River Cities Cup

River Cities Cup
Locale Ohio Valley
First meeting Cincinnati 2–3 Louisville
2016 USL
(April 16, 2016 (2016-04-16))
Latest meeting Louisville 0–1 Cincinnati
2018 USL
(September 11, 2018)
Statistics
Meetings total 10
Most wins Tied (4)
Most player appearances Paco Craig (10)
Corben Bone (10)
Top scorer Chandler Hoffman (3)
Largest victory Louisville 5–0 Cincinnati
2017 USL
(August 12, 2017)

The River Cities Cup, also known as the Dirty River Derby, is a regular season series between American soccer clubs FC Cincinnati of Cincinnati, Ohio and Louisville City FC of Louisville, Kentucky.

Both teams compete in the Eastern Conference of the United Soccer League, the second tier of soccer in the United States. The teams are located in cities situated on the Ohio River and are separated by roughly 100 miles of Interstate 71. The winner of the regular season series wins the cup for that year.

The current cup holders are Louisville City, who retained the cup by winning the first two of the teams' three regular-season matches in 2018.[1]

Beginnings

Previous clubs

Before the formation of Louisville City and FC Cincinnati, various soccer clubs, both professional and amateur, played in the respective regions. The Derby City Rovers played in the fourth-division, Premier Development League and played at the Woehrle Sports Complex in Louisville's northern suburb, Jeffersonville, Indiana. The Louisville metropolitan area also housed two indoor soccer teams prior to Louisville City: the Louisville Lightning, who played in the Major Arena Soccer League from 2009 until 2013,[2] and the Louisville Thunder who played in the American Indoor Soccer Association from 1984 until 1987.

The rivalry between the two cities long predates the arrival of professional soccer in the region; most notably, the largest universities in the two cities, the University of Cincinnati and University of Louisville, had a longstanding football rivalry that ended in 2013 due to conference realignment.

Formation of the USL clubs

Both clubs were formed in the early to mid 2010s. The formation of Louisville City FC began with the formation of the club's current supporters group, The Coopers, whom aimed to build a grassroots support base to bring a professional soccer team to Louisville.[3] The following year, a local ownership group invited the owners of Orlando City to meet with the Coopers supporters group. In 2015, the team Louisville City was born and served as the USL affiliate for Orlando City as they jumped from USL to Major League Soccer.[4] In 2016, the affiliation ended with Orlando City creating its own reserve team to field in USL.[5]

That same year, reports swirled of USL seeking expansion into Cincinnati.[6] The formation of the ownership group came from a partnership between the Cincinnati Bengals NFL franchise and the former soccer club in the region, the Cincinnati Kings, when Jeff Berding was named as part of the potential ownership group.[7] In the summer of 2015, more details on the new club were announced. The Lindner family, of American Financial Group headquartered in Cincinnati, was announced the owner of the new club with Carl Lindner III representing the owners at the press conference.[8] Subsequently the team name "FC Cincinnati" was announced as the club's name, as well as their coach, and stadium.[9]

Naming

While already unofficially known among fans as "The Dirty River Derby", an online poll by both clubs was released asking fans what their preferred name for the series cup would be. Amongst the options included the "River Cities Cup", the "Steamboat Cup", the "Royal Cup", the "100 Mile Cup" or the "Riverboat Rivalry Cup".[10] On February 5, 2016 it was announced the "River Cities Cup" had won.[11]

Rivalry

First season

The two teams played their first match on April 16, 2016 at Nippert Stadium in Cincinnati in front of a then-USL-record crowd of 20,497. Cincinnati jumped to an early lead over Louisville with a sixth minute goal from Austin Berry. Louisville's Chandler Hoffman scored the first hat-trick in series history, scoring three unanswered goals for Louisville in the next 30 minutes to give Louisville a 3–1 lead over Cincinnati. In the 40th minute, Louisville's Sean Reynolds received the first red card in series history and Louisville played the final 50 minutes down to ten men. Cincinnati was able to score a late goal in the 90th minute, but the match ended 3–2 in Louisville's favor. The return leg in Louisville ended as a scoreless draw as four yellow cards were dished out. Cincinnati would ultimately win the series in 2016 against Louisville, by earning a 2–0 victory on July 23, 2016. USL golden boot winner, Sean Okoli scored the insurance goal.

Biting controversy

External image
Photos taken by EM Dash Photography allegedly show Djiby biting McCabe's face. In one photo, Djiby's face is directly pressed against McCabe's right cheek, and in another, a mark of some sort is visible on McCabe's cheek.

The rivalry continued into its second season when Louisville visited Cincinnati for a USL match on Saturday, April 22, 2017.[12] Tensions rose between the clubs after an incident in the 87th minute, when Cincinnati forward Djiby Fall was shown a straight red card and then briefly had an exchange of words with Louisville midfielder Niall McCabe before exiting the pitch. In a post-match interview, Louisville head coach James O'Connor alleged Djiby bit McCabe's cheek during this exchange.[13] FC Cincinnati denied the claims the next day, writing in a statement, "We have seen no evidence to substantiate the allegations made by Louisville City Head Coach James O'Connor and it is our belief his post-match comments are not true. [...] Any attempt to portray Djiby as a dirty player is extremely unfair."[14]

Fans of both clubs clashed on social media for several days in the wake of the allegations. The USL's weekly disciplinary report, published the following Wednesday, announced that Djiby's red card suspension would be extended to six games for "major game misconduct", which they later confirmed was for biting an opponent.[15] FC Cincinnati manager Jeff Berding sent out a newsletter to fans the next day, stating that the USL decision had come after a failed appeal attempt by Cincinnati. He wrote that the club respected the USL decision even though they disagreed with it, and that the club continued to support Djiby, stating, "[we] will welcome him when he returns and I hope you will do the same."[16]

Rivalry continues

Corben Bone of Cincinnati and Niall McCabe of Louisville fight for the ball in the 2017 U.S. Open Cup.

