Chicago Sun-Times

ANOTHER MISS, FIRE

New regime but same result: Team won’t be in playoffs again after loss in season finale

- Twitter: @BrianSanda­low BRIAN SANDALOW

All the Fire needed to do to reach the playoffs was finish 10th in the Eastern Conference.

They couldn’t even clear that bar. Requiring a win in Sunday’s season finale to clinch a playoff berth in a generous format, the Fire lost 4-3 to New York City FC at Soldier Field. Combined with victories by Inter Miami and the Montreal Impact, the Fire (5-10-8, 23 points) finished 11th and missed the postseason for the third consecutiv­e year, stamping the first Joe Mansueto-Georg HeitzRapha­el Wicky season a failure.

To compound the wound, the Fire finished behind expansion teams Miami and Nashville SC, who will meet in the first round of the playoffs.

“I don’t know what really to say,” striker Robert Beric said. “I don’t think that we are so bad that we are not in the playoffs, that’s for sure, that we are not in the top 10 teams. But something is missing, and that is true the whole season.”

No, that doesn’t mean the whole project will fail, but falling outside the top 10 in the first go-round is not a good sign.

Heitz officially was hired Dec. 20 and had to rebuild the roster and bring on a new coach before the March 1 opener. On Dec. 27, Heitz tabbed Wicky to replace Veljko Paunovic and eventually added three designated players.

It’s fair to wonder how much differentl­y the offseason — and ensuing season — would’ve gone if that hire had come earlier. Though president Nelson Rodriguez said in October 2019 that the Fire were looking for an executive to handle the first team, Heitz didn’t come aboard until five days before Christmas.

With the clock ticking, Heitz waited just a week to sign Wicky, a former colleague at FC Basel. Before joining the Fire, Wicky spent one year at the helm of the Swiss power but was sacked, then led the U.S. under-17 team to a last-place finish in its group at the 2019 U-17 World Cup.

Wicky’s first season here wasn’t much more successful. And though this Fire team had its moments and some shrewd signings, it ended up like many of its predecesso­rs.

“I see a lot of progress on this team, but I also see a lot of mistakes which are repetitive, which we have to change,” Wicky said. “But I see a lot of progress in the last three months since we have restarted after [the MLS is Back Tournament].

I see that . . . that gives me a positive feeling to go with that base into the new season.”

The final blow came Sunday. After a wild six-goal first half, NYCFC went up in the 77th minute when the Fire’s Miguel Navarro tried a cross-field pass through the Fire box.

Valentin Castellano­s intercepte­d and tapped it past Bobby Shuttlewor­th, extending the Fire’s seasonendi­ng winless streak to six.

Missing the playoffs seemed to nullify any personal satisfacti­on for Beric, who finished with 12 goals.

“We didn’t get in the playoffs,” Beric said. “That’s bad. That’s it. Nothing else to say.”

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 ?? CHICAGO FIRE FC ?? One bright spot this season for the Fire was striker Robert Beric, who finished with 12 goals.
CHICAGO FIRE FC One bright spot this season for the Fire was striker Robert Beric, who finished with 12 goals.

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