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Wikipedia

Chicago Fire FC

Chicago Fire Football Club is an American professional soccer club based in Chicago. The team competes in Major League Soccer (MLS) as a member of the league's Eastern Conference, having moved to the conference in 2002.

Chicago Fire
FoundedOctober 8, 1997; 25 years ago (1997-10-08) as Chicago Fire Soccer Club
StadiumSoldier Field
Chicago, Illinois
Capacity61,500
OwnerJoe Mansueto
ChairmanJoe Mansueto
Head coachEzra Hendrickson
LeagueMajor League Soccer
2022Eastern Conference: 12th
Overall: 24th
Playoffs: Did not qualify
WebsiteClub website
Current season

The franchise, named in memory of the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, was founded as the Chicago Fire Soccer Club on October 8, 1997, the Great Fire's 126th anniversary. The team began play in 1998 as one of the league's first expansion teams. The Fire won the MLS Cup as well as the U.S. Open Cup (the "double") in their first season in 1998. They also won U.S. Open Cups in 2000, 2003, and 2006, in addition to the 2003 MLS Supporters' Shield.

The Fire maintains an extensive development system, consisting of the Chicago Fire Development Academy and the Chicago Fire Juniors youth organization. They also operate the Chicago Fire Foundation, the team's community-based charitable division. The Fire's home stadium is Soldier Field which it shares with the Chicago Bears of the National Football League.

History

Overview

Chicago Fire FC was founded as Chicago Fire Soccer Club on October 8, 1997.[1] The club is named after the Great Chicago Fire of 1871; the official founding date of the team was the 126th anniversary of that event.[2] The owner and chairman of the Fire is Joe Mansueto, who purchased the club in 2019. The club president is Ishwara Glassman-Chrein; Georg Heitz was appointed sporting director in December 2019; The Fire were originally based at Soldier Field from 1997 to 2006. From 2006 to 2019, the club played at SeatGeek Stadium, a stadium originally built for the club, at 71st and Harlem Avenue in Bridgeview. In 2019, with the change of ownership to Joe Mansueto, the Fire returned to Soldier Field for the 2020 MLS season. The Fire are currently one of the most successful clubs in the U.S. Open Cup, winning championships in 1998, 2000, 2003, and 2006.

Many notable players have worn the Fire shirt, including U.S. internationals Chris Armas, Carlos Bocanegra, Frank Klopas, DaMarcus Beasley, Brian McBride, Tony Sanneh, Cory Gibbs, Ante Razov, Josh Wolff, Eric Wynalda and Jon Busch. Some of the club's other notable American professional players include C.J. Brown, Jesse Marsch, Chris Rolfe, and Zach Thornton. The Fire also have a reputation for importing international talent, from established veterans like Bastian Schweinsteiger, Pável Pardo, Piotr Nowak, Cuauhtémoc Blanco, Tomasz Frankowski, Lubos Kubik, Hristo Stoichkov and Jorge Campos; in addition to younger players such as Patrick Nyarko, Marco Pappa, Damani Ralph, Bakary Soumaré and Nery Castillo.

Chicago was once the home of the Chicago Sting who competed in the top-level North American Soccer League (NASL) from 1975 to 1984. They spread their home games at Soldier Field, Wrigley Field, and Comiskey Park. The Sting won the Soccer Bowl twice: 1981 and 1984. They were the only club other than the New York Cosmos to win multiple titles in the NASL.[3] One of the club's notable players was German forward Arno Steffenhagen.

Foundation and initial success (1997–2000)

 
The Fire (in red) hosting the Dallas Burn at Soldier Field in July 1998

Founded in 1997 at Navy Pier, on the anniversary of the Great Fire, the Fire immediately tapped into the diverse ethnic makeup of the city. The team brought in Polish players Piotr Nowak, Jerzy Podbrozny, and Roman Kosecki; the Mexican Jorge Campos; and the Czech Lubos Kubik. While all showed their talent while playing for Chicago that first year, American players (Zach Thornton, Chris Armas, C.J. Brown) proved most integral to the Fire's continued success. Under the club's first head coach, Bob Bradley—and against all expectation—the team completed the double in its first competitive year, beating D.C. United in the 1998 MLS Cup Final, and defeating the Columbus Crew in Chicago to win the 1998 U.S. Open Cup a week later.

The team's momentum continued, reaching the 2000 MLS Cup final (losing to Kansas City) and winning the 2000 U.S. Open Cup. Internationally experienced players such as Hristo Stoitchkov joined the Fire, while young American talents such as DaMarcus Beasley developed. The Fire quickly became cemented as one of the league's preeminent teams.

Nomadic times (2002–2004)

With Soldier Field undergoing massive renovations, the Fire moved to the western Chicago suburb of Naperville in 2002. That same year, Bob Bradley abruptly departed the team to lead the MetroStars, from his home state of New Jersey. The Fire then selected the U.S. men's national team's top assistant, Dave Sarachan, to assume the vacant post.

Chicago qualified for the league final while also capturing the Supporters' Shield and 2003 U.S. Open Cup along the way. The team returned to Chicago and the renovated Soldier Field midway through the 2003 season.

After that season, longtime captain Piotr Nowak retired to take a position in the front office. He departed a year later to become manager of D.C. United. In this period new talent emerged, including Jamaican striker Damani Ralph. Still, stagnating performances and the building strength of the Eastern Conference made Chicago's league position ever more tenuous. In 2004, the team missed the league playoffs for the first time in their history.

Turmoil, and a permanent home (2005–2007)

The 2005 season began with the unexpected dismissal of popular club president Peter Wilt by then-owners AEG, a move decried by fans, many players, and club staff.[4] This came as a shock, given his brokering of a $100m deal to build the Fire a stadium in the collar suburb of Bridgeview. He was immediately replaced by MetroStars executive John Guppy.

Competitively, the season was most notable for the blockbuster visit of Milan from Italy's Serie A, and the surprising 4–0 away defeat of D.C. United in the Eastern Conference Semi-finals.

2006 arrived, and the Fire moved from Soldier Field into its new stadium in Bridgeview, a southwest suburb of Chicago: Toyota Park, located at the corner of 71st Street and Harlem Avenue. In its first season, it played host to an unspectacular league campaign; but victory in the 2006 U.S. Open Cup marked a continuation of the club's successes and promise for the future.

The anxiety to win another league title continued to grow, however. Sarachan entered 2007 (his fifth season in charge) under intense pressure from fans and the administration to produce a league championship. Tension mounted further on April 3, 2007, when the Fire signed Mexico and América star Cuauhtémoc Blanco to a Designated Player contract. After a perfect three matches to open the year, they won only one of their next eight, and Sarachan was dismissed. Following a brief search, Millonarios manager Juan Carlos Osorio was named the club's third head coach.

Andell Inc. acquisition of the Fire (2007–2009)

 
Section 8 during a June 2008 match at Toyota Park

More change came soon afterward. On September 6, 2007, Andell Holdings, a Los Angeles-based private investment firm controlled by chairman Andrew Hauptman, acquired AEG's interest in the Chicago Fire Soccer Club. Reports estimated the purchase price to be upwards of $35 million.[5] The team has not won a major trophy since Hauptman bought the team.

On the field, behind Blanco and Wilman Conde, Osorio's central defender at Millionarios, the Fire went on an extended unbeaten run to close the season, easily qualifying for the playoffs but were defeated at New England in the Eastern Conference Final. On December 10, 2007, the Fire announced Osorio's resignation. He was named manager of the New York Red Bulls eight days later. Hauptman filed tampering charges with the league in protest, and the Fire were compensated by the Red Bulls with cash and draft picks.[6]

Changes came quickly in Osorio's wake. On January 17, 2008, former Fire star Frank Klopas was named Technical Director in charge of player personnel, and longtime Fire assistant Denis Hamlett was appointed manager. While the Fire struggled at home in 2008 the team found unusual success on the road, gathering 22 out of a possible 45 away points. Momentum grew with the long-anticipated signing of Chicago native Brian McBride on a free transfer in July 2008. After disposing of the Red Bulls 5–2 in the season's final game, they decisively conquered New England in the first round of the playoffs with a 3–0 victory at home. This was Chicago's first playoff advancement over the Revolution in four consecutive seasons. But triumph only lasted for a week, as they again missed the league final with their 2–1 Eastern Conference Final loss to eventual champion Columbus.

The 2009 season saw few alterations to the previous year's roster. The story of the season was much the same, as continued poor home form offset excellent performances away from Toyota Park. This led to a second place Eastern Conference finish behind Columbus. Despite this, Real Salt Lake managed to upset the Crew in the quarterfinals, meaning Chicago would host the semi-final for the first time in six years. Chicago's nearly flawless home playoff history meant little in the end, as they lost to Salt Lake, 5–3, on penalties after 120 scoreless minutes. Shortly thereafter, manager Denis Hamlett was dismissed.[7]

A team in flux (2010–2012)

 
Chicago's Patrick Nyarko (right) dribbling past a Seattle defender during an April 2012 match

Leading up to 2010, Chicago hired Carlos de los Cobos as head coach, previously manager of El Salvador.[8] Cuauhtémoc Blanco, Chris Rolfe and Gonzalo Segares all departed. More changes came in the summer transfer window with the trade of Justin Mapp to Philadelphia, the acquisition of Mexican international striker Nery Castillo, and the trade for former Swedish international midfielder Freddie Ljungberg. Defender Gonzalo Segares returned to the Fire, leaving Apollon Limassol after only six months away. Despite these reinforcements, the Fire failed to qualify for the playoffs for only the second time in club history. Former U.S. international Brian McBride and club original C.J. Brown retired at season's end, followed closely by the departures of Wilman Conde, Ljungberg, and Castillo.

2011 began much in the way of 2010, with foundering performances both home and away. After nine winless matches, Carlos de los Cobos was let go on May 30, 2011.[9] Technical Director Frank Klopas was named interim head coach. Behind summer reinforcements Pável Pardo and Sebastián Grazzini, as well as forward Dominic Oduro's 12 goals after being acquired in a trade from Houston and Dan Gargan's defensive addition, the Fire qualified for the U.S. Open Cup Final (lost at Seattle) and narrowly missed making the playoffs after gaining 24 points in their last 12 league matches. After the season's conclusion, Klopas was given the permanent manager job on November 3, 2011.[10]

Although expectations were modest for 2012, Klopas' first full season as coach, the year saw a change in fortune for the Fire. The spring and summer months saw several new acquisitions for the club, starting with the reacquiring of Chris Rolfe from Aalborg BK.[11] Rolfe, who scored eight goals and 12 assists in the 21 games he played in 2012, would later be named the Fire's MVP.[12] Other signings included Brazilian midfielders Alex Monteiro de Lima from the Swiss side FC Wohlen, Alvaro Fernandez from Seattle Sounders FC, forward Sherjill MacDonald from Beerschot AC of Belgium and veteran defender Arne Friedrich from VfL Wolfsburg. Although they would fall out of the U.S. Open tournament early that season, the Fire eventually compiled a 17–11–6 record, their best since 2000, and ranked as high as second in the Eastern Conference before ending the year in fourth place.[13] On October 31, 2012, in their first playoff appearance since 2009, the Fire lost their first-round MLS Cup playoff match-up at home against the Houston Dynamo, 2–1.[14]

Missing the playoffs (2013–2015)

