Members of the Real Salt Lake fan club, Union Real shout and sing in preparation for the final game of the CONCACAF championship at Rio Tinto Stadium in Sandy Wednesday, April 27, 2011.
Brian Nicholson, Deseret News
SANDY — Real Salt Lake's bid for continental glory came to an end Wednesday night.
Despite a dream scenario of only needing a draw at home — and with it a rare opportunity to win a trophy at home — the task proved to be too much to ask against a very good Monterrey team.
The Rayados scored late in the first half, and then survived a Real Salt Lake onslaught in the second half to hold on for the 1-0 victory in front of a passionate home crowd of 20,378 in the CONCACAF Champions League finale.
The goal helped Monterrey claim the title 3-2 on aggregate, and earn a berth in the FIFA Club World Cup in Japan in December.
It was a devastating loss for Real Salt Lake, which hadn't lost at home since May of 2009, and only needed a low-scoring tie on Wednesday to win the title.
"Difficult to take. A lot of disappointment. Pretty bummed out right now. One goal is the difference," said RSL defender Chris Wingert.
For coach Jason Kreis, the loss was similar to a couple of playoff losses at Rio Tinto Stadium in the past few years.
"It brings back memories of the New York game back in '08, and brought back memories of the last 10 minutes in Dallas last year," said Kreis.
Real Salt Lake outshot Monterrey 16-8, but it wasn't good enough like in those New York and Dallas playoff ousters.
Monterrey's goal came in first-half stoppage time, but it was a deserved goal after the Mexican club dominated the latter portion of the half.
It was a disappointed way for RSL to head into the locker room after a bright start to the game.
In typical fashion at home, Real Salt Lake came out attacking early and created several great scoring opportunities. Fabian Espindola, in particular, gave Monterrey trouble, and he was unlucky not to score in the ninth minute after a defender tripped up in the box. His shot from 12 yards out, however, rolled just a few feet wide of the far post.
Real Salt Lake continued to enjoy the better of the play until about the 30th minute, but it failed to capitalize on those chances.
"It wasn't quite our best night in the attacking third and in and around the penalty box. We need someone to make a special play and it just didn't come off for us," said Kreis.
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