D.C. United dynasty MLS Cup's roots trace back to the foundation of Major League Soccer, when the league decided to hold a championship format similar to its contemporary North American sports leagues. The first few editions of the game were dominated by
D.C. United, who appeared in the first four MLS Cup finals, winning three. The inaugural MLS Cup in
1996 featured D.C. United and
LA Galaxy. The Galaxy went ahead 2–0 early in the second half, but their lead was relinquished towards the end of the match when
Tony Sanneh pulled one back in the 72nd minute. Nine minutes later,
Shawn Medved tied the match at two, resulting in
overtime between the two sides. Four minutes into overtime,
Eddie Pope gave United the
golden goal victory. In
1997, the second league cup final was contested at
RFK Stadium, where United won back-to-back titles, a feat that would not be accomplished for another decade (when the
Houston Dynamo won the 2006 and 2007 finals). The game ended 2–1 in United's favor over the
Colorado Rapids, who would not win a championship until
2010.
Jaime Moreno was declared
Man of the Match for his goal in the 37th minute of play. This season was also the first time in league history any MLS team won the regular season (
Supporters' Shield) and postseason title in the same season. D.C. United's run ended the third year, when they made a third run to the MLS Cup finals, only to lose to the expansion side
Chicago Fire by 2–0. However the following year, United repeated their
"double" of winning both the Supporters Shield and MLS Cup the same season. This time, it was a 2–0 win over the Galaxy in the
1999 MLS Cup final.
Rise of the California Clásico of San Jose defending against Chicago's
Carlos Bocanegra in the
2003 MLS Cup. For the first time since 1997, the 2000 MLS Cup final saw a new club reach the finals along with the Fire. This time the Kansas City Wizards, now known as Sporting Kansas City, won their first MLS Cup with a 1–0 victory over the Fire. From 2001 through 2005, the MLS Cup finals saw a rising of the
California Clásico when intrastate rivals L.A. Galaxy and the
San Jose Earthquakes clashed in the 2001 final. The match also saw the rise of U.S. national
Landon Donovan who won a Newcomer of the Year award and tallied the equalizer in the Earthquakes 2–1 championship victory over the Galaxy. With the largest crowd in MLS Cup history at hand, the New England Revolution took on the Galaxy in the 2002 finals. For the match, over 61,000 fans were in attendance at
Gillette Stadium to witness the final. In the second period of sudden-death overtime, the Galaxy nabbed their first MLS Cup title, and sparked the start of a string of MLS Cup losses for the Revolution. The 2003 final saw the league leaders for that season go head-to-head. Two clubs that had MLS Cup experience, the Fire and Earthquakes, played for the final that year. The two clubs had successful regular season campaigns with the Fire winning their first Supporters' Shield, and the Earthquakes being the Western Conference regular season and post-season champions as well as having the second best overall regular season record. In a hotly contested match, the Earthquakes won with their second MLS Cup title with a 4–2 score making it the highest scoring MLS Cup final in league history (six goals). After a four-year absence, United made their fifth trip to MLS Cup, playing against the Wizards for
MLS Cup 2004. The match had four goals scored in the first 25 minutes, with United rallying for a 3–1 lead. Midway through the second half, United had relinquished a penalty kick.
Josh Wolff scored for Kansas City, bringing the game within a goal. D.C. United was able to retain the lead, by winning their fourth MLS Cup title, by a score of 3–2. For the 2005 season, the Earthquakes, as the Supporters' Shield winners, fell to the Galaxy in the Playoffs. The Galaxy went on to win MLS Cup, matching the Earthquakes at two.
Format changes Until 2005, the MLS Cup championship games had been dominated by clubs that had either won or had come close to winning the Supporters Shield. In the
2005 MLS Cup championship, the match was won by the
LA Galaxy, which won the league title while having a ninth-place overall record. The result prompted MLS to create new wild-cards that were used starting in 2006, where a certain number of clubs per conference could qualify, and the next best overall teams regardless of conference would also qualify. That prompted debates about the league switching to a single table and a balanced schedule. The single table has yet been instituted, but in
2010 the league instituted a balanced schedule. Starting in the
2012 season, the league resumed an unbalanced schedule.
Scudetto era At the start of the
2006 season, MLS created their version of the
scudetto (Italian for "small shield"), a symbol worn on the jersey by the team who won the previous season's
Serie A (the top Italian league). The MLS scudetto was originally a curved, triangular badge featuring a backdrop of the American flag behind a replica of the Alan I. Rothenberg MLS Cup trophy. First worn by LA Galaxy in 2006, following their
2005 MLS Cup title, the Houston Dynamo wore the same triangular scudettos in 2007 and 2008 during their dual-cup run. It was redesigned after the 2008 season after the change to the MLS Cup trophy. It is now an oval-shaped black badge with the
Philip F. Anschutz Trophy in the middle. The MLS scudetto was worn by the winning team the season following the victory. It is only during the subsequent season (two years after winning the championship), that the team adds a
star – a common soccer signifier of titles won – above the team logo. The team can display the star on other items beside their jersey in the year after winning the Cup, but only if the scudetto is not shown. The
Columbus Crew was the first team to wear the redesigned scudetto.
