The
MLS Cup is the post-season championship of
Major League Soccer (MLS), a professional club soccer league based in the United States. The
2002 season was the seventh in the league's history and was contested by ten teams in two conferences following the folding of two teams in
Florida and the reorganization of the
Central Division. Each team played a total of 28 matches in the regular season, which ran from March to September, facing teams within their conference four times and outside of their conference two times. The playoffs ran from late September to October and was contested by the top eight teams overall, with the top two teams in each conference given a higher seed regardless of overall standing. The playoffs were organized into three rounds, the first two being a
home-and-away series organized into a best-of-three format with the first team to earn five points advancing, and the single-match MLS Cup final. MLS Cup 2002 was contested by the
Los Angeles Galaxy, who also won the regular season's
Supporters' Shield, and the
New England Revolution, the highest-ranked team from the
Eastern Conference. The Galaxy and Revolution played each other twice in the regular season: a 3–2 victory for New England on May 25 and a 2–1 win for Los Angeles on August 10. The two teams also played each other in the
2001 U.S. Open Cup Final, where Los Angeles won 2–1 in overtime.
Los Angeles Galaxy The Los Angeles Galaxy had qualified for the playoffs in each of the league's previous six seasons and were runners-up at the MLS Cup on three previous occasions: losing to
D.C. United in
1996 and
1999, and to in-state rivals
San Jose Earthquakes in
2001. Guatemalan forward
Carlos Ruiz, who was acquired in the offseason, scored 24 goals in his first season with the Galaxy and was named the league's
most valuable player (MVP). The Galaxy finished as Supporters' Shield champions with 51 points, while the remaining Western Conference teams all qualified for the playoffs. The Wizards won 4–1 in the second leg at
Arrowhead Stadium, setting up a series-deciding third match at the Rose Bowl. Los Angeles won the third leg 5–2, with two goals each for Jones and Ruiz, and advanced to the Conference Finals with six points. The Galaxy played against the
Colorado Rapids in the Western Conference Finals, held over the following week under the same format as the Semifinals. The team won 4–0 at the Rose Bowl and 1–0 at
INVESCO Field in
Denver, bringing the Galaxy to their fourth MLS Cup final.
New England Revolution , who led the team in scoring The Revolution failed to qualify for the playoffs in 2001, following several years of poor on-field performances that resulted in the worst winning record of the league's ten teams. Despite their league performance, New England finished as runners-up to the Galaxy in the 2001 U.S. Open Cup. During the 2002 preseason, the club acquired several players from the
Tampa Bay Mutiny and
Miami Fusion in trades and the
Allocation Draft following the contraction of the two clubs, including league MVP
Alex Pineda Chacón, forward
Mamadou Diallo, midfielder
Steve Ralston, and defender
Carlos Llamosa. New England also drafted forward
Taylor Twellman in the
2002 MLS SuperDraft following a successful college career and a return from
TSV 1860 Munich. Head coach
Fernando Clavijo was fired after the seventh match of the season, with the Revolution only winning two. New England finished the season with a six-match unbeaten streak and a total record of 12 wins, 14 losses, and two draws, scoring a league-high 49 goals. The team narrowly qualified for the playoffs on the final day of the season, with all three qualifiers from the Eastern Conference within one point of each other. The Fire won the second leg 2–1, setting up a deciding match at Gillette Stadium on October 2. The Revolution won 2–0 in the third match, clinching their first playoff series win and advancing to face the
Columbus Crew in the Conference Semifinals. The first leg at Gillette Stadium was a scoreless tie and the Revolution won the second leg in Columbus 1–0 on an early goal scored by defender
Jay Heaps, who was later ejected for an altercation with
Freddy García. After earning a 2–0 lead in the third leg, New England conceded two late goals to draw 2–2 and force overtime. Neither team could score the
golden goal needed to clinch a series win outright, leaving the Revolution with 5–2 in points and qualifying them for the MLS Cup final. The Revolution became the second team to play an MLS Cup final at their home stadium, following
D.C. United in
1997, which also held the attendance record.
Summary of results :
Note: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away). Playoffs were in best-of-three format requiring five points to advance and sudden death extra time as a tiebreaker. ==Broadcasting==