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BRIMSTONE
CUP CHARTER
Section I: Mission
To foster relations between Dallas and Chicago fans and to further stoke the
rivalry that already exists between the clubs of Chicago Fire and Dallas Burn,
as well as provide additional incentive to each of our respective clubs to
compete wholeheartedly in all matches between our clubs, as well as provide a
competition that is the under the sole control of Chicago and Dallas supporters.
Section II: The Cup
From here forth, in each season which both clubs Dallas Burn and Chicago
Fire take part in, there will be awarded a trophy called the 'Brimstone Cup' to
the winner of the yearly rivalry between the teams.
Section III: Rules [Amendment
#1]
The winner of the yearly series between the clubs will be
determined, in descending priority:
Total head-to-head
record, all matches played between clubs in a season (points accumulated, 3
for a win, 1 for a tie, 0 for a loss)
A ‘season’
shall be defined as the time period falling between either the MLS Cup
final or US Open Cup final, whichever falls last.
All matches between
Dallas and Chicago falling within the specified period count in the
standings for the cup presentation at the end of that period.
Winner of a
head-to-head competition agreed upon by the Brimstone Cup committee and
representatives of the two clubs, if possible.
Examples of
possible resolutions include playoff match, penalty shootout, or (if
agreed upon prior to a ‘season’) a resolution based upon total-goals
or regular season record.
Resolutions to a
tied series must be ratified by a unanimous vote of the committee.
Changes to
previously ratified resolutions must be themselves ratified by the
committee unanimously.
Previous year's holder
retains cup
Section IV: The Committee
There will be a committee formed of 3 each of Chicago Fire and Dallas Burn
supporters whose job is to administer the Brimstone Cup and agree upon any rules
changes for the awarding of the cup. Such changes must be approved by an
unanimous vote of the committee, and recorded as amendments to the charter. The
representatives will be selected for the committee as space opens (member leaves
or resigns) by the current members.
The first Committee Members shall be Liam Murtaugh, Alfonso Mitchell, and Don
Crafts from Chicago; and Kevin Lindstrom, Matt Witosky, and Dustin Christmann
from Dallas.
Section V: Presentation
When one of the clubs has clinched the cup for that season, after the
clinching match or prior to kickoff of the next meeting of the clubs the cup
will be presented to the winning club by representatives of the supporters of
that team and a committee representative.
Section VI: Possession
In years where the club has won the trophy, the year is to be inscribed on a
plaque on the cup to forever commemorate their victory. Clubs should have
plaques separate from the trophy to record victories when the cup is not
present. The cup can be held and displayed by the last winning club until such
time as it is to be transferred to the other club by virtue of their winning it.
The cup should be present at each match where one club has the ability to clinch
the cup to facilitate its immediate presentation. Transporting of the Cup will
be done in a custom case by a committee member, respective club official, or
other approved party.
Section VII: Commission
The Brimstone Cup and all its initial expenses will be paid for equally by
Dallas and Chicago supporters, and all repair/cleaning expenses will be paid for
in a way such as described by the Committee.
This charter approved and
executed,
this Second day of February, the year Two Thousand and One.
JL Murtaugh,
Chicago, Founder
Alfonso Mitchell, Chicago
Don Crafts, Chicago |
Kevin
Lindstrom, Dallas
Matt Witosky, Dallas
Dustin Christmann, Dallas |
AMENDMENTS
Amendment
#1 [Background]
Change Section III to read as follows:
The winner of the
yearly series between the clubs will be determined, in descending priority:
- Total head-to-head
record, all regular season MLS league matches played between the clubs
during the MLS regular season in a given calendar year (points accumulated
according to MLS rules).
- The winner (according to MLS
rules) of any head-to-head MLS playoff series or match between the clubs
immediately subsequent to the regular season in which there is a
head-to-head tie.
- The winner (according to USSF
rules) of any head-to-head Lamar Hunt United States Open Cup match between
the clubs during the calendar year in which there is a head-to-head tie
between the two clubs during the MLS regular season.
- Previous year's holder
retains cup.
This amendment approved and
executed,
this Second day of April, the year Two Thousand and Four.
JL Murtaugh,
Chicago, Founder
Paul Darter, Chicago
Marcin Tlustochowicz, Chicago |
Kevin
Lindstrom, Dallas
Matt Witosky, Dallas
Dustin Christmann, Dallas |
BACKGROUND
THOUGHTS ON AMENDMENTS
Amendment
#1 (written by Dustin Christmann)
During the 2002 and 2003 seasons, there was strong demand by both groups of fans
for a revision to the rules. In 2002, although Dallas had all but clinched
the Brimstone Cup with a 3-1 victory in Naperville in June and a 3-1 victory in
Dallas in August, they did not officially clinch it because Chicago and Dallas
could have theoretically met in the first or second rounds of the playoffs.
Chicago could have then won both matches of a playoff series, deadlocked the cup
at six points apiece, and retained ownership. It was only on the last
weekend of the season when Dallas finished with the #4 seed and Chicago with the
#7 seed that Dallas' clinching became official, since the two teams could only
then theoretically meet in the single-game MLS Cup final. Many felt that
this was a somewhat anticlimactic resolution to the series for 2002, since the
Cup was clinched not in a head-to-head matchup, but instead by matches against
other foes.
In 2003, Chicago won the first
match 4-1 against a hapless Burn team in Naperville. However, against all
odds, the Burn won the return match in Southlake in September 2-0. Because
no additional tiebreaker had been approved by the Brimstone Cup Committee, the
Cup stayed with the holders, Dallas. Some felt that this was an injustice
because Chicago had won the head-to-head aggregate goals 4-3.
Because of these two instances, in
the 2003-04 offseason, the Brimstone Cup Committee decided that a revision to
the rules was necessary. First, the Committee decided to revise the rules
to count MLS regular-season matches as the first priority. If one team
wins the head-to-head regular-season points between the two teams, then no other
matches are considered. Playoff and US Open Cup head-to-head matchups are
counted only as tiebreakers. This change allows for the Cup to be clinched
in during a regular-season Brimstone Cup match more often than under the
previous rules. In 2002, these rules would've meant a definitive Dallas
victory once they won the second regular-season game.
However, the Committee agreed that
aggregate goals should not be a tiebreaker, because unlike the playoffs or an
ordinary cup competition, the Brimstone Cup is determined mostly by
regular-season matches. And in regular-season matches, the only things
that count are "win," "lose," and "draw."
Points are vastly more important than goals, in the minds of the players and of
the fans. The Committee felt that it would be wrong to put great
importance on aggregate goals when that is of secondary importance to the
players, if it has any sort of importance to them at all. Late in Dallas'
2-0 victory over Chicago in 2003, there was no frantic effort on the part of the
Burn players to score another goal, since the points were secure. This is
in contrast to the feverish effort that the San Jose players showed in their
playoff matchup versus Los Angeles later that year when they wet down 4-0 on
aggregate late in the second leg.
Finally, the Committee felt that
in this rivalry, victory is all that matters, and the awarding of the
Brimstone Cup should reflect that philosophy. If you don't have the Cup,
and if you can't take more points from the other team during the regular season
than they take from you, if you can't beat them in the playoffs, and if you
can't beat them in the Open Cup, then you have no right to take the Cup from
them. |