like Calgary was in 2001, the Whitecaps Residency team is in its first season in the PDL. But while Vancouver has limited playoff experience in the PDL, the club itself is very familiar with the postseason atmosphere compared to that of Thunder Bay, who is only in their second playoff appearance in nine years.
The Chill recorded their first playoff win this year after falling in their opener last season. The regular season Heartland Division Champions (13-2-1) knocked off perennial power Colorado 3-1 in the Divisional Round to advance to the conference tournament, where they downed Cleveland 2-0 and Kalamazoo 4-0 for the conference crown.
All-Conference selection Brandon Swartzendruber, who led the team with 13 goals and was second in the league in points (34) and fourth in goals, scored twice in the tournament with Gustavo Oliveira also posting a goal and two assists in their conference final victory.
Despite finishing second in the league in goals with 42 on the season, the Chill could arguably be the underdogs in the contest not having yet faced a team seeded higher than ninth in the playoffs due to Kalamazoo’s upset of regular season champion Michigan. Worse yet, Vancouver knocked off the league’s top offense, Tacoma, in their conference final in an impressive 4-1 result.
Randy Edwini-Bonsu led the attack in the conference final with two goals and an assist after posting two goals in a 3-1 overtime win against San Fernando Valley in the conference semifinal and a team-leading nine goals during the season. Edwini-Bonsu’s scoring exploits perhaps overshadowed the defense’s performances after finishing as one of the best in the league with only 14 goals allowed on the year en route to an 11-4-1 record that was only second in the division due to tiebreakers.
Forged to help the club build players for the future, the Whitecaps Residency program is an innovative side with professional status that allows the team to sign talented youth prospects to professional deals while developing for the upper echelons of the professional game in North America or beyond. While the PDL team is new to the league and the playoffs, the club is extremely experienced in the postseason courtesy of the USL-1 and W-League teams.
The USL-1 franchise has missed the playoffs only twice (1994, 1996) in 15 years in the league and claimed the league championship just two years ago. On the women’s side, the Whitecaps have been perennial powers, having reached the final four five times in the first six years of play with two third-place finishes, one second-place finish and two championships (2004, 2006) before missing the postseason for the first time last year.
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