The
MLS Cup is the post-season championship of
Major League Soccer (MLS), a professional club soccer league in the United States and Canada. The
2009 season was the 14th in MLS history, and was contested by 15 teams in two conferences. The playoffs, running from October 29 to November 22, were contested by the top two clubs in each conference and four
wild card teams in the next positions regardless of conference. It was organized into three rounds: a
home-and-away series in the Conference Semifinals, a single-match Conference Final, and the MLS Cup final. The 2009 edition of the MLS Cup was contested by the
Los Angeles Galaxy and
Real Salt Lake. The two teams were from the
Western Conference, marking the second consecutive edition to be played between two teams from the same conference. The Galaxy and Real Salt Lake played each other twice in the regular season: a 2–2 draw hosted by Real Salt Lake in May and a 2–0 loss for hosts Los Angeles in June. The team finished joint-last in the league in 2008, replacing manager
Ruud Gullit with former
United States national team coach
Bruce Arena midway through the season. In the
2009 SuperDraft, the Galaxy selected
Omar Gonzalez and
A. J. DeLaGarza, both of whom would lead a revamped defense alongside newly-acquired goalkeeper
Donovan Ricketts. Though without star midfielder
David Beckham due to an extended loan to
A.C. Milan, the Galaxy began the season with one loss and two wins in their first twelve matches. After Beckham's return in July, the team went on a six-match unbeaten streak and secured a playoff berth in late August. The Galaxy finished the season with 12 wins, 6 losses, and 12 draws, placing first in the Western Conference with 48 points. The Galaxy played the Western Conference Semifinals against
Chivas USA, the co-tenant of the
Home Depot Center appearing in their fourth consecutive playoffs. The Galaxy advanced to the Conference Final after winning 1–0 in the second leg, with
Landon Donovan scoring the lone goal from a
penalty kick. The Western Conference Final was played against the
Houston Dynamo and hosted by the Galaxy at the Home Depot Center. The match was interrupted by two
power outages in both halves of regulation time, which ended scoreless after a Dynamo goal in the 80th minute was disallowed. Defender
Gregg Berhalter scored in the 103rd minute and was followed six minutes later by a Landon Donovan penalty to give the Galaxy a 2–0 win and a place in the MLS Cup final. Veteran midfielder
Jason Kreis, who had scored the franchise's first goal, was appointed head coach after six straight losses to begin the 2007 season and worked with new general manager
Garth Lagerwey to rebuild the team. After acquiring several key players in 2008, including captain
Kyle Beckerman, and defenders
Nat Borchers and
Jámison Olave, the team qualified for the playoffs and advanced to the Western Conference Final, where they were defeated by the
New York Red Bulls. Real Salt Lake qualified for the playoffs on the last day of the season with 40 points, thanks to favorable results from three matches that eliminated five other teams competing for the final two wild card spots. As a wild card, the team was seeded into the Eastern Conference Semifinals against the
Columbus Crew, the defending MLS Cup champions. Real Salt Lake faced the
Chicago Fire in the Eastern Conference Final at
Toyota Park in
Bridgeview, Illinois, which ended in a scoreless draw after extra time. Salt Lake won the ensuing
penalty shootout 5–4 after seven rounds, relying on three saves by goalkeeper
Nick Rimando. Real Salt Lake became the third MLS Cup finalist to have qualified for the playoffs as the lowest seed, mirroring the New York Red Bulls the previous year, and was the second expansion team to contest an MLS Cup.
Summary of results :
Note: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away). ==Broadcasting==