The Boston Globe

Revolution fall to 0-2 in front of robust home-opening crowd

- By Jon Couture

The Revolution, playing in front of an announced 29,293 the team hadn’t seen for an MLS home opener in three decades, struggled to finish their chances and were beaten by Toronto FC, 1-0, at Gillette Stadium on Sunday afternoon.

Longtime Italian national teamer Lorenzo Insigne’s deft chip over Revolution goalkeeper Henrich Ravas in the 27 th minute was enough to give Toronto its first road victory since August 2022 — it was 0-13-4 away from home a year ago, replacing former US national team coach Bob Bradley with John Herdman last summer.

New England, meanwhile, was 122-4 in MLS play at Gillette last season, including its playoff ouster.

Sunday’s announced crowd trailed only the 32,864 at the team’s inaugural home game on April 27, 1996.

“It’s tough. We have a great crowd today and it’s our home opener and we’re on the wrong end of a loss and a result that we didn’t want,” new head coach Caleb Porter said. “I’m encouraged by the way the team played, especially in the second half.

“There’s a lot of good in there and we need to keep a perspectiv­e. We need to stick to the process.”

The hosts were without both the injured Bobby Wood and Giacomo Vrioni, who was suspended because of his red card in last Saturday’s loss at D.C. United. Forced to shuffle up front, Porter put Tomás Chancalay at striker and retained Carles Gil, who was removed at halftime of Thursday’s CONCACAF Champions Cup victory with a tight Achilles’.

The Revolution came out strong and active, but squandered their best chances and were denied a potential penalty in the 22nd minute. Esmir Bajraktare­vic went down in the penalty area after Toronto’s Deybi Flores stepped on his left foot, but no call was made by the match’s replacemen­t referee Wesley Costa — the empasse between the league and officials’ union continues.

A penalty was again denied on review, with video showing Flores knocking the ball away before he made contact with Bajraktare­vic.

“The referee observed the defender cleanly playing the ball, and no foul was committed,” Costa told a pool reporter.

Not five minutes later, Toronto took the lead. Federico Bernardesc­hi took the ball near the right corner of the penalty area, switched to his left foot, and had a shot blocked by New England’s Dave Romney. The ball caromed across the box to Insigne, who just missed the post with a screamer earlier in the half.

Given space to work by Andrew Farrell and spying Ravas slightly off his line at the near post, Insigne lofted beyond Ravas’s reach and into the far side netting.

“We started bright. We started with energy. We were kind of knocking on the door to score. We had a couple good moments, I think, where we should score. We have to find a goal with our positive play in those first 20 minutes,” Porter said. “And then, Insigne pulls a rabbit out of a hat and finds a worldclass goal . . . . It’s an unbelievab­le play out of him. Those type of goals happen in this sport and we have to respond better when that happens.”

It was Toronto’s first goal of the year after it opened with a scoreless draw at FC Cincinnati last Sunday. Toronto’s 26 goals in 34 MLS matches last season tied for worst in the league.

With Toronto folding into its defensive shell, New England dominated possession the rest of the way, ending with 19 shots offered to the visitors’ eight and all 11 corners awarded in the match. The Revolution didn’t force Toronto keeper Sean Johnson into a second-half save until the 72nd minute, however, and Matt Turner’s backup for the United States at the 2022 World Cup was up to the challenge.

Johnson stretched to the top corner to keep out Carles Gil’s curler from 25 yards for his first stop, denied Nacho Gil’s header in the 80th, but was at his best three minutes into stoppage time.

Carles Gil fed from deep left in the penalty area back toward the middle, Chancalay touching on to a closing Matt Polster. Polster carried to the top of the box and fired low toward the bottom corner. Johnson, who’d been leaning left, reacted back across his body and got a right hand on the shot, which flew harmless over the crossbar.

The Revolution are back to Champions Cup play Wednesday — part of a run of eight games in 26 days to begin the season — when they host Central American Cup champions Liga Deportiva Alajuelens­e in the first leg of the Round of 16 meeting. (They’ll again be without Vrioni, who accumulate­d two yellows in the opening round.) Their next MLS match is Saturday at Atlanta United.

 ?? MARK STOCKWELL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Revolution midfielder Nacho Gil (left) and forward Tomás Chancalay react to a missed chance in the second half of their home opener.
MARK STOCKWELL/ASSOCIATED PRESS Revolution midfielder Nacho Gil (left) and forward Tomás Chancalay react to a missed chance in the second half of their home opener.

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