HOUSTON -- If the National Womens Soccer League finds the future to which it aspires, it might well produce greater champions than the Western New York Flash in the years ahead.But after the Flashs improbable, barely believable, last-minute escape and penalty shootout win over the Washington Spirit, it will be impossible to produce a champion that did more to earn the confetti angels the Flash players made on the field as darkness descended in Houston.Without a coach until weeks before the opening game in April, the Flash clinched the leagues final playoff berth after a win on the final day of the regular season. They then traveled the width and breadth of the country to play No. 1 seed Portland on its home field in a semifinal. There, in front of the largest crowd in the leagues admittedly short postseason history, the Flash squandered a two-goal lead then built another one to match it.On Sunday, without the coach banished for the final because of a red card in Portland, they fell behind in regulation, then again in overtime after pulling level once. They watched the minutes tick away against the team with the second-best record in the league. They played the 30 scheduled minutes of overtime.They played the 121st minute, at the referees discretion. And the 122nd minute. And the 123rd minute.Finally, Lynn Williams rose to meet a cross and headed home the tying goal in the 124th minute to force the deciding penalty shootout.People talk about teams of destiny, Western New York coach Paul Riley said. This was a team of destiny, for sure.The better team on the day?Washington players and coaches didnt think so -- not that the sentiment stirred much controversy. Western New York players and coaches agreed with the assessment. It wasnt a particularly compelling game for long stretches of regulation, but what compelling play there was came mostly from a Spirit team that built possession and harassed the Flashs back line.A deserving champion? How could a team travel a road more deserving of reward?Washington did everything possible to win the game. Rather than play the Flash on their favored terms, as Portland tried and failed a week earlier, Spirit coach Jim Gabarra adjusted to match the underdog. For the first time all season, he started neither Joanna Lohman nor Diana Matheson, two valuable veteran midfielders. He instead started three center backs, playing with a back three and pushing normal outside backs Ali Krieger and Caprice Dydasco (until Dydasco suffered a knee injury and was replaced by Alyssa Kleiner) forward in a 3-5-2.Although he said it was a secondary look the team had worked on for a long time, it was a bold roll of the dice to break out for the first extended look in the championship game. And it worked.For large majorities in the game, they were very ineffective in the attack, Gabarra said.Again, he got little argument from those on the other side. With three center backs, the Spirit had a numerical advantage on Williams and Jessica McDonald, the Western New York forwards who so tormented regular-season champion Portland a week earlier. With more possession, the Spirit also outnumbered the Flash in midfield for at least the first half.The Flash werent brilliant on the day. They got an early bolt of brilliance when Sam Mewis leveled the game at 1-1 shortly after Crystal Dunn put the Spirit in front in the first half. They got the late miracle equalizer from Williams. They got three saves from goalkeeper Sabrina DAngelo in the shootout -- enough to make Williams penalty kick the clincher.It wasnt a great overall performance. The brilliant bit was being on the field in the first place.The Flash flew home from Portland on a Sunday redeye and put their bags down at home mid-morning Monday. They trained in Buffalo on Tuesday, then left for Houston the next day. They watched the sunset in three time zones in four days and traveled more than 4,000 miles -- nearly 7,000 in less than a week, if you count the trip to Portland before the semifinal.Thats the nature of this league because the country is so big, McCall Zerboni said. When you look at the leagues in Europe and stuff, they dont travel as much. They dont travel those distances. Thats the way the cookie crumbles.But again, the will of this team, nothing is going to slow us down.Plenty slowed them down a season earlier. Although not the leagues worst team in 2015, the Flash missed the playoffs by a proverbial mile and were every bit as discordant as might be imagined, as they conceded 10 more goals than they scored. A veteran who had a rocky tenure under the weight of high expectations in Portland, Riley was perfectly suited in time and place to again become the underdog. From the minor details of food and improved travel from the teams Buffalo base to its home venue in sort-of-nearby Rochester to the skill development of rising stars such as Williams, Mewis, Abby Dahlkemper and Jaelene Hinkle, it worked.As soon as Paul came in, hes such a players coach and was really just all for us, Dahlkemper said. He listened to us. He fixed the things that needed to be fixed in order to be in this situation. Even off the field, players were together. We love each other, and you can just tell the union off the field translates straight on. We just believe in each other.So it was that a team that made such use of McDonalds long throw-in during the postseason saw its season hinge on a short throw to McDonald from Hinkle in the final minute of overtime -- no time for anything but that. With space all around her, a rare positional lapse from the Spirit, McDonald curled in a high arcing cross toward the back post.Rising between two defenders at the other end of the arc, goalkeeper Kelsey Wys made the decision to come meet the ball. Williams said it was a now or never moment. That led to an understandable thought when she saw the ball make its way into the goal.Holy crap, I scored.?Then