Advertisement

Galaxy's Ruiz Puts on a Show

Soccer: His second goal, a beauty in the 87th minute, gives L.A. an important 2-1 victory over first-place San Jose.

July 05, 2002|PAUL GUTIERREZ, TIMES STAFF WRITER

The lights of the Rose Bowl dimmed, Carlos Ruiz stood on the floor of the venerable stadium with his baby daughter in his arms and looked up to the sky as the postgame Fourth of July fireworks show burst all around.

Joining the 55,234 in attendance in wide-mouthed wonder, Ruiz, the Galaxy's rookie forward from Guatemala, was celebrating his first Independence Day in his adopted home.


Advertisement

Minutes earlier, it was Ruiz who elicited the oohs and aahs from the fifth-largest crowd to take in a Galaxy home game.

Ruiz's two goals, the second coming in the 87th minute, gave the Galaxy a 2-1 come-from-behind victory over the first-place San Jose Earthquakes.

"It was important to get the win and create some positive momentum for the Galaxy," said Ruiz, whose two scores were his first since June 1 and gave him 12 on the season. Ruiz also moved into third place among Major League Soccer scorers with 24 points, behind Dallas' Jason Kreis (26) and New England's Taylor Twellman (25).

"Now hopefully we can take the momentum forward and keep it going."

With the win, the Galaxy (7-6-2, 23 points) moved within six points of the Earthquakes (9-5-2, 29 points). A loss would have put the Galaxy in a 12-point hole and into a last-place tie with the Kansas City Wizards. The teams meet again Sunday night in San Jose.

Ruiz's game-winner was set up when Danny Califf, who had entered the game eight minutes earlier, inbounded a long, over-the-head pass from the right sideline into the middle of the penalty box.

Chris Albright headed the ball backward to Alexi Lalas, who back-heeled a nifty pass to an oncoming Ruiz. Ruiz's left-footed kick buried the ball into the net, past San Jose goalkeeper Joe Cannon.

Lalas claimed that he knew Ruiz was behind him.

"Of course," he laughed. "He was screaming his head off.

"It's not really a set play because you certainly don't work on it. There was a little desperation there at the end with the long throw-in and Chris Albright ... hit a beautiful little flick and I knew [Ruiz] was behind me. It's not the prettiest looking thing, but it will do the trick.

"We're athletes but we're also entertainers. Tonight was about entertainment."

The entertaining play also ended the Galaxy's three-game losing streak to the Earthquakes, who beat them in overtime of last year's MLS Cup title match.

Ruiz's first goal came in the 34th minute.

Los Angeles Times Articles
|