In the 2012–2013 offseason, the franchise made some moves to improve on 2012's success. The team acquired Joel Lindpere and Jeff Larentowicz and also traded Dominic Oduro for Dilly Duka and the rights to Robbie Rogers.[15] The beginning of the season saw the team struggling to score goals, resulting in a record of 2–5–1 through April. After two successive losses to the Union in May, and with veteran Arne Friedrich still on injured reserve, the Fire acquired their former centerback Bakary Soumaré from Philadelphia.[16] Also in May, Robbie Rogers expressed an interest to play in Southern California, at which point a deal was brokered for Rogers' rights in exchange for Chicago native Mike Magee from the Los Angeles Galaxy.[17] On June 23, 2013, Friedrich, who had not played a 2012–13 game due to recurring injuries, announced his retirement.[18] After starting the season 2–7–3, the additions of Soumare and Magee led to seven wins in the squad's last 10 games. The Fire were busy in the transfer window as well, adding veteran defensive midfielder Arévalo Ríos and forward Juan Luis Anangonó.[19] The Chicago Fire also advanced to host the semifinal of the 2013 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup, but fell 2–0 to eventual champions D.C. United. Alleged fan actions in the stadium that night led to a famous editorial piece, "What it means to be a part of the Fire family",[20] being penned by the club's Director of Communications, which was seen as an odd attack on the fan base and widely panned by local and national media. After a 12–6–6 finish to the season, the Fire narrowly missed the playoffs for the third time in the last four years—losing out to the Montreal Impact on goal difference. On October 30, 2013, the club announced that the president of soccer operations Javier Leon and head coach Frank Klopas had stepped down,[21] but the Fire front office had a replacement one day later. On October 31, 2013, Chicago Fire named Frank Yallop as its new head coach and director of soccer.[22] On December 5, 2013, Fire MVP Mike Magee became the first Fire player to win the MLS MVP Award—beating out Los Angeles Galaxy's Robbie Keane and Montreal Impact's Marco Di Vaio for the honor.[23][24][25]

 
Chicago Fire F.C. lineup photo, 2013

Meanwhile, Yallop was busy recruiting a new coaching staff which included "Ring of Fire" member and Chicago Fire veteran C. J. Brown and former U.S. International striker Clint Mathis as the team's assistant coaches, adding Columbus Crew's Brian Bliss as Technical Director. Former Fire forward Brian McBride was added as an assistant coach in May 2014 for a short-term assignment.[26][27][28][29] The shake-up extended to the roster, as Yallop moved team veterans and starters and brought in youth prospects—reforming the team while freeing up cap space. Major exits in early 2014 included Chris Rolfe,[30] Austin Berry,[31] Jalil Anibaba, Daniel Paladini, and Paolo Tornaghi. Filling that void was a handful of youth prospects including Harrison Shipp (homegrown player), Benji Joya (via MLS "weighted lottery"), and Grant Ward on loan from Tottenham Hotspur. Despite rarely looking like a team that could advance to the MLS Cup Playoffs, the team once again advanced to the semifinals of the 2014 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup, but were routed 6–0 by eventual champions Seattle Sounders FC on August 13. The result was the worst competitive defeat in club history and saw Frank Yallop issue an apology to Chicago Fire supporters on the club's official website.[32] As the Cup run had, the season ended in disappointment, with the Fire ending the season with a 6–18–10 record, with 18 draws, also setting a record for most draws in an MLS season in the process.

The club began 2015 with renewed hope, bringing three new Designated Player signings in David Accam, Shaun Maloney and Kennedy Igboananike to bolster an anemic attack. The club also signed products Michael Stephens and Eric Gehrig as well as Trinindad & Tobago international Joevin Jones. With so many new pieces needing to adjust, 2015 marked the first time in club history the side began the season with an 0–3–0 record, but they showed signs of recovery by winning their next three matches. Unfortunately, April was the last time the club would be anywhere near equal on wins and losses, but the side did still advance to another Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup semifinal. Playing in front of a sparse crowd at the Philadelphia Union's PPL Park, the Fire fell 1–0 at the same hurdle for the third straight season. Less than two weeks later, Maloney, who was the club's center piece offseason signing, was transferred back to England with Hull City citing personal reasons.[33]

Despite no hope for a Cup final, widespread fan protests[34][35] and dim likelihood of a playoff berth, the club didn't part ways with Frank Yallop until September 20, 2015, one day after another listless 1–0 home defeat to Orlando City SC.[36] Along with Yallop's departure, the club announced it had named long-time MLS executive Nelson Rodriguez as the club's new general manager, with his first job being to commence a search for a new head coach. Technical director Brian Bliss was given the interim head coaching job, with former player and current club vice president Logan Pause assisting for the remaining five matches. The club has finished the 2015 season with an overall record of 8 wins, 20 losses and 6 ties. For the first time in the club's history Fire finished the season with zero road wins (0–12–5). Twenty losses in a season became the highest in the club's history.[37]

Final years in Bridgeview, IL (2016–2019)

 
Bastian Schweinsteiger played for Chicago from 2017 to 2019

On November 18, 2015, Rodriguez made his first moves as GM, firing most of Yallop's remaining technical staff, including goalkeeping coach Aron Hyde, fitness coach Adrian Lamb and Director of Scouting Trevor James.[38] Rodriguez also parted ways with the club's long-time Director of First Team Operations Ron Stern, Equipment Manager Charles Raycroft and Assistant Equipment Manager Allan Araujo. On November 24, 2015, the club announced that Veljko Paunovic, former coach of the Serbian U-20 side that won the 2015 FIFA U-20 World Cup, had been named the new head coach of the Chicago Fire.[39] On January 5, 2016, technical director Brian Bliss also departed the Fire to join Sporting Kansas City as Director of Player Personnel, completing the total overhaul of the technical staff.[40]

On March 21, 2017 Manchester United allowed Bastian Schweinsteiger to join Chicago Fire, subject to a medical and a visa being secured.[41][42][43][44][45] The move from Manchester United was completed on March 29, 2017.[46]

On July 11, 2018, the club announced that Hauptman had sold a 49 percent stake of his ownership to Joe Mansueto, the founder of Morningstar, Inc.[47] On September 13, 2019, Hauptman sold his majority share to Mansueto, who became the sole owner.[48]

Return to Soldier Field and rebrand (2020–present)

As the 2019 MLS campaign concluded, the Chicago Fire organization began the ambitious process of reinventing the franchise during the course of a three-month offseason. The changes included securing a downtown Chicago venue, adding new front office positions, shifting organizational roles, making major roster changes, and rolling out a new brand identity.[49]

Two days after the end of the season, October 8, the Fire officially announced they would return to Soldier Field to play the 2020 MLS season,[50] that same day Bastian Schweinsteiger announced his retirement.[51] Two days later, the Fire announced the signing of midfielder Álvaro Medrán,[52] eight days later Designated Player and former Golden Boot winner Nemanja Nikolic announced he would be leaving the team.[53]

The first full month of the off-season saw the Fire continue their overhaul. On November 4, the team traded captain Dax McCarty to expansion side Nashville SC.[54] Ten days later Homegrown Player Grant Lillard was dealt to MLS's other expansion team Inter Miami. That same day, November 14, Chicago Fire President and general manager Nelson Rodriguez fired head coach Veljko Paunovic and his staff.[55] News that the Chicago Fire would not be renewing the contract of their last-remaining DP, Nicolas Gaitan, as well as winger Aleksandar Katai was overshadowed by an even larger organizational unveiling one week later.[56]

On November 21, the long-anticipated rebrand of the Chicago Fire franchise was announced.[57] Developed with the help of marketing agency Doubleday & Cartwright, the team revealed changes to its franchise colors, red and white to red, blue, and gold, its name from Chicago Fire Soccer Club to Chicago Fire FC and, most contentiously, its logo.[58]

While the Fire organization made their second player acquisition of the offseason in early December, homegrown player Nicholas Slonina,[59] a relatively quiet few weeks had some followers of the team concerned about their organizational progress.[60] However the Fire were busy again in late December with Nelson Rodriguez relinquishing his on-field decision making responsibilities to new Sporting Director Georg Hietz,[61] who swiftly named former US Soccer Youth National Coach Raphael Wicky as head coach and Sebastian Pelzer as Technical Director.[62][63] Heitz has previously worked with Wicky at Swiss club FC Basel and "worked closely" with Pelzer at his management consultancy business Heusler Werthmüller Heitz ("HWH").[64]

The Fire opened the 2020 campaign with the signings of Argentinian duo Ignacio Aliseda from Defensa and Gaston Gimenez from Vélez Sarsfield,[65] looking to bolster their squad after losing DP Nicolas Gaitan[66] The Fire also announced the signing of Robert Beric[67] from French outfit Saint-Étienne, who netted in his debut defeat against the Seattle Sounders FC (2–1).[68]

Colors and badge

 
The Chicago Fire SC crest (1997–2019)

The club's official primary colors are red, flag blue, deep blue, and white.[69][70] Secondary colors such as navy blue, sky blue, gold, and black have also been used throughout the history of the Fire. The original logo of the Chicago Fire, used from 1997 to 2019, was derived from the Cross of Saint Florian, a common symbol for fire departments in the United States.[71] A stylized "C" sat in the center, representing the city, similar to the logos of the Bears and Cubs. The six points in a ring around the center alluded to the stars in the Flag of Chicago, one of which commemorates the Great Chicago Fire of 1871.[72] This style was chosen by the original general manager, Peter Wilt, to establish a timeless image evocative of both classic American sports (as in the logos of the NHL Original Six) and the traditions of European soccer.[72]

Nike, the Fire's original equipment supplier, intended for the team to be named the Chicago Rhythm. The Rhythm identity featured a turquoise, black and green color scheme, and a logo adorned with a cobra. Team officials ignored Nike's work, and privately developed the Fire identity with the help of Adrenalin, Inc., a sports branding agency from Denver.[73][74] The names "Chicago Blues" and "Chicago Wind" were also considered.[73]

 
Bakary Soumaré wearing the all-red shirt with a white horizontal chest stripe. This was the club's primary kit until 2012

The original Fire jerseys were chosen because of their resemblance to a Chicago fireman's coat, featuring broad horizontal stripes across the torso and sleeves. In the first year, the home jersey was red and white with a silver "FIRE" on the stripe; while the away shirts were white and black in the same style. The jersey maintained the same format of an all-red shirt with a white horizontal chest stripe through changes in equipment sponsor (from Nike, to Puma, and currently Adidas), until 2012 when the white stripe was exchanged for a blue stripe. Conversely, the Fire's secondary shirts have changed much over the years from white with black, to white with navy, to white with red, to all-white style and the all-blue currently used. Third shirts have often been yellow (originally to honor the Chicago Sting, later for the expired partnership with Morelia). In 2005, and again from 2014 through 2016, the club wore third shirts with designs based on the Flag of Chicago.[75]

The club and their fans make frequent use of the symbols of Chicago, as a show of civic pride. Most prominent are the six-pointed Chicago stars, but the light blue color associated with the city, the municipal device, and the city skyline appear regularly on materials produced by the club and its fans. The Flag of Chicago is also favored by fans and often seen at the stadium.

