D.C. United is
an American soccer team. Based in Washington, DC, they play
in the Eastern Conference of Major League Soccer (MLS).
Their official nickname is the "Black-and-Red"; the team's
home uniform is largely black.
The team's home field is the 56,454-seat Robert F. Kennedy
Memorial Stadium on East Capitol Street, which is owned by
the government of the District of Columbia and is shared
with the Washington Nationals. It was once the home of the
Washington Senators, the Washington Redskins and the
Washington Freedom. The city is considered to be one of the
most supportive of soccer in the country. United's main
supporters' club is called the Screaming Eagles. Other
supporters' clubs include Barra Brava and La Norte.
The club was one of the founding ten members of the MLS in
1996 and was initially the most successful. They won the
first "double" in modern U.S. soccer history in 1996,
beating Los Angeles Galaxy to take the MLS Cup and the A-League
club Rochester Raging Rhinos to win the US Open Cup. They
have also been successful in CONCACAF competitions, winning
the Champions Cup and the Interamerican Cup in 1998. From
the back of domestic success, the club's first coach, Bruce
Arena, went on to direct the national side. Although United
would win an MLS Cup in the season after his departure, the
loss of Arena would signal a significant downturn in the
team's fortunes. While Thomas Rongen's initial year was a
success, two lackluster seasons led to his departure and
replacement by Ray Hudson in 2002. The team did not fare
much better under Hudson, however, and Peter Nowak replaced
him prior to the start of the 2004 season. The season was
marred by injuries in the early-going, and some players were
known to have complained about Nowak's methods. A strong
late finish propelled the United into the playoffs with the
second seed, where they advanced past the New England
Revolution on penalty kicks in what some have called "the
greatest MLS game ever played". United then defeated the
Kansas City Wizards 3-2 to take their fourth MLS Cup.
Famous past players for United include the US internationals
Roy Lassiter, Eddie Pope, Jeff Agoos, John Harkes, Tony
Sanneh, Ben Olsen, Carlos Llamosa, and most recently Bobby
Convey, who was transferred to Reading F.C. in the English
Football League Championship on July 22, 2004. Foreign stars
included Marco Etcheverry, Raul Diaz Arce, Jaime Moreno, and
Hristo Stoitchkov.
On November 18, 2003, MLS made sports history by signing
Freddy Adu, a prodigy of a soccer player, at the age of 14
and on January 16, 2004 he was selected by United with the
first pick in the 2004 MLS SuperDraft. When Adu entered
United's regular-season opener as a second-half substitute
on April 3, 2004, he became the youngest player in any
professional sport in the United States since 1887. |