Los Angeles Times

Streaks end for Galaxy

Run of consecutiv­e victories stops at five, as does Ibrahimovi­c’s goal- scoring string.

- By Kevin Baxter

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Two impressive streaks came to an end for the Galaxy on Wednesday.

The team’s f ive- game winning streak, the longest in MLS, is done as is Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c’s f ive- game goal- scoring streak, also longest in the league.

But the Galaxy kept another streak going, extending their unbeaten skein to six games by battling Minnesota United to a 0- 0 draw on a rough, rain- soaked field at Allianz Field.

However in the locker room afterward, the point they won felt more like a consolatio­n prize, one they accepted but didn’t necessaril­y earn.

“If the opponent was better, yes. But I didn’t see the opponent as being good,” said a frustrated Ibrahimovi­c. “I see it more that we lost two points.”

Goalkeeper David Bingham, who picked up his third shutout in four games and lowered his goals- against average to 0.88, third- best in MLS, agreed.

“We got a shutout and that was one goal. But the main goal was to get three points,” he said. “At the end of the day we feel like we dropped two points here. We played very poorly and we know that.”

Minnesota ( 3- 3- 2) worked to neutralize Ibrahimovi­c, who scored seven times in his f irst f ive games, by using a high defensive line, surroundin­g him with three defenders and collapsing on him every time he got the ball.

As a result Ibrahimovi­c took a season- low three shots, only one of them on target.

“It became easy for them because I didn’t really have chances,” he said.

Neither did anyone else with the Galaxy taking only 10 shots as a team, also a season low.

Ibrahimovi­c’s most promising try came in the f irst half, when he nodded a header just wide of the right post.

In the second half he onehopped a shot toward the center of the goal that proved an easy save for Minnesota keeper Vito Mannone.

And that was pretty much the extent of the Galaxy offense despite dominating possession and completing 84% of their 499 passes.

The Galaxy were also bothered by the patchy field at Allianz Field, which opened this month. Huge pieces of grass came up at times and conditions worsened midway through the second half when a heavy rain began to fall.

“The f ield was terrible,” Bingham said. “It was one of the worst grass f ields we’ve played on in a long time. But we have to do better.”

Minnesota’s only shot on goal came in the 60th minute when a Galaxy turnover deep in their own end launched the Loons on a three- on- one break. But midfielder Jonathan dos Santos, hustling after the play, ran down Minnesota’s Osvaldo Alonso and when Alonso pushed the ball ahead for Angelo Rodriguez in the penalty area, Dos Santos slid in to break up the shot, taking a knee to the head for his troubles but making Bingham’s only save of the night a little easier.

Minutes later the Galaxy ( 6- 1- 1) suffered their biggest loss of the night when teenage defender Julian Araujo, who played a brilliant game in his second MLS start, limped off the f ield between two trainers, favoring his right ankle.

Araujo left the stadium on crutches but coach Guillermo Barros Schelotto, whose team is already missing two starters to injury in defender Rolf Feltscher ( groin) and midfielder Romain Alessandri­ni ( left knee), said he thinks the 17year- old will be able to play Sunday in the Galaxy’s third game in 10 days.

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