WASHINGTON – D.C. United captain Dwayne De Rosario missed his second attempt at a penalty kick in the 89th minute after scoring on the first as the Philadelphia Union held on to draw D.C. on Sunday, 1-1, in a match that spiraled out of control late at RFK Stadium.
An encroachment call on De Rosario’s successful penalty kick attempt in the 87th minute was followed by a scrum, during which United midfielder Branko Boskovic was handed a red card.
De Rosario rocketed the ensuing kick over the goal to preserve the final score, but the dramatics weren’t done. D.C. defender Emiliano Dudar was handed a straight red three minutes later, Union defender Sheanon Williams was sent off with a second yellow in the dying seconds of the match and D.C. teammates Chris Korb and Brandon McDonald exchanged heated words with each other after the final whistle.
The Union ended a two-game losing skid despite blowing an early lead, while D.C. now have one win in their previous five tries. Philadelphia (7-12-3, 24 points) jumped up one spot to eighth in the Eastern Conference while D.C. (11-8-4, 37) took sole possession of fifth, just ahead of the Montreal Impact.
After beating Philadelphia goalkeeper Zac MacMath to his right on the first penalty attempt, De Rosario chipped his second shot high over the net. Chris Pontius was tripped by Roger Torres in the box, setting the stage for the penalty.
Boskovic’s 70th-minute free kick deflected off Philadelphia’s Amobi Okugo for an own-goal that proved the equalizer in a match where the Union’s Brian Carroll gave Philadelphia a 1-0 lead in the eighth minute.
Boskovic, who entered the match in the 57th minute, delivered a beautiful left-footed service that slid through a bevy of players, then nicked off Okugo’s head and by the outstretched arms of MacMath.
Philadelphia’s goal resulted from a set piece where Freddy Adu – playing in his first match at RFK since 2006 – lobbed a useful ball toward the box. The service pinballed to Carlos Valdés, who fired a shot that was headed away by D.C.’s Perry Kitchen, right to Carroll. The former United midfielder poked it by United keeper Bill Hamid for his first goal of the season and sixth of his career.
In the 64th minute, it appeared United had their first goal, but referee Mark Geiger ruled MacMath was interfered with by Hamdi Salihi as he was reaching for the ball. Replays showed MacMath didn’t have control of the ball on the play and the call drew the ire of a majority of the 12,312 spectators in attendance.
Both goalkeepers loomed large in the first half with Hamid making two diving saves and MacMath stopping four quality chances.
The Union return to action on Friday at home against Real Salt Lake, while D.C. host the Chicago Fire on Wednesday.
MLSsoccer.com Men of the Match
Rank |
Player |
What We Saw |
1 |
<a href="//www.mlssoccer.com/players/chris-pontius" target="_blank"><span style="font-size:12px;">Chris Pontius</span></a> |
Typically pesky for DC and a rare bright spot offensively, and set up De Ro's late PK with a nimble move in the box. |
2 |
<a href="//www.mlssoccer.com/players/carlos-valdes"><span style="font-size:12px;">Carlos Valdés</span></a> |
Solid night in the back when the Union needed it, despite the equalizer on a miscue by Okugo. |
3 |
<a href="//www.mlssoccer.com/players/nick-deleon" target="_blank"><span style="font-size:12px;">Nick DeLeon</span></a> |
The rookie played beyond his years at times, and got robbed of a goal. Is he back in the ROY discussion? |