On November 21, 2019, the club unveiled its first major rebranding ahead of their move back to Soldier Field in Chicago. The club's name was changed to Chicago Fire Football Club (Chicago Fire FC) and the original logo was replaced with an ovular crest marked with mirrored sets of three triangles called the "Fire Crown" to reference the revitalization of Chicago following the Great Fire.[76][71] The crest used dark blue, red, and gold as its main colors.[71] Secondary design colors are to be ivory and "flag blue", a light blue color derived from the Chicago flag.[77] Before its unveiling, the rebranding was leaked onto social media and garnered an "overwhelmingly negative response" from fans.[78] Comparisons were made between the "Fire Crown" and the existing logo of the Vancouver Whitecaps FC, which uses a similar set of mirrored triangles, and some fans worried that the "Fire Crown" was reminiscent of the logo of the Latin Kings street gang. The team responded to the decidedly negative reaction by saying "[new] brands take time and repetition to build meaning. They will be judged in years, not days", insisting that there are no plans to revive the old logo.[79] The club ultimately unveiled a new crest in the middle of the 2021 season, with a full embrace of it beginning in 2022. This new logo was designed by Matthew Wolff.[80]

Uniform history

Sponsorship

Seasons Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
1998–2002 Nike
2003–2005 Puma
2006–2007 Adidas
2008–2010 Best Buy
2011
2012–2015 Quaker
2016–2018[81] Valspar
2019–present Motorola

Stadium

 
SeatGeek Stadium, located in Bridgeview, Illinois, was the club's home stadium from 2006 until 2019

Chicago played its home games at SeatGeek Stadium, a soccer-specific stadium located at 71st Street and Harlem Avenue in the Chicago suburb of Bridgeview, Illinois, about 12 miles southwest from downtown Chicago from 2006 until the end of the 2019 season. The Village of Bridgeview owns and operates SeatGeek Stadium, which opened as Toyota Park on June 11, 2006, and originally cost approximately $100 million. It was renamed from Toyota Park to SeatGeek Stadium after the end of the 2018 season, with an estimated naming rights fee between 2.5 million to 4 million per year.[82]

In April 2019, multiple sources reported the club in negotiations with Bridgeview to buy out the remainder of its lease at SeatGeek Stadium and return to Soldier Field.[83][84] For its first years in the league the Fire played at Soldier Field, the 61,500-capacity home of the Chicago Bears of the NFL and one of the main venues of the 1994 FIFA World Cup. While that stadium was undergoing a $632 million renovation, the Fire played at Cardinal Stadium in Naperville, Illinois, on the outskirts of the Chicago metropolitan area. They returned to Soldier Field toward the end of 2003, remaining there through the end of 2005.

In July 2019, Chicago Fire reached a deal to leave SeatGeek Stadium for a payment of $65.5 million and move back to Soldier Field starting in 2020.[85] The return to Soldier Field was finalized with an agreement with the Chicago Park District in September 2019.[86]

Home stadiums

Other stadiums

Club culture

Supporters

There is a noteworthy fan culture for the Fire, existing from the date the club was founded, and building on an enthusiasm throughout Chicago sports. At matches, supporters and ultras groups occupy a standing area directly behind the north goal, in the Harlem End of Toyota Park.[87] This area is referred to as Section 8, originating from the numbering of the corresponding section at Soldier Field and the American military designation of mentally unfit soldiers.[88] Section 8 Chicago, the Independent Supporters' Association (ISA) for the Fire, oversees the activities of these numerous groups.[89] While incorporating a worldwide variety of styles with a Chicago bent, groups as part of Section 8 generally fall under the ultras designation. Additionally, an associated spinoff group called "Sector Latino" which originally congregated in the corner-kick Section 101[90][non-primary source needed] at the stadium's southwest end until season long discussions between the ISA and the Chicago Fire Front Office eventually saw the group moved to Section 137, directly behind the south goal. There are also several other affiliated ultras and supporters groups, including The Arsonists, Banter Buddies, Blitzer Mob, Husaria, Fire Ultras 98, Partisans, Red Scare, Second City North, The Western Front, Ultras Red-Side, Mike Ditka Street Crew (MDSC), and Whiskey Brothers Aught-Five.[91] The Section 8 Chicago ISA is a registered 501(c)7 non-profit organization run by volunteers through an elected board of directors.[92]

 
"Section 8", the supporters area at SeatGeek Stadium

Match atmosphere is known for organized displays of stadium-wide support, particularly for matches of prime competitive importance. Call-and-response cheering amongst the crowd is commonplace.[93] Fans at SeatGeek Stadium for Fire matches periodically choreograph tifo presentations both to show their pride and inspire the players on the field.[94] SeatGeek Stadium remains one of the few American environments to conduct such fan-driven presentations on a large scale.

Mascot

Their official mascot is Sparky, an anthropomorphic Dalmatian dog. Sparky is usually shown wearing the club's jersey but also arrives wearing firefighter attire.[95]

Rivalries

While the Fire have heated rivalries with a number of different MLS teams, Fire supporters of different ages will likely give different responses as to who the club's main rival is. The earliest Fire supporters would list Brimstone Cup rival FC Dallas as the Fire's nemesis, or Los Angeles Galaxy following heated playoff and cup matches with Dallas and L.A. in the league's early years.

After the Fire moved to the Eastern Conference, meetings with Dallas and LA became less frequent. Rivalries with D.C. United and New England Revolution were stoked following several thrilling playoff meetings. The Fire and Revolution are MLS' most frequent playoff matchup, meeting in the MLS Cup Playoffs 8 different times in 10 seasons from 2000 to 2009, splitting those encounters 4–4, with the Fire winning in 2000, 2003, 2008, and 2009. New England ended the Fire's playoff runs in 2002, 2005, 2006, and 2007. Newer rivals include Columbus Crew, who up until the introduction of FC Cincinnati were the closest MLS team geographically to the Fire, and Atlanta United following quarrels between the two sets of fans.

Broadcasting

Beginning with the 2020 season, WGN Sports was added as a regional television rightsholder under a multi-year deal, with all regional matches airing on WGN-TV. The first season under the contract was concurrent with the final year of the existing ESPN+ regional rights. WGN had recently lost its legacy professional sports rights to NBC Sports Chicago and Marquee Sports Network.[96][97][98] In April 2021, the club announced that their television broadcast team would consist of play-by-play commentator Tyler Terens, color analyst, Tony Meola. Play-by-play commentator Arlo White – whose Fire broadcast debut was postponed in 2020 because of the pandemic – was also expected to call several games.[99] With every MLS game available on Apple TV via their rights deal in 2023, Chicago games will be broadcast almost exclusively on this service, with exceptions for certain national linear television broadcast partners.

Spanish-language radio station WRTO has aired Chicago Fire matches since 2017, replacing WEBG-HD2.[100]

Players

Roster

As of March 15, 2023[101]
No. Pos. Player Nation
2 DF Arnaud Souquet   France
3 DF Alonso Aceves (on loan from Pachuca)   Mexico
4 DF Carlos Terán   Colombia
5 DF Rafael Czichos   Germany
6 DF Miguel Navarro   Venezuela
7 MF Maren Haile-Selassie (on loan from Lugano)   Switzerland
8 FW Chris Mueller   United States
10 MF Xherdan Shaqiri (DP)   Switzerland
11 FW Kacper Przybyłko   Poland
16 DF Wyatt Omsberg   United States
17 MF Brian Gutiérrez (HG)   United States
18 GK Spencer Richey   United States
19 FW Georgios Koutsias   Greece
20 MF Jairo Torres (DP)   Mexico
21 FW Fabian Herbers   Germany
22 MF Mauricio Pineda (HG)   United States
23 FW Kei Kamara   Sierra Leone
24 DF Jonathan Dean   United States
25 GK Jeff Gal   United States
27 DF Kendall Burks   United States
30 MF Gastón Giménez   Paraguay
31 MF Federico Navarro   Argentina
32 FW Missael Rodríguez (HG)   United States
33 FW Victor Bezerra (HG)   United States
34 GK Chris Brady (HG)   United States
35 MF Sergio Oregel (HG)   United States
36 DF Justin Reynolds (HG)   United States
37 MF Javier Casas (HG)   United States
38 MF Alex Monis (HG)   United States
39 MF Allan Rodriguez (HG)   United States

Ring of Fire

The "Ring of Fire" was established in 2003 by Chicago Fire Soccer Club and the Chicago Fire Alumni Association as permanent tribute to honor those who have made the club proud and successful over its history.[102] Aside from the initial member Piotr Nowak, only "Ring of Fire" members can select new inductees, and no more than one can be selected any year. Names and numbers (if applicable) are prominently displayed inside SeatGeek Stadium.

There were no inductees in 2008, 2010, or 2011. In 2008, the members voted to honor two recently deceased fans (supporter leaders Dan Parry and Brandon Kitchens) but were overruled by the club chairman Andrew Hauptman.[103] Parry and Kitchens were later made members of the Wall of Honor, a special recognition for Fire fans. In addition to Parry and Kitchens, the late Fire fans Euan McLean and Al Hack have been inducted into the Wall of Honor as of 2011.[104] C.J. Brown was expected to be honored in 2011, but a new rule was established that inductees must have been away from the club for at least a calendar year.[105] Brown, at the time an assistant head coach at Real Salt Lake, was officially inducted at the halftime ceremony during the home game vs. Real Salt Lake in Toyota Park on May 9, 2012.[106][107]

On October 3, 2015, Ante Razov, the club's all-time leading scorer, became the eighth individual to be inducted into the club's Ring of Fire Hall of Fame.[108] The ceremony took place on that day during the halftime of the regular season home match against New England Revolution.[109]

Staff

Head coaches

Name Nationality Tenure
Bob Bradley   United States October 30, 1997 – October 5, 2002
Dave Sarachan   United States November 4, 2002 – June 20, 2007
Juan Carlos Osorio   Colombia July 1, 2007 – December 10, 2007
Denis Hamlett   Costa Rica January 11, 2008 – November 24, 2009
Carlos de los Cobos   Mexico January 1, 2010 – May 30, 2011
Frank Klopas   United States May 30, 2011 – October 30, 2013
Frank Yallop   Canada October 31, 2013 – September 20, 2015
Brian Bliss (interim)   United States September 20, 2015 – November 24, 2015
Veljko Paunović   Serbia November 24, 2015 – November 13, 2019
Raphaël Wicky   Switzerland December 27, 2019 – September 30, 2021
Frank Klopas (interim)   United States September 30, 2021 – November 7, 2021
Ezra Hendrickson   Saint Vincent and the Grenadines November 24, 2021 – present

Club presidents

Name Tenure
Robert Sanderman 1997–2000
Peter Wilt 2001–2005
John Guppy 2005–2008
Javier León (interim) 2008
Dave Greeley 2008–2010
Javier León (interim) 2010
Julian Posada 2010–2012
Nelson Rodríguez 2018–2021
Ishwara Glassman-Chrein 2021–2022[110]

General managers

Name Tenure
Peter Wilt 1997–2005
Nelson Rodriguez 2015–2019
Georg Heitz 2019–

Chief Operating Officer

Name Tenure
John Urban 2018–present [111]

Technical directors

Directors of player personnel

Assistant coaches

Team physicians

  • Dr. Preston Wolin (1998–2008)
  • Dr. Gilberto Muñoz (1999–2015)
  • Dr. Jeffrey Mjaanes, M.D. (2015– )
  • Dr. Joshua Blomgren, D.O. (2015– )

Honors

Continental
Competitions Titles Seasons
National[121]
Competitions Titles Seasons
MLS Cup 1 1998
Supporters' Shield 1 2003
U.S. Open Cup 4 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006

Records

Top goalscorers

As of August 18, 2019[122]
# Name Career MLS Playoffs Open Cup CCL Total
1   Ante Razov 1998–2000
2001–2004
76 10 6 2 94
2   Nemanja Nikolić 2017–2019 50 0 5 0 55
3   Chris Rolfe 2005–2009
2012–2014
48 4 3 0 55
4   Josh Wolff 1998–2002 32 0 6 1 39
5   David Accam 2015–2017 33 0 5 0 38
6   Dema Kovalenko 1999–2002 22 5 3 5 35
7   Piotr Nowak 1998–2002 26 3 0 0 29
8   Damani Ralph 2003–2004 22 1 4 1 28
9   Mike Magee 2013–2015 22 0 5 0 27
10   Hristo Stoichkov 2000–2002 17 4 3 0 24

Year-by-year

This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Fire. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Chicago Fire FC seasons.

