2000 MLS All-Star Game

MLS All-Star Game 2000
Event 2000 Major League Soccer season
Date July 29, 2000
Venue Columbus Crew Stadium, Columbus, Ohio
Man of the Match Mamadou Diallo (Tampa Bay Mutiny)
Referee Paul Tamberino
Attendance 23,495
Weather Cloudy, 78°F
MLS All-Star 2000
Half 1 2 Total
West 4 0 4
East 3 6 9
TV in the United States
Network ESPN2

The 2000 Major League Soccer All-Star Game was the 5th MLS All-Star Game, played on July 29, 2000 at Columbus Crew Stadium, now known as Mapfre Stadium, in Columbus, Ohio. In the highest scoring MLS All-Star Game, the Eastern Conference won 9-4.

Match Details

2000-07-29
East 9 4 West
Mathis  2'
Moreno  36'
Valencia  39'
Chung  51'
Diallo  59', 61'
Heaps  65'
Washington  67'
McBride  76'
Report Razov  17', 22'
Cienfuegos  19'
Nowak  44'
Columbus Crew Stadium, Columbus
Attendance: 23,495
Referee: Paul Tamberino

COLUMBUS, Ohio – The MLS All-Stars East defeated the MLS All-Stars West, 9-4 in front of 23,495 fans at Columbus Crew Stadium in Columbus.

The total of 13 goals scored is the highest in an All-Star game in the league’s five-year history, and it did not take long for the scoring to start.

Clint Mathis found the back of the net in just the 2nd minute for the East, before Ante Razov (17’) and Mauricio Cienfuegos (19’) answered for the West. Razov would tally another in the 22nd minute to give the Western All-Stars a 3-1 lead.

Jaime Moreno (36’) and Adolfo Valencia (39’) leveled the score, but a 44th-minute strike from Piotr Nowak gave the West a 4-3 halftime lead.

The next 45 minutes belonged entirely to the East.

Mark Chung opened the scoring with the first of six second-half goals in the 51st minute. Tampa Bay Mutiny forward, and game MVP, Mamadou Diallo tallied twice in the 59th and 61st minutes, and two more quick goals by Jay Heaps (65’) and Dante Washington (67’) put the game out of reach.

Brian McBride added another for good measure in the 76th minute to secure the 9-4 victory for the East.

The Eastern All-Stars are currently 3-1 against their counterparts from the West.

John Doyle and Miklos Molnar were originally selected to the All-Star West team but were replaced due to injury.

Scoring summary EST—Mathis (Chung, Ammann) 2 WST—Razov (Jones, Preki) 17 WST—Cienfuegos (Jones) 19 WST—Razov (Jones, Azizi) 22 EST—Moreno (Chung) 36 EST—Valencia (Moreno) 39 WST—Nowak (Jones, Preki) 44 EST—Chung (McBride, Valderrama) 51 EST—Diallo (Valderrama) 59 EST—Diallo (Valderrama, Heaps) 61 EST—Heaps (Diallo, McBride) 64 EST—Washington (Petke) 67 EST—McBride (Washington, Valderrama) 76

WEST: Tony Meola (Zach Thornton 46), Robin Fraser (Peter Vermes 46), Greg Vanney, Marcelo Balboa, Khodadad Azizi (Chris Henderson 46), Preki (Azizi reenters 67, subbed off for Meola 80), Mauricio Cienfuegos (Luis Hernandez 46), Peter Nowak (Dario Brose 46), Chris Armas (Matt McKeon 32), Ante Razov (Jason Kreis 46), Cobi Jones (Ariel Graziani 46)

EAST: Mike Ammann (Scott Garlick 46), Eddie Pope (Mike Clark 32), Lothar Matthaus (Jay Heaps 46), Jeff Agoos (Mike Petke 34), John Harkes, Jaime Moreno (Brian McBride 46), Steve Ralston (Pablo Mastroeni 34), Carlos Valderrama, Mark Chung (Ammann reenters 88), Clint Mathis (Mamadou Diallo 46), Adolfo Valencia (Dante Washington 46)

Referees: Paul Tamberino; George Vergara, Robert Fereday

External links

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