MLS Final: Müller’s Heartbreak – Missed Chances & Defeat

Thomas Müller missed out on being crowned MLS champion in the dream final against Lionel Messi. Müller’s team is very unlucky. First a bitter own goal brings the deficit, then the aluminum becomes Vancouver’s kryptonite.

Lionel Messi’s assists decided the MLS Cup final and denied Thomas Müller the crowning glory of his first few months with the Vancouver Whitecaps. At home, Inter Miami won 3-1 (1-0) against the team of the former world champions, who won the title in a final against Messi’s Argentina in 2014.

Messi went into hiding for a long time in the final, but in front of just over 21,000 spectators, he delivered the decisive pass to make it 2-1 through his compatriot Rodrigo de Paul (71st minute) and also to make it 3-1 in stoppage time through Tadeo Allende (90th + 6th). Édier Ocampo (8th) had previously given Miami the lead with a bitter own goal, before which Messi also played the important deep pass. Ali Ahmed rewarded Vancouver’s strong performance with the interim equalizer (60′).

“Now all the emotions come up. If you give Messi the ball, you get chances. That’s how we did it. We knew we would be successful,” said club owner David Beckham on “AppleTV”.

The early goal caused noticeable uncertainty among the guests; in contrast to the win against San Diego FC a week earlier, the Canadian team had no access to the game at all. Every possession of the ball by Messi brought loud cheers. Quick passes with his former Barça colleagues Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba, for each of whom it was the last game of their careers, stressed the Whitecaps defense. The fact that Ocampo deflected the ball at 0-1 was emblematic of the initial phase.

Müller directs the game

The longer the game lasted, the more confident Vancouver played. Müller sometimes directed his teammates like a police officer in traffic when the lights were out, and the Whitecaps had their own chances. Miami’s professionals, on the other hand, became increasingly entangled in discussions with the referee, and Messi hardly had any scenes anymore.

In the 33rd minute, Whitecaps top scorer Brian White failed with a header, and in the 38th minute, Müller then brought the ball into position with a header from Emmanuel Sabbi. But Sabbi couldn’t get past goalkeeper Rocco Ríos Novo from a few meters. Another three minutes later, Müller’s header wasn’t dangerous enough.

“Not the start we wanted, but I think we’re playing better now, have our rhythm – we just need a breakthrough,” Whitecaps coach Jesper Sörensen said at halftime.

After the break, the game continued primarily towards the hosts’ goal, but initially without a brilliant idea. A header from Messi briefly caused tremors among the Whitecaps fans who had traveled with him. The Whitecaps finally rewarded themselves in the 60th minute when Ahmed equalized. Shortly after the kick-off there was almost reason to celebrate again, but Sabbi hit the post three times within five seconds after a fine solo effort. The ball bounced off the inside posts on both sides of the goal, and the follow-up shot also landed on the aluminum.

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An already clarified situation ultimately made the decision: Messi won the ball, sent de Paul into the penalty area with a fine pass – and the world champion made it 2-1. In stoppage time, Messi once again showed his class by preparing the third goal.

dpa/luwi

Aiko Tanaka

Aiko Tanaka is a combat sports journalist and general sports reporter at Archysport. A former competitive judoka who represented Japan at the Asian Games, Aiko brings firsthand athletic experience to her coverage of judo, martial arts, and Olympic sports. Beyond combat sports, Aiko covers breaking sports news, major international events, and the stories that cut across disciplines — from doping scandals to governance issues to the business side of global sport. She is passionate about elevating the profile of underrepresented sports and athletes.

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