Louisville and Cincinnati faced each other in their first non-USL match on May 31, 2017, when they met in the third round of the 2017 U.S. Open Cup, again hosted in Cincinnati. Although Djiby's six-game suspension (originating from the previous Cincinnati–Louisville match) had not yet ended, he was allowed to play as in-league suspensions do not apply to the U.S. Open Cup. Cincinnati won 1–0, with Djiby scoring the sole goal at the 48th minute.[17] The two clubs did not meet again until the next season, when Louisville won 1–0 at FC Cincinnati's home opener on April 7, 2018. Lou City officially retained the cup for 2018 with a 2–0 win on May 26, also at Nippert Stadium. Cincinnati defeated Louisville 1–0 in the final regular season match between the two clubs on September 11, 2018.

Results

Home team is listed on the left, away team is listed on the right. Home team's score is listed first.

  Cincinnati win   Louisville win   Draw

Top goalscorers

As of September 11, 2018. Does not include own goals.
Top scorer, Chandler Hoffman
Position Name Team Goals
1 United States Chandler Hoffman Louisville City FC 3
2 Senegal Baye Djiby Fall FC Cincinnati 2
England Cameron Lancaster Louisville City FC
4 United States Richard Ballard Louisville City FC 1
United States Austin Berry FC Cincinnati
United States Corben Bone FC Cincinnati
United States George Davis IV Louisville City FC
Australia Harrison Delbridge FC Cincinnati
Serbia Ilija Ilić Louisville City FC
Canada Mark-Anthony Kaye Louisville City FC
Denmark Danni König FC Cincinnati
Republic of Ireland Niall McCabe Louisville City FC
United States Pat McMahon FC Cincinnati
United States Sean Okoli FC Cincinnati
United States Brian Ownby Louisville City FC
United States Aodhan Quinn FC Cincinnati
United States Sean Reynolds Louisville City FC
United States Luke Spencer Louisville City FC
United States Andrew Wiedeman FC Cincinnati

Players who played for both clubs

Player Louisville City FC career FC Cincinnati career
Span Apps Goals Span Apps Goals
United States Aodhan Quinn 2015–2016 48 5 2017 17 2
United States Kadeem Dacres 2015–2016 49 8 2017 21 0
United States Luke Spencer 2017–present 26 10 2016 11 0
United States Pat McMahon 2018–present 0 0 2016–2017 28 1

References

  1. Murray, Nicholas (May 26, 2018). "Louisville Strikes Twice to Defeat Cincinnati". United Soccer League. Retrieved May 28, 2018.
  2. Warner, Adam (March 14, 2013). "Q&A with Ted Nichols: A fire in his belly for soccer at all levels". The Courier-Journal. Louisville, KY: Gannett Company. Retrieved March 15, 2013.
  3. Main, Dalton (January 8, 2014). "Louisville could soon host pro soccer team". Louisville, KY: WDRB. Retrieved February 15, 2015.
  4. Main, Dalton (January 14, 2014). "Louisville soccer fans rally around possible pro team". Louisville, KY: WDRB. Retrieved February 15, 2015.
  5. Tenorio, Paul (June 30, 2015). "Orlando City to own, operate USL franchise in 2016". Orlando Sentinel.
  6. Hollingsworth, Chad (May 10, 2015), USL to Expand to Cincinnati in 2016
  7. Monk, Dan (August 6, 2015), Cincinnati Bengals exec Jeff Berding trying to bring a new pro soccer franchise to town, WCPO-TV, archived from the original on August 8, 2015
  8. Vicar, Nathan (August 12, 2015). "Details released about new FC Cincinnati pro soccer team". FOX10 News. Retrieved October 7, 2016.
  9. Report: FC Cincinnati set to announce 2016 USL expansion, John Harkes as head coach, MLSSoccer.com, August 11, 2015
  10. Litner, Jonathan (February 2, 2016). "LouCity FC asks fans to 'name the rivalry'". The Courier-Journal. Louisville, KY: Gannett Company. Retrieved May 27, 2017.
  11. Brennan, Patrick (February 5, 2016). "FC Cincy, Louisville City to compete for 'River Cities Cup'". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Cincinnati, OH: Gannett Company. Retrieved May 27, 2017.
  12. Brennan, Patrick (April 24, 2017). "FC Cincy takeaways: River Cities Cup again lives up to hype". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Gannett Company. Retrieved May 27, 2017.
  13. Lerner, Danielle (April 22, 2017). "Late equalizer spoils Louisville City FC result". The Courier-Journal. Gannett Company. Retrieved June 9, 2017.
  14. Brennan, Patrick (April 23, 2017). "FC Cincy, Lou City at odds over alleged Djiby bite". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Gannett Company. Retrieved June 9, 2017.
  15. Brennan, Patrick (April 26, 2017). "FC Cincinnati's Djiby Fall suspended for 'major game misconduct'". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Gannett Company. Retrieved June 9, 2017.
  16. Brennan, Patrick (April 27, 2017). "FC Cincinnati: We will welcome Djiby back". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Gannett Company. Retrieved June 9, 2017.
  17. Brennan, Patrick (May 31, 2017). "FC Cincinnati, Djiby down Louisville City FC in U.S. Open Cup". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Gannett Company. Retrieved June 9, 2017.
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