2003 Major League Soccer season
Season2003
MLS CupSan Jose Earthquakes (2nd title)
Supporters' ShieldChicago Fire (1st shield)
2004 CONCACAF Champions' CupSan Jose Earthquakes
Chicago Fire
Matches played150
Goals scored433 (2.89 per match)
Top goalscorerCarlos Ruiz
Los Angeles Galaxy
Goals: 15
Taylor Twellman
N.E. Revolution
Goals: 15
Biggest home winCHI 4–0 COL
CLB 6–2 CHI
Biggest away winSJ 1–4 CHI
DAL 0–3 SJ
Highest scoringNY 4–4 SJ
CLB 6–2 CHI
Longest winning runColorado Rapids
Games: 5
(07/04 – 08/09)
MetroStars
Games: 5
(04/26 – 05/24)
Longest unbeaten runChicago Fire
Games: 7
(07/19 – 08/24)
Colorado Rapids
Games: 7
(08/16 – 10/01)
Longest losing runColorado Rapids
Games: 4
(05/03 – 05/25)
Dallas Burn
Games: 4
(07/19 -08/13)
Highest attendanceLos Angeles Galaxy
Season: 329,752
Game Avg.: 21,983
Lowest attendanceDallas Burn
Season: 118,585
Game Avg.: 7,906
Total attendance2,234,747
Average attendance14,898
2002
2004
2003 Major League Soccer season is located in the United States
D.C.United
D.C.
United
MetroStars
MetroStars
Columbus Crew
Columbus Crew
New England Revolution
New England Revolution
ChicagoFire
Chicago
Fire
Colorado Rapids
Colorado Rapids
DallasBurn
Dallas
Burn
Los Angeles Galaxy
Los Angeles Galaxy
Kansas City Wizards
Kansas City Wizards
San Jose Earthquakes
San Jose Earthquakes
Locations of teams for the 2003 Major League Soccer season
Western Conference   Eastern Conference

The 2003 Major League Soccer season was the eighth season of Major League Soccer. It was also the 91st season of FIFA-sanctioned soccer in the United States, and the 25th with a national first-division league.

The Los Angeles Galaxy moved into the league's second soccer-specific stadium when the Home Depot Center opened on June 1, 2003. The Chicago Fire continued to play at Cardinal Stadium in Naperville but returned to the newly renovated Soldier Field for their final regular season game.

The number of games was increased to 30 after a reduction to 28 for the 2002 season. Instead of a best-of-three series, the playoffs were tweaked so that the conference semifinals would be determined by a home-and-away aggregate score over two matches. Additionally, the two conference finals became one match fixtures instead of two legs.

The regular season began on April 5, and concluded on October 26. The 2003 MLS Cup Playoffs began on November 1, and concluded with MLS Cup 2003 on November 23. The San Jose Earthquakes won their second MLS Cup in three years with a victory over Chicago.

Overview

Season Format

The season began on April 5 and concluded with MLS Cup on November 23. The 10 teams were split evenly into two conferences. Each team played 30 games that were evenly divided between home and away. Each team played every other team in their conference, and two designated opponents from the opposite conference, four times, and the remaining teams in the opposite conference twice.

The top four teams from each conference qualified for the MLS Cup Playoffs. In the first round, aggregate goals over two matches determined the winners. The conference finals were played as a single match, and the winners advanced to MLS Cup. In all rounds, draws were broken with two 15-minute periods of extra time, followed by penalty kicks if necessary. The away goals rule was not used in any round.

The team with the most points in the regular season was awarded the MLS Supporters' Shield. Additionally, the winner of MLS Cup and the runner-up qualified for the CONCACAF Champions' Cup.