Season League Position Playoffs USOC Continental / Other Average
attendance
Top goalscorer(s)
Div League Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts PPG Conf. Overall Name(s) Goals
2017 1 MLS 34 16 11 7 62 48 +14 55 1.67 3rd 3rd R1 R5 DNQ 17,383   Nemanja Nikolić 24♦
2018 MLS 34 8 18 8 43 74 −31 32 0.94 10th 20th DNQ SF DNQ 14,806   Nemanja Nikolić 19
2019 MLS 34 10 12 12 55 47 +8 42 1.24 8th 17th R4 Leagues Cup QF 12,324   Nemanja Nikolić 13
2020 MLS 23 5 10 8 33 39 −6 23 1.00 11th 22nd NH MLS is Back Tournament GS 0   Robert Berić 12
2021 MLS 34 9 18 7 36 54 −18 34 1.00 12th 22nd NH DNQ 10,703   Robert Berić 8

^ 1. Avg. attendance include statistics from league matches only.
^ 2. Top goalscorer(s) includes all goals scored in League, MLS Cup Playoffs, U.S. Open Cup, MLS is Back Tournament, CONCACAF Champions League, FIFA Club World Cup, and other competitive continental matches.

Team awards

As of November 28, 2022[123]
Year Team MVP Golden Boot Defender of the Year
Winner Goals
1998   Piotr Nowak   Ante Razov 10   Luboš Kubík
1999   Luboš Kubík   Ante Razov 14   Luboš Kubík
2000   Piotr Nowak   Ante Razov 18   Carlos Bocanegra
2001   Piotr Nowak   Eric Wynalda 10   Zach Thornton
2002   Zach Thornton   Ante Razov 14   Zach Thornton
2003   Chris Armas   Ante Razov 14   Carlos Bocanegra
2004   Henry Ring   Damani Ralph 11   Jim Curtin
2005   Iván Guerrero   Chris Rolfe 8   Iván Guerrero
2006   Andy Herron   Andy Herron 9   CJ Brown
2007   Cuauhtémoc Blanco   Chad Barrett 7   Gonzalo Segares
2008   Jon Busch   Chris Rolfe 9   Bakary Soumaré
2009   Brian McBride   Brian McBride 7   Wilman Conde
2010   Logan Pause   Marco Pappa 7   CJ Brown
2011   Dominic Oduro   Dominic Oduro 12   Cory Gibbs
2012   Chris Rolfe   Chris Rolfe 8   Arne Friedrich
2013   Mike Magee   Mike Magee 15   Sean Johnson
2014   Sean Johnson   Quincy Amarikwa 8   Sean Johnson
2015   David Accam   David Accam 10   Eric Gehrig
2016   David Accam   David Accam 9   Johan Kappelhof
2017   Nemanja Nikolić   Nemanja Nikolić 24   Johan Kappelhof
2018   Bastian Schweinsteiger   Nemanja Nikolić 15   Bastian Schweinsteiger
2019   C.J. Sapong   C.J. Sapong 13   Bastian Schweinsteiger
2020   Robert Berić   Robert Berić 12   Mauricio Pineda
2021   Federico Navarro   Robert Berić
  Luka Stojanović
8*   Boris Sekulić
2022   Xherdan Shaqiri   Jhon Durán 8   Rafael Czichos

Golden Boot is the team leader in goals (regular season games only). * Indicates a season where two players tied for the Golden Boot award.

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External links

  •   Media related to Chicago Fire FC at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website  

