On This Day in 2002, Claudio Reyna Gave Sunderland the Breathing Room They Desperately Needed
When Claudio Reyna slipped through the door at Sunderland in December 2001, he did so in a manner entirely fitting for a man who would spend the rest of the season defying expectation. He signed his five-year deal minutes before the midday deadline on December 7, having played for Rangers in a UEFA Cup tie at Paris Saint-Germain the night before. He touched down on Wearside jet-lagged and anonymous, and was starting in the Premier League eight days later.
The early returns were promising. A debut at Southampton was modest, a 20-yard shot saved, a 2–0 defeat, but the following week, in his first home match against Everton, Reyna scored the only goal of the game. The Stadium of Light had a new favorite.
Then winter turned complicated. The goals dried up, the wins dried up, and by the time April arrived, Sunderland had taken just three victories from their previous 14 league matches following that win over Everton. What had looked like a comfortable mid-table season on Boxing Day, when the club sat ninth, had curdled into a survival fight. Manager Peter Reid called the visit of Leicester City on April 1 a must-win match, and he meant it literally. Three points separated Sunderland from the drop zone.
Leicester arrived at the Stadium of Light in worse shape than their hosts, with the Foxes at the bottom of the table, almost certainly doomed, their relegation a question of when rather than if, but they had won their previous match against Blackburn and carried the dangerous looseness of a side with nothing left to lose. Reid was without Patrick Mboma, still nursing the knock he had taken against Arsenal, and Kevin Phillips, Sunderland's top scorer, had only just been passed fit after his own injury scare. Niall Quinn was on hand to deputize upfront if needed.
The tension in the ground was palpable from the first whistle, the kind that settles over a stadium when fans understand the stakes but dare not say them aloud. Reyna, as he had been since December, was everywhere from the start. Three minutes in, he made the anxiety irrelevant, briefly. Finding space 20 yards from goal, he caught a loose ball on his left foot and drove it into the top corner. No buildup, no warning. A goal from nothing.
What followed was maddening. Leicester equalized in the ninth minute through a sequence Sunderland supporters would argue about for weeks. Referee Neale Barry awarded a free kick against Darren Williams for a foul on Paul Dickov, overruling his own assistant, despite replays suggesting Dickov had led with his elbow. Stefan Oakes swung the ball into the box, Matt Elliott powered a header that Thomas Sorensen could only deflect onto the post, and Dickov bundled the rebound over the line. The goal was legitimate by the letter of the law. It didn't feel that way in the stands.
Sunderland's confidence, always fragile that season, wobbled visibly. Reid left his dugout to make his feelings known to his players. The crowd grew restless. But Reyna didn't wobble. In the 17th minute, Muzzy Izzet dragged down Phillips on the edge of the area, and the American stepped up to the free kick from 25 yards. Ian Walker set his wall. Reyna bent the ball up and over it into the top corner. Walker didn't move in the right direction until it was already in the net.
Reyna nearly had a hat-trick before halftime. A 42nd-minute volley from outside the area beat Walker cleanly and rattled the outside of the post. The ground groaned. The second half was survival football of the most nerve-shredding kind. Walker made a brilliant stop to deny Phillips in the 65th minute. Sorensen came up enormous at the other end, twice denying Dickov as Leicester pushed desperately for the equalizer. When the final whistle came, the relief was audible.
Reid's assessment afterward was characteristically unvarnished: "Claudio was outstanding — a calming influence. Apart from his two goals, it was a good job he was on the pitch. I don't think we are safe yet. But that has given us a little breathing space." Leicester manager Dave Bassett, gracious in defeat, put things plainly: "This was a big relief for Sunderland, and I think they will have enough points to stay up."
He was right, barely. The six points of breathing space Reid mentioned would prove to be almost exactly the margin that kept Sunderland up. The final weeks of the season brought defeats at Leeds and Liverpool, a thrashing at West Ham, and a scrappy draw at Charlton. A home draw with Derby on the last day of the season confirmed survival in 17th place. They finished as the Premier League's lowest scorers, with just 29 goals all season.
Reyna ended the campaign having led the United States to a remarkable run at the World Cup that summer—a quarterfinal appearance, a famous win over Portugal, a narrow loss to Germany. He had proven in the toughest weeks of a difficult season that an American could carry a team on his back, on the biggest stages, with the math brutally simple and the margin for error gone.
The two goals against Leicester weren't glamorous. They were necessary. Sometimes that's more important.