Stadiums and locations

Team Stadium Capacity
Chicago Fire Cardinal Stadium
Soldier Field
15,000
61,500
Colorado Rapids Invesco Field at Mile High 76,125
Columbus Crew Columbus Crew Stadium 22,555
D.C. United RFK Stadium 46,000
Dallas Burn Dragon Stadium 11,000
Kansas City Wizards Arrowhead Stadium 81,425
Los Angeles Galaxy Home Depot Center 27,000
MetroStars Giants Stadium 80,200
New England Revolution Gillette Stadium 68,756
San Jose Earthquakes Spartan Stadium 30,456

Personnel and sponsorships

Team Head coach Captain Shirt sponsor
Chicago Fire United States Dave Sarachan
Colorado Rapids United States Tim Hankinson
Columbus Crew United States Greg Andrulis Pepsi
D.C. United England Ray Hudson
Dallas Burn United States Mike Jeffries
Kansas City Wizards United States Bob Gansler
Los Angeles Galaxy United States Sigi Schmid Budweiser
MetroStars United States Bob Bradley United States Eddie Pope
New England Revolution Scotland Steve Nicol
San Jose Earthquakes Canada Frank Yallop United States Jeff Agoos Yahoo! en Español

Coaching changes

TeamOutgoing coachManner of departureDate of vacancyIncoming coachDate of appointment
Dallas Burn United States Mike Jeffries Fired September 15, 2003 Northern Ireland Colin Clarke September 15, 2003

Standings

Eastern Conference

Pos Team Pld W L T GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Chicago Fire 30 15 7 8 53 43 +10 53 MLS Cup Playoffs
2 New England Revolution 30 12 9 9 55 47 +8 45
3 MetroStars 30 11 10 9 40 40 0 42
4 D.C. United 30 10 11 9 38 36 +2 39
5 Columbus Crew 30 10 12 8 44 44 0 38
Source: MLS

Western Conference

Pos Team Pld W L T GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 San Jose Earthquakes 30 14 7 9 45 35 +10 51 MLS Cup Playoffs
2 Kansas City Wizards 30 11 10 9 48 44 +4 42
3 Colorado Rapids 30 11 12 7 40 45 5 40
4 Los Angeles Galaxy 30 9 12 9 35 35 0 36
5 Dallas Burn 30 6 19 5 35 64 29 23
Source: MLS

Overall Standings

Pos Team Pld W L T GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Chicago Fire (S) 30 15 7 8 53 43 +10 53 CONCACAF Champions' Cup
2 San Jose Earthquakes (C) 30 14 7 9 45 35 +10 51
3 New England Revolution 30 12 9 9 55 47 +8 45
4 Kansas City Wizards 30 11 10 9 48 44 +4 42
5 MetroStars 30 11 10 9 40 40 0 42
6 Colorado Rapids 30 11 12 7 40 45 5 40
7 D.C. United 30 10 11 9 38 36 +2 39
8 Columbus Crew 30 10 12 8 44 44 0 38
9 Los Angeles Galaxy 30 9 12 9 35 35 0 36
10 Dallas Burn 30 6 19 5 35 64 29 23
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

MLS Cup Playoffs

Bracket

Conference Semifinals Conference Finals MLS Cup
          
E1 Chicago (wins 4–0 agg.) 2 2
E4 D.C. United 0 0
E1 Chicago 1
Eastern Conference
E3 New England 0
E2 New England (wins 3–1 agg.) 2 1
E3 MetroStars 0 1
E1 Chicago 2
W1 San Jose 4
W1 San Jose (wins 5–4 agg.) 0 5*
W4 Los Angeles 2 2
W1 San Jose 3
Western Conference
W3 Kansas City 2
W3 Kansas City (wins 3–1 agg.) 1 2
W2 Colorado 1 0

Eastern Conference Semifinals

Chicago Fire2–0D.C. United
Williams 4'
Razov 94'
Attendance: 15,202
D.C. United0–2Chicago Fire
Ralph 17'
Razov 55'

Chicago Fire won 4–0 on aggregate.


New England Revolution won 3–1 on aggregate.

Western Conference Semifinals

San Jose Earthquakes won 5–4 on aggregate after golden goal extra time.


Kansas City Wizards won 3–1 on aggregate.