chicago, fire, this, article, about, soccer, club, american, football, team, with, same, name, chicago, fire, show, chicago, fire, series, chicago, fire, football, club, american, professional, soccer, club, based, chicago, team, competes, major, league, socce. This article is about the MLS soccer club For the American football team with the same name see Chicago Fire WFL For the TV show see Chicago Fire TV series Chicago Fire Football Club is an American professional soccer club based in Chicago The team competes in Major League Soccer MLS as a member of the league s Eastern Conference having moved to the conference in 2002 Chicago FireFoundedOctober 8 1997 25 years ago 1997 10 08 as Chicago Fire Soccer ClubStadiumSoldier FieldChicago IllinoisCapacity61 500OwnerJoe MansuetoChairmanJoe MansuetoHead coachEzra HendricksonLeagueMajor League Soccer2022Eastern Conference 12thOverall 24thPlayoffs Did not qualifyWebsiteClub websiteHome colorsAway colorsCurrent seasonThe franchise named in memory of the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 was founded as the Chicago Fire Soccer Club on October 8 1997 the Great Fire s 126th anniversary The team began play in 1998 as one of the league s first expansion teams The Fire won the MLS Cup as well as the U S Open Cup the double in their first season in 1998 They also won U S Open Cups in 2000 2003 and 2006 in addition to the 2003 MLS Supporters Shield The Fire maintains an extensive development system consisting of the Chicago Fire Development Academy and the Chicago Fire Juniors youth organization They also operate the Chicago Fire Foundation the team s community based charitable division The Fire s home stadium is Soldier Field which it shares with the Chicago Bears of the National Football League Contents 1 History 1 1 Overview 1 2 Foundation and initial success 1997 2000 1 3 Nomadic times 2002 2004 1 4 Turmoil and a permanent home 2005 2007 1 5 Andell Inc acquisition of the Fire 2007 2009 1 6 A team in flux 2010 2012 1 7 Missing the playoffs 2013 2015 1 8 Final years in Bridgeview IL 2016 2019 1 9 Return to Soldier Field and rebrand 2020 present 2 Colors and badge 2 1 Uniform history 2 2 Sponsorship 3 Stadium 3 1 Home stadiums 3 2 Other stadiums 4 Club culture 4 1 Supporters 4 2 Mascot 4 3 Rivalries 5 Broadcasting 6 Players 6 1 Roster 7 Ring of Fire 8 Staff 8 1 Head coaches 8 2 Club presidents 8 3 General managers 8 4 Chief Operating Officer 8 5 Technical directors 8 6 Directors of player personnel 8 7 Assistant coaches 8 8 Team physicians 9 Honors 10 Records 10 1 Top goalscorers 10 2 Year by year 11 Team awards 12 References 13 External linksHistory EditOverview Edit Chicago Fire FC was founded as Chicago Fire Soccer Club on October 8 1997 1 The club is named after the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 the official founding date of the team was the 126th anniversary of that event 2 The owner and chairman of the Fire is Joe Mansueto who purchased the club in 2019 The club president is Ishwara Glassman Chrein Georg Heitz was appointed sporting director in December 2019 The Fire were originally based at Soldier Field from 1997 to 2006 From 2006 to 2019 the club played at SeatGeek Stadium a stadium originally built for the club at 71st and Harlem Avenue in Bridgeview In 2019 with the change of ownership to Joe Mansueto the Fire returned to Soldier Field for the 2020 MLS season The Fire are currently one of the most successful clubs in the U S Open Cup winning championships in 1998 2000 2003 and 2006 Many notable players have worn the Fire shirt including U S internationals Chris Armas Carlos Bocanegra Frank Klopas DaMarcus Beasley Brian McBride Tony Sanneh Cory Gibbs Ante Razov Josh Wolff Eric Wynalda and Jon Busch Some of the club s other notable American professional players include C J Brown Jesse Marsch Chris Rolfe and Zach Thornton The Fire also have a reputation for importing international talent from established veterans like Bastian Schweinsteiger Pavel Pardo Piotr Nowak Cuauhtemoc Blanco Tomasz Frankowski Lubos Kubik Hristo Stoichkov and Jorge Campos in addition to younger players such as Patrick Nyarko Marco Pappa Damani Ralph Bakary Soumare and Nery Castillo Chicago was once the home of the Chicago Sting who competed in the top level North American Soccer League NASL from 1975 to 1984 They spread their home games at Soldier Field Wrigley Field and Comiskey Park The Sting won the Soccer Bowl twice 1981 and 1984 They were the only club other than the New York Cosmos to win multiple titles in the NASL 3 One of the club s notable players was German forward Arno Steffenhagen Foundation and initial success 1997 2000 Edit The Fire in red hosting the Dallas Burn at Soldier Field in July 1998 Founded in 1997 at Navy Pier on the anniversary of the Great Fire the Fire immediately tapped into the diverse ethnic makeup of the city The team brought in Polish players Piotr Nowak Jerzy Podbrozny and Roman Kosecki the Mexican Jorge Campos and the Czech Lubos Kubik While all showed their talent while playing for Chicago that first year American players Zach Thornton Chris Armas C J Brown proved most integral to the Fire s continued success Under the club s first head coach Bob Bradley and against all expectation the team completed the double in its first competitive year beating D C United in the 1998 MLS Cup Final and defeating the Columbus Crew in Chicago to win the 1998 U S Open Cup a week later The team s momentum continued reaching the 2000 MLS Cup final losing to Kansas City and winning the 2000 U S Open Cup Internationally experienced players such as Hristo Stoitchkov joined the Fire while young American talents such as DaMarcus Beasley developed The Fire quickly became cemented as one of the league s preeminent teams Nomadic times 2002 2004 Edit With Soldier Field undergoing massive renovations the Fire moved to the western Chicago suburb of Naperville in 2002 That same year Bob Bradley abruptly departed the team to lead the MetroStars from his home state of New Jersey The Fire then selected the U S men s national team s top assistant Dave Sarachan to assume the vacant post Chicago qualified for the league final while also capturing the Supporters Shield and 2003 U S Open Cup along the way The team returned to Chicago and the renovated Soldier Field midway through the 2003 season After that season longtime captain Piotr Nowak retired to take a position in the front office He departed a year later to become manager of D C United In this period new talent emerged including Jamaican striker Damani Ralph Still stagnating performances and the building strength of the Eastern Conference made Chicago s league position ever more tenuous In 2004 the team missed the league playoffs for the first time in their history Turmoil and a permanent home 2005 2007 Edit The 2005 season began with the unexpected dismissal of popular club president Peter Wilt by then owners AEG a move decried by fans many players and club staff 4 This came as a shock given his brokering of a 100m deal to build the Fire a stadium in the collar suburb of Bridgeview He was immediately replaced by MetroStars executive John Guppy Competitively the season was most notable for the blockbuster visit of Milan from Italy s Serie A and the surprising 4 0 away defeat of D C United in the Eastern Conference Semi finals 2006 arrived and the Fire moved from Soldier Field into its new stadium in Bridgeview a southwest suburb of Chicago Toyota Park located at the corner of 71st Street and Harlem Avenue In its first season it played host to an unspectacular league campaign but victory in the 2006 U S Open Cup marked a continuation of the club s successes and promise for the future The anxiety to win another league title continued to grow however Sarachan entered 2007 his fifth season in charge under intense pressure from fans and the administration to produce a league championship Tension mounted further on April 3 2007 when the Fire signed Mexico and America star Cuauhtemoc Blanco to a Designated Player contract After a perfect three matches to open the year they won only one of their next eight and Sarachan was dismissed Following a brief search Millonarios manager Juan Carlos Osorio was named the club s third head coach Andell Inc acquisition of the Fire 2007 2009 Edit Section 8 during a June 2008 match at Toyota Park More change came soon afterward On September 6 2007 Andell Holdings a Los Angeles based private investment firm controlled by chairman Andrew Hauptman acquired AEG s interest in the Chicago Fire Soccer Club Reports estimated the purchase price to be upwards of 35 million 5 The team has not won a major trophy since Hauptman bought the team On the field behind Blanco and Wilman Conde Osorio s central defender at Millionarios the Fire went on an extended unbeaten run to close the season easily qualifying for the playoffs but were defeated at New England in the Eastern Conference Final On December 10 2007 the Fire announced Osorio s resignation He was named manager of the New York Red Bulls eight days later Hauptman filed tampering charges with the league in protest and the Fire were compensated by the Red Bulls with cash and draft picks 6 Changes came quickly in Osorio s wake On January 17 2008 former Fire star Frank Klopas was named Technical Director in charge of player personnel and longtime Fire assistant Denis Hamlett was appointed manager While the Fire struggled at home in 2008 the team found unusual success on the road gathering 22 out of a possible 45 away points Momentum grew with the long anticipated signing of Chicago native Brian McBride on a free transfer in July 2008 After disposing of the Red Bulls 5 2 in the season s final game they decisively conquered New England in the first round of the playoffs with a 3 0 victory at home This was Chicago s first playoff advancement over the Revolution in four consecutive seasons But triumph only lasted for a week as they again missed the league final with their 2 1 Eastern Conference Final loss to eventual champion Columbus The 2009 season saw few alterations to the previous year s roster The story of the season was much the same as continued poor home form offset excellent performances away from Toyota Park This led to a second place Eastern Conference finish behind Columbus Despite this Real Salt Lake managed to upset the Crew in the quarterfinals meaning Chicago would host the semi final for the first time in six years Chicago s nearly flawless home playoff history meant little in the end as they lost to Salt Lake 5 3 on penalties after 120 scoreless minutes Shortly thereafter manager Denis Hamlett was dismissed 7 A team in flux 2010 2012 Edit Chicago s Patrick Nyarko right dribbling past a Seattle defender during an April 2012 match Leading up to 2010 Chicago hired Carlos de los Cobos as head coach previously manager of El Salvador 8 Cuauhtemoc Blanco Chris Rolfe and Gonzalo Segares all departed More changes came in the summer transfer window with the trade of Justin Mapp to Philadelphia the acquisition of Mexican international striker Nery Castillo and the trade for former Swedish international midfielder Freddie Ljungberg Defender Gonzalo Segares returned to the Fire leaving Apollon Limassol after only six months away Despite these reinforcements the Fire failed to qualify for the playoffs for only the second time in club history Former U S international Brian McBride and club original C J Brown retired at season s end followed closely by the departures of Wilman Conde Ljungberg and Castillo 2011 began much in the way of 2010 with foundering performances both home and away After nine winless matches Carlos de los Cobos was let go on May 30 2011 9 Technical Director Frank Klopas was named interim head coach Behind summer reinforcements Pavel Pardo and Sebastian Grazzini as well as forward Dominic Oduro s 12 goals after being acquired in a trade from Houston and Dan Gargan s defensive addition the Fire qualified for the U S Open Cup Final lost at Seattle and narrowly missed making the playoffs after gaining 24 points in their last 12 league matches After the season s conclusion Klopas was given the permanent manager job on November 3 2011 10 Although expectations were modest for 2012 Klopas first full season as coach the year saw a change in fortune for the Fire The spring and summer months saw several new acquisitions for the club starting with the reacquiring of Chris Rolfe from Aalborg BK 11 Rolfe who scored eight goals and 12 assists in the 21 games he played in 2012 would later be named the Fire s MVP 12 Other signings included Brazilian midfielders Alex Monteiro de Lima from the Swiss side FC Wohlen Alvaro Fernandez from Seattle Sounders FC forward Sherjill MacDonald from Beerschot AC of Belgium and veteran defender Arne Friedrich from VfL Wolfsburg Although they would fall out of the U S Open tournament early that season the Fire eventually compiled a 17 11 6 record their best since 2000 and ranked as high as second in the Eastern Conference before ending the year in fourth place 13 On October 31 2012 in their first playoff appearance since 2009 the Fire lost their first round MLS Cup playoff match up at home against the Houston Dynamo 2 1 14 Missing the playoffs 2013 2015 Edit In the 2012 2013 offseason the franchise made some moves to improve on 2012 s success The team acquired Joel Lindpere and Jeff Larentowicz and also traded Dominic Oduro for Dilly Duka and the rights to Robbie Rogers 15 The beginning of the season saw the team struggling to score goals resulting in a record of 2 5 1 through April After two successive losses to the Union in May and with veteran Arne Friedrich still on injured reserve the Fire acquired their former centerback Bakary Soumare from Philadelphia 16 Also in May Robbie Rogers expressed an interest to play in Southern California at which point a deal was brokered for Rogers rights in exchange for Chicago native Mike Magee from the Los Angeles Galaxy 17 On June 23 2013 Friedrich who had not played a 2012 13 game due to recurring injuries announced his retirement 18 After starting the season 2 7 3 the additions of Soumare and Magee led to seven wins in the squad s last 10 games The Fire were busy in the transfer window as well adding veteran defensive midfielder Arevalo Rios and forward Juan Luis Anangono 19 The Chicago Fire also advanced to host the semifinal of the 2013 Lamar Hunt U S Open Cup but fell 2 0 to eventual champions D C United Alleged fan actions in the stadium that night led to a famous editorial piece What it means to be a part of the Fire family 20 being penned by the club s Director of Communications which was seen as an odd attack on the fan base and widely panned by local and