Sockers Score Six Straight In Second Half To Beat Monterrey 6-4

SAN DIEGO, CA. - For thirty minutes, the San Diego Sockers looked like a lost club on the floor. For thirty minutes after, they
looked like back-to-back MASL champions.

Christian Gutierrez scored twice during a six-goal outburst after halftime, as the Sockers came from behind to post a 6-4
win over the Monterrey Flash on Friday night at Pechanga Arena. San Diego (17-2, 49 points) won their eighteenth straight
at home, but needed a huge second half effort to pick up the three points.

“We can’t play the first half like that, and let teams get ahead of us, but we did show a lot of heart,” said head coach Phil
Salvagio, “There was no yelling (at halftime), it was very positive. Let’s come back and see what the Sockers are made of.”

San Diego showed their mettle with a 4-0 third quarter. Sockers captain Kraig Chiles was in the middle of it, delivering a
goal with two set-piece assists. His gorgeous curving service on a right-wing free kick at 9:13 of the third quarter found
Leonardo de Oliveira’s extended right foot for a sharply-struck go-ahead tally and a 4-3 lead.

Chiles blamed a hard week of training, in which San Diego had the rare opportunity to utilize the floor at Pechanga Arena
for three straight nights, as the reason for the club’s first half struggles.

“I knew we were a little bit ‘leggy’ coming into this match,” said Chiles, who moved into a tie for the team lead with (19-
12=31) points, “When we get into this arena, we have a tendency to really want to train hard and use every minute of it, and
I think it cost in the first half. We were able to kind of rebound in the second half.”

San Diego trailed Monterrey (10-7-2, 29 points) 3-0 at the half, looking every bit leg-weary and disconnected. The crowd
sat in stunned silence as the Flash rattled off two goals in succession at the end of the first quarter and start of the
second quarter, pushing the visitors from Nuevo Leon ahead by the 3-0 score. The Sockers shut out the Flash for the next
43 minutes before conceding a late six-attacker goal in the fourth quarter.

To do so, San Diego leaned on all-MASL goalkeeper Boris Pardo, who stopped 9-of-13 shots, eight in the second half. His
one-handed diving stop against Carlos Bocanegra in the third quarter denied a possible equalizer, and Pardo made three
saves against the six-attacker formation in the late fourth quarter.

“To allow only four goals to Monterrey is quite an accomplishment,” said Salvagio, “against six attacker he was on fire.”
Gustavo Rosales scored a squirter of a goal that snuck off board and near post to get past Pardo at 9:20 of the first
quarter for a 1-0 lead, finishing a lovely run along the right wall in which former Socker Erick Tovar sent Rosales in with a
half-step over the defense. At the 14:00 mark of the quarter, Monterrey’s Jorge Luis Cortés netted the rebound of a toparc
Tovar shot, doubling the score at 2-0.

The second quarter began with Cortés ambushing San Diego’s Christian Gutierrez from behind, shouldering him off a
loose ball on right wing and finishing a shot through the legs of Pardo, just nine seconds into the frame. It was 3-0
Monterrey, and despite an 11-to-1 shot disparity in the quarter in favor of the Sockers, nothing would get past net-minder
Diego Reynoso (7-of-12 saves).

San Diego took advantage of set piece veteran savvy to get back in the match. Gifted a top-arc opportunity at 5:54 of the
third quarter, Chiles slid a pass to Charlie Gonzalez on left wing, who beat Reynoso inside the right post for his sixteenth
goal of the season, pulling one back for the Sockers at 3-1.