Match Recap: TFC 1, DCU 2

TORONTO – Goals by Nick DeLeon and Perry Kitchen gave D.C. United a 2-1 win over Toronto FC with all three strikes coming in a wild second half that came to a crescendo when TFC were cut down to 10 men in the final minutes Saturday evening at BMO Field.


HIGHLIGHTS: Joe Bendik Slide Save | Jermain Defoe Clear Chance | Luke Moore Ties Game | Jonathan Osorio Free Kick | Daniel Lovitz Inches Away | Luke Moore Looks For Second


Luke Moore scored a 60th-minute goal to level the game at 1-1 briefly, but Toronto FC were unable to take advantage of the return from the World Cup of midfielder Michael Bradley and lost for the first time in seven matches to end their three-game home winning streak.


INTERVIEWS: Ryan Nelsen | Luke Moore | Michael Bradley | Jermain Defoe | Jonathan Osorio | Dominic Oduro


They remain in fourth place in the Eastern Conference with 21 points from 14 matches.


D.C. United, meanwhile, bounced back from their June 28 loss to the Seattle Sounders to take sole possession of first place in the East with 28 points from 17 games.


With TFC head coach Ryan Nelsen taking a page out of USMNT head coach Jurgen Klinsmann’s playbook by employing Bradley beside Jermain Defoe up top in the same position he played in Brazil alongside Clint Dempsey, it was a relatively uneventful first half for both sides.


The lions share of the chances went Toronto FC’s way.


And Defoe managed to get three shots on goal but each was lapped up soundly by D.C. goalkeeper Bill Hamid.


Toronto FC replaced Bradley Orr in midfield with speedster Dominic Oduro to seemingly open things up even more. But it was D.C. that struck when DeLeon forced a turnover off Nick Hagglund from an advanced position and bamboozled the TFC defense before placing a shot past Joe Bendik to give D.C. United a 1-0 lead in the 55th minute.


But it didn’t take Toronto long to find an equalizer.


Jackson picked out Defoe, whose shot deflected onto Moore’s foot. The English forward tucked away the chance by sliding onto the ball to give Toronto the equalizing goal. 

Second-half substitute Lewis Neal made his presence felt immediately for D.C. when he swung a cross into the box and connected with Kitchen, who got his head on the ball to beat Bendik and give his side the 2-1 lead in the 70th minute.


A bit of controversy marked the end of the game when D.C. forward Eddie Johnson got loose on a counter and was dragged down by Hagglund. The TFC defender was initially shown yellow for the encounter, but head referee David Gantar changed his mind after consulting with his assistants to change the booking to a straight red in the 88th minute.


Toronto created three dangerous chances in the five minutes of injury time, but the D.C. backline held strong and Ben Olsen’s men walked away with all three points. 




Toronto FC next hosts the Houston Dynamo at home on Saturday while D.C. United travel to Buck Shaw Stadium to take on the San Jose Earthquakes on July 11. 




Scoring Summary

DCU – Nick DeLeon 54’ (Luis Silva)


TFC – Luke Moore 60’


DCU – Perry Kitchen 69’ (Lewis Neal)                


Misconduct Summary

TFC – Nick Hagglund 88’ (ejection)


Records:

Toronto FC:  6-5-3  21pts.


D.C. United:  8-5-4  28pts. 


Lineups

Toronto FC – Joe Bendik; Mark Bloom, Steve Caldwell ©, Nick Hagglund, Justin Morrow; Jackson (Daniel Lovitz 77’), Michael Bradley (Jonathan Osorio 61’), Collen Warner, Bradley Orr (Dominic Oduro 45’); Jermain Defoe, Luke Moore


Substitutes Not Used: Chris Konopka, Doneil Henry, Kyle Bekker, Dwayne De Rosario


D.C. United – Bill Hamid; Sean Franklin, Steve Bimbaum, Chris Korb, Bobby Boswell ©; Perry Kitchen, Nick DeLeon (Conor Doyle 79’) Conor Doyle, Davy Arnaud, Luis Silva (Lewis Neal 62’); Chris Rolfe (Collin Martin 84’), Eddie Johnson      


Substitutes Not Used: Andrew Dykstra, Nana Attakora, Taylor Kemp, Jared Jeffrey