national media After a 12 6 6 finish to the season the Fire narrowly missed the playoffs for the third time in the last four years losing out to the Montreal Impact on goal difference On October 30 2013 the club announced that the president of soccer operations Javier Leon and head coach Frank Klopas had stepped down 21 but the Fire front office had a replacement one day later On October 31 2013 Chicago Fire named Frank Yallop as its new head coach and director of soccer 22 On December 5 2013 Fire MVP Mike Magee became the first Fire player to win the MLS MVP Award beating out Los Angeles Galaxy s Robbie Keane and Montreal Impact s Marco Di Vaio for the honor 23 24 25 Chicago Fire F C lineup photo 2013 Meanwhile Yallop was busy recruiting a new coaching staff which included Ring of Fire member and Chicago Fire veteran C J Brown and former U S International striker Clint Mathis as the team s assistant coaches adding Columbus Crew s Brian Bliss as Technical Director Former Fire forward Brian McBride was added as an assistant coach in May 2014 for a short term assignment 26 27 28 29 The shake up extended to the roster as Yallop moved team veterans and starters and brought in youth prospects reforming the team while freeing up cap space Major exits in early 2014 included Chris Rolfe 30 Austin Berry 31 Jalil Anibaba Daniel Paladini and Paolo Tornaghi Filling that void was a handful of youth prospects including Harrison Shipp homegrown player Benji Joya via MLS weighted lottery and Grant Ward on loan from Tottenham Hotspur Despite rarely looking like a team that could advance to the MLS Cup Playoffs the team once again advanced to the semifinals of the 2014 Lamar Hunt U S Open Cup but were routed 6 0 by eventual champions Seattle Sounders FC on August 13 The result was the worst competitive defeat in club history and saw Frank Yallop issue an apology to Chicago Fire supporters on the club s official website 32 As the Cup run had the season ended in disappointment with the Fire ending the season with a 6 18 10 record with 18 draws also setting a record for most draws in an MLS season in the process The club began 2015 with renewed hope bringing three new Designated Player signings in David Accam Shaun Maloney and Kennedy Igboananike to bolster an anemic attack The club also signed products Michael Stephens and Eric Gehrig as well as Trinindad amp Tobago international Joevin Jones With so many new pieces needing to adjust 2015 marked the first time in club history the side began the season with an 0 3 0 record but they showed signs of recovery by winning their next three matches Unfortunately April was the last time the club would be anywhere near equal on wins and losses but the side did still advance to another Lamar Hunt U S Open Cup semifinal Playing in front of a sparse crowd at the Philadelphia Union s PPL Park the Fire fell 1 0 at the same hurdle for the third straight season Less than two weeks later Maloney who was the club s center piece offseason signing was transferred back to England with Hull City citing personal reasons 33 Despite no hope for a Cup final widespread fan protests 34 35 and dim likelihood of a playoff berth the club didn t part ways with Frank Yallop until September 20 2015 one day after another listless 1 0 home defeat to Orlando City SC 36 Along with Yallop s departure the club announced it had named long time MLS executive Nelson Rodriguez as the club s new general manager with his first job being to commence a search for a new head coach Technical director Brian Bliss was given the interim head coaching job with former player and current club vice president Logan Pause assisting for the remaining five matches The club has finished the 2015 season with an overall record of 8 wins 20 losses and 6 ties For the first time in the club s history Fire finished the season with zero road wins 0 12 5 Twenty losses in a season became the highest in the club s history 37 Final years in Bridgeview IL 2016 2019 Edit Bastian Schweinsteiger played for Chicago from 2017 to 2019 On November 18 2015 Rodriguez made his first moves as GM firing most of Yallop s remaining technical staff including goalkeeping coach Aron Hyde fitness coach Adrian Lamb and Director of Scouting Trevor James 38 Rodriguez also parted ways with the club s long time Director of First Team Operations Ron Stern Equipment Manager Charles Raycroft and Assistant Equipment Manager Allan Araujo On November 24 2015 the club announced that Veljko Paunovic former coach of the Serbian U 20 side that won the 2015 FIFA U 20 World Cup had been named the new head coach of the Chicago Fire 39 On January 5 2016 technical director Brian Bliss also departed the Fire to join Sporting Kansas City as Director of Player Personnel completing the total overhaul of the technical staff 40 On March 21 2017 Manchester United allowed Bastian Schweinsteiger to join Chicago Fire subject to a medical and a visa being secured 41 42 43 44 45 The move from Manchester United was completed on March 29 2017 46 On July 11 2018 the club announced that Hauptman had sold a 49 percent stake of his ownership to Joe Mansueto the founder of Morningstar Inc 47 On September 13 2019 Hauptman sold his majority share to Mansueto who became the sole owner 48 Return to Soldier Field and rebrand 2020 present Edit As the 2019 MLS campaign concluded the Chicago Fire organization began the ambitious process of reinventing the franchise during the course of a three month offseason The changes included securing a downtown Chicago venue adding new front office positions shifting organizational roles making major roster changes and rolling out a new brand identity 49 Two days after the end of the season October 8 the Fire officially announced they would return to Soldier Field to play the 2020 MLS season 50 that same day Bastian Schweinsteiger announced his retirement 51 Two days later the Fire announced the signing of midfielder Alvaro Medran 52 eight days later Designated Player and former Golden Boot winner Nemanja Nikolic announced he would be leaving the team 53 The first full month of the off season saw the Fire continue their overhaul On November 4 the team traded captain Dax McCarty to expansion side Nashville SC 54 Ten days later Homegrown Player Grant Lillard was dealt to MLS s other expansion team Inter Miami That same day November 14 Chicago Fire President and general manager Nelson Rodriguez fired head coach Veljko Paunovic and his staff 55 News that the Chicago Fire would not be renewing the contract of their last remaining DP Nicolas Gaitan as well as winger Aleksandar Katai was overshadowed by an even larger organizational unveiling one week later 56 On November 21 the long anticipated rebrand of the Chicago Fire franchise was announced 57 Developed with the help of marketing agency Doubleday amp Cartwright the team revealed changes to its franchise colors red and white to red blue and gold its name from Chicago Fire Soccer Club to Chicago Fire FC and most contentiously its logo 58 While the Fire organization made their second player acquisition of the offseason in early December homegrown player Nicholas Slonina 59 a relatively quiet few weeks had some followers of the team concerned about their organizational progress 60 However the Fire were busy again in late December with Nelson Rodriguez relinquishing his on field decision making responsibilities to new Sporting Director Georg Hietz 61 who swiftly named former US Soccer Youth National Coach Raphael Wicky as head coach and Sebastian Pelzer as Technical Director 62 63 Heitz has previously worked with Wicky at Swiss club FC Basel and worked closely with Pelzer at his management consultancy business Heusler Werthmuller Heitz HWH 64 The Fire opened the 2020 campaign with the signings of Argentinian duo Ignacio Aliseda from Defensa and Gaston Gimenez from Velez Sarsfield 65 looking to bolster their squad after losing DP Nicolas Gaitan 66 The Fire also announced the signing of Robert Beric 67 from French outfit Saint Etienne who netted in his debut defeat against the Seattle Sounders FC 2 1 68 Colors and badge Edit The Chicago Fire SC crest 1997 2019 The club s official primary colors are red flag blue deep blue and white 69 70 Secondary colors such as navy blue sky blue gold and black have also been used throughout the history of the Fire The original logo of the Chicago Fire used from 1997 to 2019 was derived from the Cross of Saint Florian a common symbol for fire departments in the United States 71 A stylized C sat in the center representing the city similar to the logos of the Bears and Cubs The six points in a ring around the center alluded to the stars in the Flag of Chicago one of which commemorates the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 72 This style was chosen by the original general manager Peter Wilt to establish a timeless image evocative of both classic American sports as in the logos of the NHL Original Six and the traditions of European soccer 72 Nike the Fire s original equipment supplier intended for the team to be named the Chicago Rhythm The Rhythm identity featured a turquoise black and green color scheme and a logo adorned with a cobra Team officials ignored Nike s work and privately developed the Fire identity with the help of Adrenalin Inc a sports branding agency from Denver 73 74 The names Chicago Blues and Chicago Wind were also considered 73 Bakary Soumare wearing the all red shirt with a white horizontal chest stripe This was the club s primary kit until 2012 The original Fire jerseys were chosen because of their resemblance to a Chicago fireman s coat featuring broad horizontal stripes across the torso and sleeves In the first year the home jersey was red and white with a silver FIRE on the stripe while the away shirts were white and black in the same style The jersey maintained the same format of an all red shirt with a white horizontal chest stripe through changes in equipment sponsor from Nike to Puma and currently Adidas until 2012 when the white stripe was exchanged for a blue stripe Conversely the Fire s secondary shirts have changed much over the years from white with black to white with navy to white with red to all white style and the all blue currently used Third shirts have often been yellow originally to honor the Chicago Sting later for the expired partnership with Morelia In 2005 and again from 2014 through 2016 the club wore third shirts with designs based on the Flag of Chicago 75 The club and their fans make frequent use of the symbols of Chicago as a show of civic pride Most prominent are the six pointed Chicago stars but the light blue color associated with the city the municipal device and the city skyline appear regularly on materials produced by the club and its fans The Flag of Chicago is also favored by fans and often seen at the stadium On November 21 2019 the club unveiled its first major rebranding ahead of their move back to Soldier Field in Chicago The club s name was changed to Chicago Fire Football Club Chicago Fire FC and the original logo was replaced with an ovular crest marked with mirrored sets of three triangles called the Fire Crown to reference the revitalization of Chicago following the Great Fire 76 71 The crest used dark blue red and gold as its main colors 71 Secondary design colors are to be ivory and flag blue a light blue color derived from the Chicago flag 77 Before its unveiling the rebranding was leaked onto social media and garnered an overwhelmingly negative response from fans 78 Comparisons were made between the Fire Crown and the existing logo of the Vancouver Whitecaps FC which uses a similar set of mirrored triangles and some fans worried that the Fire Crown was reminiscent of the logo of the Latin Kings street gang The team responded to the decidedly negative reaction by saying new brands take time and repetition to build meaning They will be judged in years not days insisting that there are no plans to revive the old logo 79 The club ultimately unveiled a new crest in the middle of the 2021 season with a full embrace of it beginning in 2022 This new logo was designed by Matthew Wolff 80 Uniform history Edit 1998 2008 2009 2012 2013 2014 2015 2020 2021 2022 2022 Sponsorship Edit Seasons Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor1998 2002 Nike 2003 2005 Puma2006 2007 Adidas2008 2010 Best Buy2011 2012 2015 Quaker2016 2018 81 Valspar2019 present MotorolaStadium Edit Soldier Field SeatGeek Stadium located in Bridgeview Illinois was the club s home stadium from 2006 until 2019 Chicago played its home games at SeatGeek Stadium a soccer specific stadium located at 71st Street and Harlem Avenue in the Chicago suburb of Bridgeview Illinois about 12 miles southwest from downtown Chicago from 2006 until the end of the 2019 season The Village of Bridgeview owns and operates SeatGeek Stadium which opened as Toyota Park on June 11 2006 and originally cost approximately 100 million It was renamed from Toyota Park to SeatGeek Stadium after the end of the 2018 season with an estimated naming rights fee between 2 5 million to 4 million per year 82 In April 2019 multiple sources reported the club in negotiations with Bridgeview to buy out the remainder of its lease at SeatGeek Stadium and return to Soldier Field 83 84 For its first years in the league the Fire played at Soldier Field the 61 500 capacity home of the Chicago Bears of the NFL and one of the main venues of the 1994 FIFA World Cup While that stadium was undergoing a 632 million renovation the Fire played at Cardinal Stadium in Naperville Illinois on the outskirts of the Chicago metropolitan area They returned to Soldier Field toward the end of 2003 remaining there through the end of 2005 In July 2019 Chicago Fire reached a deal to leave SeatGeek Stadium for a payment of 65 5 million and move back to Soldier Field starting in 2020 85 The return to Soldier Field was finalized with an agreement with the Chicago Park District in September 2019 86 Home stadiums Edit Soldier Field Chicago 1998 2001 2003 2005 2020 present Cardinal Stadium Naperville Illinois 2002 2003 one U S Open Cup game in 2004 SeatGeek Stadium Bridgeview Illinois 2006 2019 Other stadiums Edit Forest View Park Arlington Heights Illinois 2000 1 game in U S Open Cup Milwaukee Sports Complex Franklin Wisconsin 2001 1 game in U S Open Cup McCully Field Wheaton Illinois 2001 1 game in U S Open Cup Shea Stadium Peoria Illinois 2008 2011 2 games in U S Open Cup QualifyingClub culture EditSupporters Edit There is a noteworthy fan culture for the Fire existing from the date the club was founded and building on an enthusiasm throughout Chicago sports At matches supporters and ultras groups occupy a standing area directly