Sports

Chicago Fire are shut out for the 4th consecutive match in a 1-0 home loss to the New England Revolution

[ad_1]

Tomás Chancalay scored in the second half and newly signed Aljaž Ivačič made it stand up in his first start in goal for New England as the Revolution edged the Chicago Fire 1-0 on Saturday night at Soldier Field.

The Revolution (2-7-1) snapped a three-match losing streak after the start was delayed an hour because of inclement weather.

Chancalay’s goal was unassisted in the 62nd minute. Both of his goals this season have come in the last two matches.

Ivačič saved three shots to earn a clean sheet in his first start for New England. Ivačič played for the Portland Timbers from 2019-23 and posted eight shutouts — six in 2022 — in 53 starts.

Chris Brady finished with three saves for the Fire (2-5-4). Brady had two saves and Ivačič wasn’t tested in a scoreless first half.

The Revolution, in their first season under manager Caleb Porter, and the visiting Fire played to a 1-1 draw on March 23.

The Fire were coming off a scoreless draw against Atlanta United and have just one victory in their last seven matches. They’ve been shut out four consecutive times, the last three at home.

The Fire signed Chicago Fire FC II forward Omari Glasgow, 20, to a short-term agreement. He subbed in for Brian Gutiérrez in the 79th minute and missed his only shot in his debut.

The Revolution stay on the road to play the New York Red Bulls on Saturday. The Fire travel to play St. Louis City on Saturday.

[ad_2]

Associated Press , 2024-05-05 06:02:29

Source link

Related posts

Lake Central transfer Sam Hays is a ‘great fit’ for Munster. Triton commit wants to be part of a great run too.

New-York

Introducing the 2024 Daily Southtown Boys Volleyball All-Area Team

New-York

Oregon Powerball player wins a $1.3 billion jackpot, ending more than 3 months without a grand prize

New-York

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept Read More

Privacy & Cookies Policy