came the realization of just how late the Flash left it.First, I was like, Lets go get another one, Williams said. Then I realized, unless we get one of those crazy, two-second goals, its probably not going to happen for us. So prepare for PKs.As was the case a week earlier in Portland, the result left the possibility of one result overshadowing a seasons worth of success. In this case, the result was officially a draw and not even a loss. The final seconds and ensuing penalty shootout certainly left Crystal Dunn unjustly in the shadows after she scored two goals.In very nearly adding an NWSL title to the U-20 World Cup and NCAA titles she earlier claimed, Dunn played like the player Williams displaced as MVP. After a regular season in which she scored just two goals, willingly taking on a different role that Gabarra said he hoped would continue her evolution into one of the best players in the world, it was sweet redemption.Until it turned bittersweet in the blink of an eye in the 124th minute.As strange as it sounds for one of the most improbable escapes from the most improbable of finalists, those confetti angels were everything the Flash deserved. Mattia De Sciglio Juventus Jersey .S District Court against Major League Baseball, the Office of the Commissioner and his own union, the MLBPA. Emre Can Juventus Jersey . Coach Tom Thibodeau says the former MVP will probably start travelling with the team in the next few weeks. Rose tore the meniscus in his right knee at Portland in November and was ruled out for the remainder of the season by the Bulls. http://www.juventusfcpro.com/Kids-Gianluigi-Buffon-Jersey/ .com) - Yankee Stadium is the home of the Bronx Bombers, but on Sunday afternoon it will open its gates to host the latest addition of the Hudson River Rivalry. Mario Mandzukic Juventus Jersey .ca look back at each of the Top 10 stories of 2013. Today, we look back at Boston Strong - a citys recovery from tragedy. Andrea Barzagli Jersey .Y. - Nelson Mandela will be honoured by the New York Yankees with a plaque in Monument Park. WINNIPEG, Manitoba -- Patrik Laine took his teammates advice and it paid off with an end to his six-game goal drought.The rookie scored his 13th of the season with a high wrist shot past New Jersey Devils goalie Cory Schneider, helping the Winnipeg Jets to a 3-2 victory Tuesday night.People told me in the second intermission that I should try blocker (side), Laine said. It was the first shot, blocker, and it goes in.I was obviously relieved. It was a good goal. I had some pretty good scoring chances in the second period and I just couldnt score. It was an amazing feeling to get that goal and help my team to win.Mark Scheifele also scored his 13th of the season and captain Blake Wheeler had the other goal for the Jets. Scheifele added an assist to give him a team-leading 26 points.Devils rookie Miles Wood, with his first NHL goal, and Nick Lappin supplied the offense for New Jersey. Wood also had a penalty shot but failed to convert.Connor Hellebuyck made 23 saves in his fifth straight start for Winnipeg (11-12-2), which has won five straight at home.Schneider stopped 26 shots for the Devils (10-7-5), who had earned at least a point in each of their previous three games (1-0-2).Devils coach John Hynes called his players a resilient group.The thing is, you dont want to be down in games, chasing games, but I think the belief in how we play and that we can come back is important, Hynes said.New Jersey outshot Winnipeg 7-6 in the scoreless first period, which featured shots from both teams that rang off the post and others fired just wide of the net.Winnipeg had a two-man advantage for 1:41 early in the second and sent two shots at Schneider. A couple of others clanged off the post.The Jets made up for it with a pair of goals 2:01 apart, with Scheifele scoring at 11:20 and Wheeler beating Schneider off a rebound at 13:21.Wood had a penalty shot after being taken down by Dustin Byfuglien on the way to the net, but whiffed on his opportunity.It was cool to hear thee crowd boo me all the way down, Wood said.dddddddddddd Its something Ill never forget.Wood made up for his botched attempt with a shot fired through Hellebuycks pads at 2:52 of the third.Laines wrist shot went high past Schneider to make it 3-1 at 4:47.He has a heck of a shot, Schneider said. It might have ramped off my defensemans stick there. Its just kind of how it has been going lately. I felt I had a bead on it, and it just changed direction slightly.Thats all it takes for me right now. Its just something that I have to work through.Scheifele enjoyed his view of Laines great shot.I was pretty much right behind him and you pretty much cant see it, so its a pretty special shot, Scheifele said.Lappin closed the gap to one goal 3 minutes later off a rebound.The Devils had a power play with 8:09 left in the third, but couldnt capitalize. Schneider was pulled with 1:45 remaining.Game notes Jets center Bryan Little returned to the lineup after missing 23 games with a lower-body injury sustained a few shifts into the teams season opener on Oct. 13. He also missed the final 25 games last season because of a fractured vertebrae. I thought he was excellent. Better than I expected, Wheeler said. That first shift, I kicked one to him in the (defensive zone) and he took off like a bat out of hell. He was flying tonight. Its pretty exciting to have him back in the lineup. ... Winnipeg forward Marko Dano left in the first period and didnt return after taking a stick in the face from Kyle Quincey of the Devils. Jets coach Paul Maurice said the stick caught Dano near his eye and the team would know more after he sees a doctor. ... Winnipeg was up 22-14 on shots on goal after the second period.UP NEXTDevils: Travel to Chicago for the third game on a four-game road trip Thursday.Jets: Finish up a three-game homestand Thursday against Edmonton. ' ' '