behind the north goal in the Harlem End of Toyota Park 87 This area is referred to as Section 8 originating from the numbering of the corresponding section at Soldier Field and the American military designation of mentally unfit soldiers 88 Section 8 Chicago the Independent Supporters Association ISA for the Fire oversees the activities of these numerous groups 89 While incorporating a worldwide variety of styles with a Chicago bent groups as part of Section 8 generally fall under the ultras designation Additionally an associated spinoff group called Sector Latino which originally congregated in the corner kick Section 101 90 non primary source needed at the stadium s southwest end until season long discussions between the ISA and the Chicago Fire Front Office eventually saw the group moved to Section 137 directly behind the south goal There are also several other affiliated ultras and supporters groups including The Arsonists Banter Buddies Blitzer Mob Husaria Fire Ultras 98 Partisans Red Scare Second City North The Western Front Ultras Red Side Mike Ditka Street Crew MDSC and Whiskey Brothers Aught Five 91 The Section 8 Chicago ISA is a registered 501 c 7 non profit organization run by volunteers through an elected board of directors 92 Section 8 the supporters area at SeatGeek Stadium Match atmosphere is known for organized displays of stadium wide support particularly for matches of prime competitive importance Call and response cheering amongst the crowd is commonplace 93 Fans at SeatGeek Stadium for Fire matches periodically choreograph tifo presentations both to show their pride and inspire the players on the field 94 SeatGeek Stadium remains one of the few American environments to conduct such fan driven presentations on a large scale Mascot Edit Their official mascot is Sparky an anthropomorphic Dalmatian dog Sparky is usually shown wearing the club s jersey but also arrives wearing firefighter attire 95 Rivalries Edit While the Fire have heated rivalries with a number of different MLS teams Fire supporters of different ages will likely give different responses as to who the club s main rival is The earliest Fire supporters would list Brimstone Cup rival FC Dallas as the Fire s nemesis or Los Angeles Galaxy following heated playoff and cup matches with Dallas and L A in the league s early years After the Fire moved to the Eastern Conference meetings with Dallas and LA became less frequent Rivalries with D C United and New England Revolution were stoked following several thrilling playoff meetings The Fire and Revolution are MLS most frequent playoff matchup meeting in the MLS Cup Playoffs 8 different times in 10 seasons from 2000 to 2009 splitting those encounters 4 4 with the Fire winning in 2000 2003 2008 and 2009 New England ended the Fire s playoff runs in 2002 2005 2006 and 2007 Newer rivals include Columbus Crew who up until the introduction of FC Cincinnati were the closest MLS team geographically to the Fire and Atlanta United following quarrels between the two sets of fans Broadcasting EditBeginning with the 2020 season WGN Sports was added as a regional television rightsholder under a multi year deal with all regional matches airing on WGN TV The first season under the contract was concurrent with the final year of the existing ESPN regional rights WGN had recently lost its legacy professional sports rights to NBC Sports Chicago and Marquee Sports Network 96 97 98 In April 2021 the club announced that their television broadcast team would consist of play by play commentator Tyler Terens color analyst Tony Meola Play by play commentator Arlo White whose Fire broadcast debut was postponed in 2020 because of the pandemic was also expected to call several games 99 With every MLS game available on Apple TV via their rights deal in 2023 Chicago games will be broadcast almost exclusively on this service with exceptions for certain national linear television broadcast partners Spanish language radio station WRTO has aired Chicago Fire matches since 2017 replacing WEBG HD2 100 Players EditFor details on former players see All time Chicago Fire FC roster Roster Edit As of March 15 2023 101 No Pos Player Nation2 DF Arnaud Souquet France3 DF Alonso Aceves on loan from Pachuca Mexico4 DF Carlos Teran Colombia5 DF Rafael Czichos Germany6 DF Miguel Navarro Venezuela7 MF Maren Haile Selassie on loan from Lugano Switzerland8 FW Chris Mueller United States10 MF Xherdan Shaqiri DP Switzerland11 FW Kacper Przybylko Poland16 DF Wyatt Omsberg United States17 MF Brian Gutierrez HG United States18 GK Spencer Richey United States19 FW Georgios Koutsias Greece20 MF Jairo Torres DP Mexico21 FW Fabian Herbers Germany22 MF Mauricio Pineda HG United States23 FW Kei Kamara Sierra Leone24 DF Jonathan Dean United States25 GK Jeff Gal United States27 DF Kendall Burks United States30 MF Gaston Gimenez Paraguay31 MF Federico Navarro Argentina32 FW Missael Rodriguez HG United States33 FW Victor Bezerra HG United States34 GK Chris Brady HG United States35 MF Sergio Oregel HG United States36 DF Justin Reynolds HG United States37 MF Javier Casas HG United States38 MF Alex Monis HG United States39 MF Allan Rodriguez HG United StatesRing of Fire EditThe Ring of Fire was established in 2003 by Chicago Fire Soccer Club and the Chicago Fire Alumni Association as permanent tribute to honor those who have made the club proud and successful over its history 102 Aside from the initial member Piotr Nowak only Ring of Fire members can select new inductees and no more than one can be selected any year Names and numbers if applicable are prominently displayed inside SeatGeek Stadium There were no inductees in 2008 2010 or 2011 In 2008 the members voted to honor two recently deceased fans supporter leaders Dan Parry and Brandon Kitchens but were overruled by the club chairman Andrew Hauptman 103 Parry and Kitchens were later made members of the Wall of Honor a special recognition for Fire fans In addition to Parry and Kitchens the late Fire fans Euan McLean and Al Hack have been inducted into the Wall of Honor as of 2011 104 C J Brown was expected to be honored in 2011 but a new rule was established that inductees must have been away from the club for at least a calendar year 105 Brown at the time an assistant head coach at Real Salt Lake was officially inducted at the halftime ceremony during the home game vs Real Salt Lake in Toyota Park on May 9 2012 106 107 On October 3 2015 Ante Razov the club s all time leading scorer became the eighth individual to be inducted into the club s Ring of Fire Hall of Fame 108 The ceremony took place on that day during the halftime of the regular season home match against New England Revolution 109 10 Piotr Nowak inducted 2003 41 Frank Klopas inducted 2004 5 Lubos Kubik inducted 2005 Former general manager and club president Peter Wilt inducted 2006 Former head coach Bob Bradley inducted 2007 14 Chris Armas inducted 2009 2 C J Brown inducted 2012 9 Ante Razov inducted 2015 Staff EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Head coaches Edit Name Nationality TenureBob Bradley United States October 30 1997 October 5 2002Dave Sarachan United States November 4 2002 June 20 2007Juan Carlos Osorio Colombia July 1 2007 December 10 2007Denis Hamlett Costa Rica January 11 2008 November 24 2009Carlos de los Cobos Mexico January 1 2010 May 30 2011Frank Klopas United States May 30 2011 October 30 2013Frank Yallop Canada October 31 2013 September 20 2015Brian Bliss interim United States September 20 2015 November 24 2015Veljko Paunovic Serbia November 24 2015 November 13 2019Raphael Wicky Switzerland December 27 2019 September 30 2021Frank Klopas interim United States September 30 2021 November 7 2021Ezra Hendrickson Saint Vincent and the Grenadines November 24 2021 presentClub presidents Edit Name TenureRobert Sanderman 1997 2000Peter Wilt 2001 2005John Guppy 2005 2008Javier Leon interim 2008Dave Greeley 2008 2010Javier Leon interim 2010Julian Posada 2010 2012Nelson Rodriguez 2018 2021Ishwara Glassman Chrein 2021 2022 110 General managers Edit Name TenurePeter Wilt 1997 2005Nelson Rodriguez 2015 2019Georg Heitz 2019 Chief Operating Officer Edit Name TenureJohn Urban 2018 present 111 Technical directors Edit Frank Klopas 2008 2011 112 Brian Bliss December 6 2013 January 5 2016 113 Sebastian Pelzer December 28 2019 114 Directors of player personnel Edit Mike Jeffries 2010 2012 115 Assistant coaches Edit Denis Hamlett 1998 2007 Mike Jeffries 1998 2000 2008 2009 Frank Klopas 2000 Daryl Shore 2000 2009 Tom Soehn 2001 2003 Craig Reynolds 2004 2007 Chris Armas 2008 2009 Alvaro Briones 2010 Larry Sunderland 2010 2011 Mike Matkovich 2009 2010 2012 2013 Leo Percovich 2011 2013 Aron Hyde 2010 2015 C J Brown 2013 2014 116 Clint Mathis 2014 2015 117 Marc Bircham 2015 118 Marko Mitrovic 2015 2019 Eric Gehrig 2017 2019 119 Frank Klopas 2020 present 120 David Zdrillic 2020 2021 Adin Brown 2020 2022 Junior Gonzalez 2022 present C J Brown 2022 present Zach Thornton 2022 present Team physicians Edit Dr Preston Wolin 1998 2008 Dr Gilberto Munoz 1999 2015 Dr Jeffrey Mjaanes M D 2015 Dr Joshua Blomgren D O 2015 Honors EditContinentalCompetitions Titles SeasonsNational 121 Competitions Titles SeasonsMLS Cup 1 1998Supporters Shield 1 2003U S Open Cup 4 1998 2000 2003 2006Individual club awards MLS Team Fair Play Award 2009Records EditTop goalscorers Edit As of August 18 2019 122 Name Career MLS Playoffs Open Cup CCL Total1 Ante Razov 1998 20002001 2004 76 10 6 2 942 Nemanja Nikolic 2017 2019 50 0 5 0 553 Chris Rolfe 2005 20092012 2014 48 4 3 0 554 Josh Wolff 1998 2002 32 0 6 1 395 David Accam 2015 2017 33 0 5 0 386 Dema Kovalenko 1999 2002 22 5 3 5 357 Piotr Nowak 1998 2002 26 3 0 0 298 Damani Ralph 2003 2004 22 1 4 1 289 Mike Magee 2013 2015 22 0 5 0 2710 Hristo Stoichkov 2000 2002 17 4 3 0 24Year by year Edit Main article List of Chicago Fire FC seasons This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Fire For the full season by season history see List of Chicago Fire FC seasons Season League Position Playoffs USOC Continental Other Average attendance Top goalscorer s Div League Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts PPG Conf Overall Name s Goals2017 1 MLS 34 16 11 7 62 48 14 55 1 67 3rd 3rd R1 R5 DNQ 17 383 Nemanja Nikolic 24 2018 MLS 34 8 18 8 43 74 31 32 0 94 10th 20th DNQ SF DNQ 14 806 Nemanja Nikolic 192019 MLS 34 10 12 12 55 47 8 42 1 24 8th 17th R4 Leagues Cup QF 12 324 Nemanja Nikolic 132020 MLS 23 5 10 8 33 39 6 23 1 00 11th 22nd NH MLS is Back Tournament GS 0 Robert Beric 122021 MLS 34 9 18 7 36 54 18 34 1 00 12th 22nd NH DNQ 10 703 Robert Beric 8 1 Avg attendance include statistics from league matches only 2 Top goalscorer s includes all goals scored in League MLS Cup Playoffs U S Open Cup MLS is Back Tournament CONCACAF Champions League FIFA Club World Cup and other competitive continental matches Team awards Edit Piotr Nowak As of November 28 2022 123 Year Team MVP Golden Boot Defender of the YearWinner Goals1998 Piotr Nowak Ante Razov 10 Lubos Kubik1999 Lubos Kubik Ante Razov 14 Lubos Kubik2000 Piotr Nowak Ante Razov 18 Carlos Bocanegra2001 Piotr Nowak Eric Wynalda 10 Zach Thornton2002 Zach Thornton Ante Razov 14 Zach Thornton2003 Chris Armas Ante Razov 14 Carlos Bocanegra2004 Henry Ring Damani Ralph 11 Jim Curtin2005 Ivan Guerrero Chris Rolfe 8 Ivan Guerrero2006 Andy Herron Andy Herron 9 CJ Brown2007 Cuauhtemoc Blanco Chad Barrett 7 Gonzalo Segares2008 Jon Busch Chris Rolfe 9 Bakary Soumare2009 Brian McBride Brian McBride 7 Wilman Conde2010 Logan Pause Marco Pappa 7 CJ Brown2011 Dominic Oduro Dominic Oduro 12 Cory Gibbs2012 Chris Rolfe Chris Rolfe 8 Arne Friedrich2013 Mike Magee Mike Magee 15 Sean Johnson2014 Sean Johnson Quincy Amarikwa 8 Sean Johnson2015 David Accam David Accam 10 Eric Gehrig2016 David Accam David Accam 9 Johan Kappelhof2017 Nemanja Nikolic Nemanja Nikolic 24 Johan Kappelhof2018 Bastian Schweinsteiger Nemanja Nikolic 15 Bastian Schweinsteiger2019 C J Sapong C J Sapong 13 Bastian Schweinsteiger2020 Robert Beric Robert Beric 12 Mauricio Pineda2021 Federico Navarro Robert Beric Luka Stojanovic 8 Boris Sekulic2022 Xherdan Shaqiri Jhon Duran 8 Rafael CzichosGolden Boot is the team leader in goals regular season games only Indicates a season where two players tied for the Golden Boot award References Edit Chicago Fire Club History chicago fire com Archived from the original on March 23 2017 Retrieved September 30 2012 History Chicago Fire FC Archived from the original on November 28 2019 Retrieved December 5 2019 The Chicago Sting looms lager er larger by the week as 06 23 80 SI Vault sportsillustrated cnn com Archived from the original on May 11 2011 Retrieved January 12 2022 Fire Fire Peter Wilt Fans Protest chicagoist com Archived from the original on October 17 2007 Retrieved December 31 2007 Hauptman to Purchase Chicago Fire Thesportsbizblog blogspot com July 12 2007 Archived from the original on December 8 2015 Retrieved December 3 2011 The owner that won t let go soccerbyives net Archived from the original on September 8 2015 Retrieved April 13 2008 Fire sack Hamlett FIFA Archived from the original on November 11 2012 Monday Kickaround The Washington Post Archived from the original on September 18 2012 Retrieved January 4 2010 Fire part ways with Carlos de los Cobos Chicago Fire Archived from the original on November 4 2013 Retrieved September 12 2021 Fire Names Frank Klopas Head Coach Chicago Fire Archived from the original on November 2 2013 Retrieved September 12 2021 Fire reacquire forward Chris Rolfe Chicago Fire Archived from the original on April 13 2014 Retrieved September 12 2021 Fire Announce 2012 Team Award Winners Chicago Fire Archived from the original on January 17 2013 Retrieved September 12 2021 Standings Chicago Fire FC chicagofirefc Archived from the original on September 12 2021 Retrieved September 12 2021 Houston Defeat Fire 2 1 Chicago Fire Archived from the original on May 18 2013 Retrieved September 12 2021 Bell Jack Das Andrew February 28 2013 2013 M L S Preview Eastern Conference The New York Times Archived from the original on March 3 2013 Retrieved April 3 2013 Union trade Bakary Soumare to Chicago Fire May 23 2013 Archived from the original on November 2 2013 Retrieved May 23 2013 McCarthy Jack May 25 2013 Magee trade for Rogers confirmed expected to join Fire Monday Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on June 21 2013 Retrieved June 28 2013 Chicago Fire Defender Arne Friedrich Announces Retirement chicago fire com June 23 2013 Archived from the original on June 27 2013 Retrieved June 23 2013 Chicago Fire coach Frank Klopas raves about new DP Arevalo Rios This guy s a world class player MLSsoccer com Archived from the original on July 2 2014 