Conference Finals

Eastern Conference

New England Revolution0–1 (a.e.t.)Chicago Fire
Armas gold-colored soccer ball 101'

Western Conference

MLS Cup

Chicago Fire2–4San Jose Earthquakes
Beasley 49'
Roner 54' (o.g.)
Ekelund 5'
Donovan 38', 71'
Mulrooney 50'

Player statistics

Goals

RankPlayerClubGoals
1 Guatemala Carlos Ruiz Los Angeles Galaxy 15
United States Taylor Twellman New England Revolution
3 United States Ante Razov Chicago Fire 14
Scotland John Spencer Colorado Rapids
5 United States Landon Donovan San Jose Earthquakes 12
United States Brian McBride Columbus Crew
United States Preki Kansas City Wizards
8 United States Mark Chung Colorado Rapids 11
Jamaica Damani Ralph Chicago Fire
10 United States Edson Buddle Columbus Crew 10
United States Pat Noonan New England Revolution

Assists

RankPlayerClubAssists
1 United States Preki Kansas City Wizards 12
2 Honduras Amado Guevara MetroStars 9
3 United States Mark Lisi MetroStars 6
United States Ross Paule Columbus Crew
United States Steve Ralston New England Revolution
6 United States Cobi Jones Los Angeles Galaxy 5
United States Manny Lagos San Jose Earthquakes
United States Brian Mullan San Jose Earthquakes
United States Richard Mulrooney San Jose Earthquakes
United States Pat Noonan New England Revolution
United States Eric Quill Kansas City Wizards
Jamaica Andy Williams Chicago Fire

Clean Sheets

Rank Player Club Clean
Sheets
1 United States Scott Garlick Colorado Rapids 9
Canada Pat Onstad San Jose Earthquakes
3 United States Zach Thornton Chicago Fire 8
4 United States Nick Rimando D.C. United 7
5 United States Adin Brown New England Revolution 4
United States Jon Busch Columbus Crew
United States Kevin Hartman LA Galaxy
United States Tony Meola Kansas City Wizards
United States Jonny Walker MetroStars
10 United States D.J. Countess Dallas Burn 3
United States Tim Howard MetroStars

Awards

Individual awards

AwardPlayerClub
Most Valuable PlayerUnited States PrekiKansas City Wizards
Defender of the YearUnited States Carlos BocanegraChicago Fire
Goalkeeper of the YearCanada Pat OnstadSan Jose Earthquakes
Coach of the YearUnited States Dave SarachanChicago Fire
Rookie of the YearJamaica Damani RalphChicago Fire
Comeback Player of the YearUnited States Chris ArmasChicago Fire
Scoring ChampionUnited States PrekiKansas City Wizards
Goal of the YearJamaica Damani RalphChicago Fire
Fair Play AwardUnited States Brian McBrideColumbus Crew
Humanitarian of the YearUnited States Ben OlsenD.C. United

Best XI

Goalkeeper Defenders Midfielders Forwards
United States Tim Howard, MetroStars United States Wade Barrett, San Jose
United States Carlos Bocanegra, Chicago
United States Alexi Lalas, LA Galaxy
United States Mark Chung, Colorado
Denmark Ronnie Ekelund, San Jose
Colombia Óscar Pareja, Dallas
United States Steve Ralston, New England
United States Jeff Cunningham, Columbus
Guatemala Carlos Ruiz, LA Galaxy
United States Taylor Twellman, New England

Attendance

Club Games Season Game Avg.
Los Angeles Galaxy 15 329,752 21,983
Colorado Rapids 15 251,578 16,772
Columbus Crew 15 243,756 16,250
MetroStars 15 237,326 15,822
Kansas City Wizards 15 233,594 15,573
D.C. United 15 233,476 15,565
New England Revolution 15 219,611 14,641
Chicago Fire 15 210,080 14,005
San Jose Earthquakes 15 156,989 10,466
Dallas Burn 15 118,585 7,906
Totals 150 2,234,747 14,898

References

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