Two years after the Maccabees won their last title in 1981, the NASL collapsed under its own bloat and many of that league’s players found themselves back in the Open Cup once again. There they helped keep the game alive during U.S. soccer’s so-called Dark Days.
And that leads us up to 1996 and the founding of MLS.
Chicago Fire? Could Be
Four-time Champions Sporting Kansas City and the Seattle Sounders both had the chance to become the first MLS teams to win five Open Cup titles last year, in our 2024 edition. Both came up short – Seattle in a Semifinal loss in Tukwila, Washington to our eventual Champions LAFC and SKC in the thrilling Final in Los Angeles.
And among the surviving eight-club field of MLS sides through to the Quarterfinals in this year’s Open Cup, the Chicago Fire are the only four-time winner and thus the only team able to reach the mountaintop of a fifth crown.
Fans of the early Fire will remember the club’s first Open Cup triumph fondly. It formed half of an MLS League-Cup Double they won in their first year as a competing club in 1998. The game was played in driving wind and rain on October 30, just five days after the Fire beat D.C. United in the decider of that year’s MLS campaign at the Rose Bowl in sunny Pasadena.
With the Open Cup Final tied, and with the Golden-Goal rule still in use back then, up stepped Chicagoland legend Frank Klopas. The homegrown USMNT hero sealed a 2-1 win over Brian McBride’s Columbus Crew with a goal that would become famous in the legend and lore of the Chicago club.
“It came down to little details,” Klopas said. “In the end it’s down to us making a couple plays. And the rest is history. Guys in that team hated to lose and Bob [Bradley, the then Fire coach] made sure everyone bought into what we were doing and that the balance was right,”
Two years later, in 2000, the Fire lifted the Open Cup for a second time. After beating LA Galaxy in the Semifinal, they hosted the decider once again at Soldier Field where they snuck past then coach (and now iconic broadcaster) Ray Hudson’s Miami Fusion 2-1 in the Final. The goals came from former Barcelona star Hristo Stoichkov and a late own goal by Tyrone Marshall.
Fire Dream Team of 2023
Three years after that triumph, the 2003 Final was played at the Meadowlands and it needed a late and lone goal from Damani Ralph to see the Fire pip the MetroStars to our historic trophy. That year’s Chicago Fire was one of the best teams ever assembled in MLS – with the likes of Ante Razov, DaMarcus Beasley, Carlos Bocanegra, Jim Curtin and Zach Thornton between the posts.
A fourth Open Cup title for the Fire, in the tight space of just eight years, came in 2006. They weren’t to know it at the time, but it would also be their last for (at least) 19 years. It was a totally revamped team from 2003, with many of the club’s stars jettisoned – but a 3-1 win over Landon Donovan and Cobi Jones’ LA Galaxy in Bridgeview, Illinois brought another star for a proud Fire organization.
The Fire of today, starting slowly but improving in MLS Eastern Conference play – and coached by former USMNT boss Gregg Berhalter, have the chance to capture the spirit of those old glory days. They opened their 2025 Open Cup campaign with a Round of 32 rout of USL Championship (Division II) side Detroit City FC and a road win in the next round against fellow MLS outfit New England Revolution.
Now, at the Quarterfinal stage and with a place in the Semis on the line, they’ll line up on the road in St. Paul against 2019 Open Cup Runners-up Minnesota United FC on July 8 (LIVE on Paramount+ and on air at the CBS Sports Network).
Fontela is editor-in-chief of usopencup.com. Follow him at @jonahfontela on X/Twitter.