Real Salt Lake wore the scudetto in 2010 after winning their first MLS cup in 2009. A year after the
Colorado Rapids also wore it after their cup run in 2010 for the 2011 season. Finally, the LA Galaxy wore the scudetto after winning MLS Cup in 2011, ironically, it was the last team to do so. After the 2012 season, MLS decided not to use the scudetto for upcoming season and instead the defending MLS Cup champions would have a gold star above one or more silver stars indication the team's MLS Cup wins, followed by an additional silver star added to the lined stars the following season. The LA Galaxy were the first to receive the gold star above the team's three silver stars for the 2013 season.
"Buffalo Bills" of MLS While the Galaxy won its second MLS Cup trophy and the Houston Dynamo earned consecutive cups, the New England Revolution went on a run of making three consecutive MLS Cup finals, losing all of them. Two of their three losses were in extra time, while the other was lost on penalty kicks. The infamy gave the club the title of being the
Buffalo Bills (an
NFL American football team) of MLS. This was in reference to the Buffalo Bills'
Super Bowl games in the early 1990s, in which they lost in four consecutive appearances. In the 2005 final, the Revolution lost to the LA Galaxy, a rematch of 2002, in the final. In a match held at Pizza Hut Park (now
Toyota Stadium) in
Frisco, Texas, the Galaxy defeated the Revolution by a score of 1–0 thanks to a 105th-minute overtime goal from Galaxy midfielder and
Guatemalan international,
Guillermo Ramírez. Ramírez's goal sealed the Galaxy's second MLS Cup title, and left the Revs searching once again. In 2006, the championship was once again played in Frisco at Pizza Hut Park. This time the Revolution took on the
Houston Dynamo. Both were coming off a successful season in which they fell short of winning the Supporters' Shield. A sellout crowd of 22,427 attended the match. Revolution forward
Taylor Twellman scored an overtime goal in the 113th minute to give the Revolution the 1–0 lead. However, Dynamo captain and forward
Brian Ching immediately tied the score following the Revolution's goal. The match went to penalties, in which the Dynamo won 4–3. This left the Revolution for a second consecutive year searching for league glory. It was also the first time in league history that a club lost consecutive MLS Cups.
Underdogs winning the cup Early in the
2008 Major League Soccer season, the league announced that the championship would be returning to The Home Depot Center (now known as
Dignity Health Sports Park). Throughout the regular season, the league was dominated by the Columbus Crew, who finished the season with 57 points, and secured the Supporters' Shield title with three matches remaining before the
2008 MLS Cup Playoffs. Traditionally, the Shield winners only rarely made it to the league championship, in spite of usually being the heavy favorites going into the playoffs. However, for the first time in eight years, a regular season champion made it to MLS Cup. The
Sigi Schmid-led club made their first run to the championship, along with their opponents the
New York Red Bulls. For the Crew, being the Shield winners, their run to the final was a bit expected. The Red Bulls making the final was seen as a large surprise, possibly even a fluke. The Red Bulls did not qualify for the playoffs until the last day of the season, where they were the weakest team, in terms of regular season record, to qualify for the playoffs. The match ended up being dominated by the Crew as Columbus defeated New York with ease, 3–1. The point gap between the two clubs was the largest in history, and the scoreline between the two clubs made it tied for the largest margin of victory in MLS Cup history. New York's run to the finals was further emphasized as a fluke when the club had the worst record in 2009. The following championship saw two intra-conference clubs meet in the final for the second consecutive year, this time at
Seattle's Qwest Field (later CenturyLink Field and now
Lumen Field). The Western Conference regular season and postseason champions, LA Galaxy took on
Real Salt Lake, who finished fifth in the West. Although the Sounders FC management had originally planned on capping the seats available in Qwest Field to 35,700, surging demand led to the release of an additional 10,000 seats, expanding the total capacity to roughly 45,700. The announced crowd was 46,011. The crowd size was the first championship crowd since 2002 to draw over 45,000 spectators. Televised on
ESPN, it was the first time that the MLS championship match was televised on the cable network; the first thirteen were carried on
ABC. In the 41st minute, Galaxy striker
Mike Magee scored, only for Salt Lake's
Robbie Findley to make the tying goal in the 61st. The stalemate was not broken in regulation nor overtime, requiring penalty kicks to decide the match. Thanks to a strike from Salt Lake's
Robbie Russell, Salt Lake won their first major trophy. By winning the championship, they gained entry into the
2010–11 CONCACAF Champions League. There, they made it to the final, only to lose to
Monterrey of Mexico. At the 2010 season's end, six teams from the Western Conference qualified for the playoffs, whereas only two clubs from the East qualified, making it the largest disparity between the two conferences in league history. The league's seeding at the time awarded conference winners earned the top seeds, the two weakest Western Conference teams,
San Jose Earthquakes and
Colorado Rapids were seeded against the Eastern Conference champion, New York Red Bulls and runner-up
Columbus Crew, respectively. Some cited this as an unfair advantage for the Rapids and Earthquakes, as both teams made the semi-finals. In the end, the Rapids played FC Dallas for
MLS Cup 2010, winning 2–1 in overtime.