Retrieved June 30 2015 EDITORIAL What it means to be a part of the Fire family Chicago Fire com Archived from the original on July 4 2014 Retrieved November 30 2014 Chicago Fire Soccer Club President of Soccer Operations Javier Leon and Head Coach Frank Klopas To Step Down chicago fire com October 30 2013 Archived from the original on June 6 2014 Retrieved October 30 2013 Chicago Fire Names Frank Yallop as New Head Coach and Director of Soccer chicago fire com October 31 2013 Archived from the original on August 30 2014 Retrieved October 31 2013 Marco Di Vaio Robbie Keane amp Mike Magee vie for Volkswagen MVP as MLS reveals award finalists mlssoccer com November 20 2013 Archived from the original on July 2 2014 Retrieved December 5 2013 Chicago Fire forward Mike Magee voted 2013 Volkswagen MLS Most Valuable Player mlssoccer com December 5 2013 Archived from the original on December 8 2013 Retrieved December 5 2013 RELEASE Chicago Fire Forward Mike Magee Wins 2013 Volkswagen MLS Most Valuable Player Award chicago fire com December 5 2013 Archived from the original on August 30 2014 Retrieved December 5 2013 Chicago Fire name longtime Columbus Crew fixture Brian Bliss as new technical director MLSsoccer com December 6 2013 Archived from the original on December 5 2014 Retrieved February 14 2014 Chicago Fire Soccer Club Adds Clint Mathis to Coaching Staff Chicago Fire com January 31 2014 Archived from the original on August 30 2014 Retrieved January 31 2014 RELEASE Chicago Fire Soccer Club Names C J Brown Assistant Coach chicago fire com December 11 2013 Archived from the original on June 9 2014 Retrieved December 11 2013 Brian McBride rejoins Fire as an assistant Chicago Tribune May 28 2014 Archived from the original on May 24 2014 Retrieved May 28 2014 Chicago Fire trade Chris Rolfe to D C United for allocation money MLSsoccer com April 2 2014 Archived from the original on June 9 2014 Retrieved May 28 2014 Chicago Fire deal ironman defender 2012 Rookie of the Year Austin Berry to Philadelphia Union February 24 2014 Archived from the original on November 27 2014 Retrieved May 28 2014 Fire head coach Frank Yallop apologizes to supporters for Open Cup semifinal defeat Chicago Fire com August 14 2015 Archived from the original on November 23 2015 Retrieved November 23 2015 Report Chicago Fire set to transfer midfielder Shaun Maloney to Hull City MLSsoccer com August 20 2015 Archived from the original on November 24 2015 Retrieved November 23 2015 HauptmanOut Fire fans protest against ownership hottimeinoldtown com July 7 2015 Archived from the original on March 18 2016 Retrieved March 15 2016 Chicago Fire soccer fans in the mud pit of hell Chicago Tribune September 30 2015 Archived from the original on March 14 2016 Retrieved March 14 2016 Chicago Fire Soccer Club Names Former MLS Executive Nelson Rodriguez General Manager Chicago Fire Archived from the original on October 17 2015 Retrieved October 5 2015 Bliss Fire Should Hold Heads High Despite Season Ending Loss to Red Bulls chicago fire com October 25 2015 Archived from the original on October 29 2015 Retrieved February 29 2016 Chicago Fire Soccer Club Announce Soccer Staff Changes Chicago Fire com November 18 2015 Archived from the original on November 23 2015 Retrieved November 23 2015 Chicago Fire Soccer Club Hires Veljko Paunovic as Head Coach Chicago Fire Communications November 24 2015 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved February 4 2016 Sporting KC Names Brian Bliss Director of Player Personnel Sporting KC Communications January 5 2016 Archived from the original on February 9 2016 Retrieved February 4 2016 Stone Simon March 21 2017 Bastian Schweinsteiger Manchester United allow midfielder to join Chicago Fire BBC Sport Archived from the original on March 21 2017 Retrieved March 21 2017 Bastian Schweinsteiger says he is sad to leave Manchester United for Chicago Fire Sky Sports March 21 2017 Archived from the original on March 21 2017 Retrieved March 21 2017 Marshall Adam March 21 2017 SCHWEINSTEIGER TO JOIN CHICAGO FIRE Manchester United F C Archived from the original on March 21 2017 Retrieved March 21 2017 Chicago Fire Soccer Club Acquires World Champion Bastian Schweinsteiger as Designated Player chicago fire com March 21 2017 Archived from the original on March 22 2017 Retrieved March 21 2017 Stejskal Sam March 22 2017 How the Chicago Fire embraced past futility to land Bastian Schweinsteiger mlssoccer com Archived from the original on March 24 2017 Retrieved March 22 2017 Marshall Adam March 29 2017 SCHWEINSTEIGER SEALS CHICAGO FIRE MOVE Archived from the original on December 6 2017 Retrieved March 29 2017 Bannon Tim July 11 2018 Chicago billionaire Joe Mansueto buys 49 percent stake in Fire Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on July 11 2018 Retrieved July 11 2018 Bannon Tim September 13 2019 Billionaire Joe Mansueto takes full ownership of the Chicago Fire Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on September 14 2019 Retrieved September 13 2019 Chicago Fire making some striking changes USA Today December 17 2019 Archived from the original on December 27 2019 Retrieved December 27 2019 Mikula Jeremy October 8 2019 Chicago Fire are returning to Soldier Field beginning with the 2020 MLS season This can change the whole tenor of the club Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on February 20 2020 Retrieved December 27 2019 Sandalow Brian October 8 2019 Fire s Bastian Schweinsteiger announces retirement Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on December 27 2019 Retrieved December 27 2019 Santaromita Dan October 10 2019 Chicago Fire sign Spanish midfielder Alvaro Medran ProSoccerUSA com Archived from the original on December 27 2019 Retrieved December 27 2019 Santaromita Dan October 18 2019 Nemanja Nikolic announces he is leaving Chicago Fire Archived from the original on December 27 2019 Retrieved December 27 2019 Tenorio Paul November 4 2019 Chicago Fire Reportedly Trade Captain Dax McCarty The Athletic Archived from the original on November 29 2019 Retrieved December 27 2019 Santaromita Dan November 14 2019 Veljko Paunovic s exit raises questions as Chicago Fire faces big changes ProSoccerUSA com archived from the original on January 6 2020 retrieved December 27 2019 Chicago Fire FC decline contract options on Nicolas Gaitan Aleksandar Katai MLS Soccer November 21 2019 Archived from the original on December 27 2019 Retrieved December 27 2019 West Jenna November 21 2019 Chicago Fire Unveils New Badge and Slight Name Change Sports Illustrated Archived from the original on April 2 2020 Retrieved December 27 2019 Bell Demetrius November 21 2019 Chicago Fire FC Get Caught In Fan Firestorm After Unveiling Their New Logo Forbes archived from the original on December 22 2019 retrieved December 27 2019 Bogert Tom December 10 2019 Chicago Fire sign defender Nicholas Slonina to a Homegrown deal MLS Soccer Archived from the original on December 11 2019 Retrieved December 27 2019 Sandalow Brian December 14 2019 Fire behind schedule with no coach and small roster Chicago Sun Times archived from the original on December 27 2019 retrieved December 27 2019 Bell Arch December 20 2019 Chicago Fire hire former FC Basel sporting director Georg Heitz ESPN Archived from the original on December 27 2019 Retrieved December 27 2019 Fire hire former US youth coach Raphael Wicky as MLS coach Associated Press December 27 2019 Archived from the original on December 27 2019 Retrieved December 27 2019 Mikula Jeremy December 28 2019 Fire hire Sebastian Pelzer as technical director to oversee scouting and other soccer operations Chicago Tribune archived from the original on December 28 2019 retrieved December 28 2019 Chicago Fire FC Names Sebastian Pelzer Technical Director ChicagoFireFC com December 28 2019 Archived from the original on December 28 2019 Retrieved December 28 2019 Chicago Fire FC sign Argentine midfielder Gaston Gimenez from Velez Sarsfield MLSSoccer com mlssoccer Archived from the original on September 12 2021 Retrieved September 12 2021 Lille to land Nicolas Gaitan in surprise deadline day move Get French Football News www getfootballnewsfrance com Archived from the original on March 3 2020 Retrieved March 3 2020 Official Robert Beric is Chicago Fire FC s new No 9 after move from Saint Etienne MLSSoccer com mlssoccer Archived from the original on September 12 2021 Retrieved September 12 2021 Seattle Sounders FC 2 Chicago Fire FC 1 2020 MLS Match Recap MLSSoccer com mlssoccer Archived from the original on September 12 2021 Retrieved September 12 2021 Chicago Fire FC unveils new crest inspired by supporters MLSSoccer com Press release MLS Digital June 18 2021 Archived from the original on January 3 2022 Retrieved April 4 2022 A Crest For All Chicago ChicagoFireFC com MLS Digital June 18 2021 Archived from the original on November 9 2021 Retrieved April 4 2022 a b c Mikula Jeremy November 21 2019 Chicago Fire unveil a new crest dubbed the Fire Crown for flames inverted to become a crown and adopt Football Club as part of their name Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on November 22 2019 Retrieved November 21 2019 a b PeterWilt1 July 24 2019 No one asked but here are my thoughts on SAVETHEFIRE Tweet via Twitter a b DeSimone Bonnie October 9 1997 Name game ends It s Fire Chicago Tribune p 3 Archived from the original on December 8 2016 Retrieved November 21 2019 Chicago Fire Adrenalin Inc Archived from the original on September 8 2015 Retrieved June 30 2015 Jersey History chicagofirefc com Chicago Fire FC Archived from the original on May 17 2020 Retrieved November 22 2019 Chicago Fire Reveals New Primary Badge and Brand 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Parker Graham March 18 2015 We re anarcho syndicalists an interview with Chicago Fire s Section 8 The Guardian Archived from the original on December 11 2016 Retrieved December 11 2016 Mission Statement Section 8 Chicago Section 8 Chicago Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 11 2016 Sector Latino Archived from the original on March 31 2014 Retrieved December 18 2016 Supporters Groups Archived from the original on August 28 2018 Retrieved March 5 2018 About Section 8 Chicago Section 8 Chicago Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 11 2016 Songs and Chants Chicago Fire Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 18 2016 Crandall Jeff August 8 2010 The Tifo Display Chicago Fire Archived from the original on February 22 2019 Retrieved December 18 2016 Sparky Archived from the original on February 19 2012 Retrieved January 16 2012 WGN TV to air 24 Chicago Fire Football Club games in landmark multi year broadcast agreement WGN TV February 19 2020 Archived from the original on February 20 2020 Retrieved March 1 2020 Mikula Jeremy February 19 2020 Chicago Fire reach a multiyear deal with WGN to televise games Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on March 1 2020 Retrieved March 1 2020 Feder Robert February 19 2020 Back to play by play WGN to air Chicago Fire soccer broadcasts RobertFeder com Archived from the original on February 22 2020 Retrieved March 1 2020 Arlo White Tony Meola amp Tyler Terens Headline Chicago Fire FC s 2021 Broadcast Team April 15 2021 Archived from the original on September 7 2021 Retrieved September 7 2021 Chicago Fire Spanish Language Broadcasts Move To WRTO Univision Deportes Radio Archived February 20 2019 at the Wayback Machine All Access April 20 2017 First Team chicagofirefc com Chicago Fire FC Archived from the original on July 27 2021 Retrieved July 24 2021 Ring of Fire Chicago Fire Archived from the original on October 17 2015 Retrieved October 5 2015 1 Archived June 7 2008 at the Wayback Machine Wall of Honor Chicago Fire SC Archived from the original on September 19 2012 Retrieved September 30 2012 Rivera Guillermo June 6 2011 CJ Brown Will Have To Wait Chicago Fire Confidential Chicagonow com Archived from the original on October 4 2012 Retrieved December 3 2011 Brown returns to Chicago for Ring of Fire induction chicago fire com May 9 2012 Archived from the original on May 18 2013 Retrieved May 10 2012 CJ Brown Fire Legend Ring of Fire Inductee May 10 2012 Archived from the original on June 18 2012 Retrieved May 10 2012 Ring of Fire chicago fire com Archived from the original on October 17 2015 Retrieved October 5 2015 Chicago Fire Host New England Revolution on Special Evening at Toyota Park chicago fire com Archived from the original on October 5 2015 Retrieved October 5 2015 Chicago Fire FC Names Ishwara Glassman Chrein President Chicago Fire FC chicagofirefc Archived from the original on September 12 2021 Retrieved September 12 2021 Chicago Fire Soccer Club Announces Executive Leadership Moves Chicago Fire FC chicagofirefc Archived from the original on September 12 2021 Retrieved September 12 2021 Fire Names Frank Klopas Head Coach Chicago Fire November 3 2011 Archived from the original on August 7 2016 Retrieved December 11 2016 RELEASE Chicago Fire appoints Brian Bliss Technical Director chicago fire com December 6 2013 Archived from the original on May 8 2014 Retrieved January 27 2014 Fire continue building soccer staff add Sebastian Pelzer as technical director Chicago Sun Times December 28 2011 Archived from the original on December 28 2019 Retrieved December 28 2019 Technical Staff Chicago Fire Archived from the original on June 25 2014 Retrieved May 25 2013 New York City FC Adds CJ Brown to Coaching Staff nycfc com December 1 2014 Archived from the original on July 1 2016 Retrieved December 1 2014 Chicago Fire Soccer Club Adds Clint Mathis to Coaching Staff chicago fire com January 31 2014 Archived from the original on August 30 2014 Retrieved January 31 2014 Chicago Fire Announce Two Additions to Technical Staff Chicago Fire Archived from the original on June 27 2015 Retrieved June 30 2015 Retired Chicago Fire defender Eric Gehrig hired by club as assistant coach mlssoccer com February 15 2017 Archived from the original on February 18 2017 Retrieved February 16 2017 Ezra Hendrickson s staff filled top to bottom with MLS experience mlssoccer com December 21 2021 Archived from the original on December 21 2021 Retrieved December 21 2021 Trophies by MLS club MLSsoccer com Archived from the original on March 8 2021 Retrieved September 12 2021 Stats Chicago Fire Archived from the original on July 4 2019 Retrieved August 11 2019 Honors Chicago Fire Archived from the original on May 3 2012 Retrieved October 27 2011 External links Edit Media related to Chicago Fire FC at Wikimedia Commons Official website Portals Association football Chicago Illinois Retrieved from https en wikipedia org 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