LA Galaxy dynasty captain
Robbie Keane was the
2014 MLS Cup MVP. Between the 2011 and 2014 MLS Cups, the
LA Galaxy appeared in three MLS Cup finals, having the most success in MLS Cup in a short period of time since United's late 1990s dynasty. The only final that the Galaxy did not win, came in 2013, where they lost in the 2013 Western Conference semi-finals to eventual runner-up,
Real Salt Lake. During that time, the Galaxy became the first MLS franchise to win five MLS Cups, when they won
MLS Cup 2014. These teams contained several high-profile players including Landon Donovan,
Robbie Keane,
Gyasi Zardes,
David Beckham and
Omar Gonzalez. Some claim that the Galaxy's dynasty began in 2009, when they reached the playoffs for the first time since 2005, and marched to the finals, only to lose on penalties to
Real Salt Lake. In 2010, and again, in 2011, the Galaxy won consecutive
Supporters' Shield, and completed the league double winning both the Shield and MLS Cup in 2011. This was the first time this had been accomplished since the Columbus Crew achieved it in 2008. In the
2011 MLS Cup final, the Galaxy defeated the
Houston Dynamo, 1–0 off a 72nd minute Donovan goal. The goal was scored off a Galaxy counter where Beckham fed a through ball to Donovan who slotted it past Hall. The 2012 final featured both the Galaxy and Dynamo again, making it the first since 2007 that an MLS Cup final was a rematch of the previous final. Again, the Galaxy won the final, this time
coming from behind to defeat the Dynamo by a 3–1 scoreline. The match was Beckham's final MLS match. During the 2013 season, the Galaxy's chance to three-peat was thwarted by Real Salt Lake. Salt Lake defeated the Galaxy, 2–1 on aggregate, to advance to MLS Cup, where they eventually lost to
Sporting Kansas City.
The following season, the Galaxy reached MLS Cup again, playing the
New England Revolution, making it a rematch of
MLS Cup 2002 and
MLS Cup 2005. In extra-time a Robbie Keane goal propelled the Galaxy to their fifth MLS match, a victory in the 2014 MLS Cup.
Expansion teams from Cascadia, Canada, and Atlanta The
Portland Timbers won the
2015 MLS Cup, defeating the Columbus Crew 2–1. Portland's
Diego Valeri scored the fastest goal in MLS Cup history at 27 seconds when Crew goalkeeper
Steve Clark made a fundamental error after he miscontrolled his defender's back-pass while Valeri had advanced towards the ball to strike at the opportunity. The
Seattle Sounders FC faced
Toronto FC in the
2016 MLS Cup, which was played at
BMO Field in
Toronto on the evening of December 10, 2016. The temperature at the start of the match was (, when adjusted for wind chill), with strong winds coming off Lake Ontario. The field was watered shortly before the match, and resultant field was described as icy by players.
Seattle Sounders FC defeated
Toronto FC 5–4 in a
penalty shoot-out after a scoreless match of 90 minutes regular time and 30 minutes overtime. The Sounders did not register a single shot on goal, becoming the first club to do so in an MLS Cup final. The Sounders, despite a very poor start and mid-season managerial change, became the second team from the
Pacific Northwest to win the cup, after Portland in 2015. In the
2017 MLS Cup, Toronto FC and Seattle faced off in a rematch of the previous edition, also at BMO Field. Toronto FC won the match 2–0, and became the first Canadian team to win MLS Cup, and the first MLS team to complete a domestic
treble, after winning the
Canadian Championship and
Supporters' Shield earlier in the year. 's trophy ceremony following the
2018 MLS Cup final
Atlanta United FC, in their second season as an expansion team, won the
2018 edition of MLS Cup by defeating the
Portland Timbers 2–0. The match, hosted in
Atlanta at
Mercedes-Benz Stadium, was attended by 73,019 spectators and broke the MLS Cup attendance record set in 2002 by New England. The club became the second-youngest to win an MLS Cup, behind the 1998 Chicago Fire, and brought the first professional sports championship for the city of
Atlanta since 1995. In the
2019 MLS Cup, Toronto FC and Seattle Sounders FC both overcame underdog status in their respective conferences to contest a third final in four years, this time playing at Seattle's home ground. Seattle Sounders FC duly won their second MLS Cup, taking the final match 3–1 at CenturyLink Field in front of a Sounders record attendance of 69,274. The
2020 edition, which marked the end of a season dramatically affected by the
COVID-19 pandemic, saw the Sounders return to MLS Cup, this time facing
Columbus Crew at the latter's home of
Mapfre Stadium in
Columbus, Ohio. The Crew won 3–0 in front of a crowd restricted to 1,500, in the stadium's last playoff game. == Broadcasting ==