Red Stars defender Amanda Kowalski laughs as she adjusts her headband at the news conference minutes after scoring the final goal in an improbable tie over North Carolina. Photo by Jeff Vorva

Red Stars defender Amanda Kowalski laughs as she adjusts her headband at the news conference minutes after scoring the final goal in an improbable tie over North Carolina. Photo by Jeff Vorva

Pro Soccer Report: Stoppage time goals one minute apart give Red Stars improbable draw

Spread the love

By Jeff Vorva
Staff Writer

The Chicago Red Stars have reached the halfway point of their 22-game NWSL schedule and find themselves in second place, one point behind front-running San Diego.

They had a chance to climb into first place, but their chances slipped away with wild 2-2 draw to last-place North Carolina on July 10 in front of an announced crowd of 4,098 at SeatGeek Stadium in Bridgeview. The tie prevented them from a share of the top spot but kept the Stars’ (5-2-5) unbeaten string alive at nine games.

The Courage (2-5-2, 8 points) had a 2-0 lead after 90 minutes, but the officials gave a minimum of two minutes of stoppage time. Sarah Griffin scored in the 91st minute and Amanda Kowalski’s header off a Danielle Colaprico corner kick in the 93rd minute seconds before the final whistle gave the Stars the improbable tie.

“I kind of closed my eyes and prayed to the man upstairs,” said Kowalski, a defender who has two goals in three matches since starting for injured Kayla Sharples. “I noticed I was heavily marked the entire game. It almost felt like in that last corner, they were pushing everybody in and weren’t worried about man-marking.

“I felt more comfortable running into the box and seeing the flight of the ball. Once it got into my eyesight, I prayed that it would go in.”

DEBEN AND ERCEG scaled

Red Stars midfielder Vanessa DiBernardo (top) and North Carolina’s Abby Erceg get tangled up during a 2-2 tie on July 10 in Bridgeview. Photo by Jeff Vorva

The Red Stars came into the season with new coach Chris Petrucelli among new faces and young players. While he admits that the team did not play a good game against the Courage, the coach said he is happy with the first 11 games.

“If you look at it big-picture and look at it on the whole, I think we’ve been good,” he said. “We’re starting to really get the concepts of keeping the ball and passing the ball and moving the ball. It’s been a total change of style and a change of system.

“I think we’re starting to understand those things. Look, no one in this league is going to be undefeated. People are going to tie and people are going to lose and the games are close every week. To be sitting where we are, we feel pretty good about it.”

The Courage, which won the Challenge Cup during the exhibition season, came into the game with five losses in eight games, the worst eight-game stretch in team history. Interestingly, the two teams at the bottom of the standings are Washington and North Carolina, both finalists in the Challenge Cup. Washington is the defending NWSL champion.

 

In the seats

The Red Stars can be found near the top of the standings in the NWSL but when it comes to home attendance, they have been at the bottom.

Through the first nine weeks of the 2022 season, the Red Stars drew an average announced crowd of 3,098 per game, which ranked last out of the 12 teams.

Expansion team Angel City leads the league bringing in 18,507 per game, while Portland is second at 13,927.

The League average is 7,404.

The 2021 NWSL champion Washington has drawn an 8,805 average in a pair of games at Audi Field in Washington, D.C., and just 2,996 in three games at Segra Field in Leesburg, Virginia.

 

All-Star chatter

The WNBA held its all-star game in Chicago on Sunday and some may wonder if it is feasible for the NWSL to host an all-star game.

With all of the international competition and other scheduling headaches, it may never happen, but Chicago’s Ella Stevens wouldn’t mind seeing it come to fruition.

“It would be fun,” she said. “But the players you would choose would probably be playing a lot of minutes, so if they could figure that out it would be a lot of fun.”

 

Coming up

The Red Stars visit Houston on Saturday before its big July 30 home game against NWSL leader San Diego at Soldier Field.

 

Fire II tops Cincy

The visiting Chicago Fire II stopped Cincinnati 2, 3-0, Sunday in a Major League Soccer NEXT Pro battle.

Richard Fleming III and Javier Casas Jr. scored their first goals of the season and Josh Penn picked up his fifth.

Goalie Chris Brady, returning from national team duty with the United States in the Concacaf Under-20 championships, racked up the shutout.

The Fire (4-7-4, 17 points) host Orlando (3-8-2, 14 points) at 6 p.m. Sunday at SeatGeek Stadium.

 

TATUMN IN SCRUM scaled

Red Stars defender Tatumn Milazzo (left) and North Carolina’s Keleigh Kurtz collide in a scrum Sunday in an NWSL battle in Bridgeview. Photo by Jeff Vorva

Local News

SRP-IMAGE-Logo

St. Rita takes 5th at Hinsdale Central Holiday Classic

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Steve Millar  Correspondent St. Rita’s youth was evident in some mistakes the Mustangs made down the stretch in the fifth-place game of the Hinsdale Central Holiday Classic. But the Mustangs’ talent won out in the end. Sophomore guard Jaedin Reyna went coast-to-coast and scored on a drive to the basket with 2.5…

Lyons Township’s Tavari Johnson was an all-tournament player as he helped his team to a second-place finish in the Jack Tosh Tournament. Photo by Jeff Vorva

Lions take 2nd at Tosh Holiday Classic

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Correspondent Glenbard West won the Jack Tosh Holiday Classic. That made sense. The Hilltoppers are ranked No. 1 in most state and Chicago-area polls. But not much else about this tournament made a lot of sense, especially when it came some of the seven area teams involved or, in two…

Abbey Murphy, a Mother McAuley grad and University of Minnesota hockey player, was named to the Olympic team. University of Minnesota photo

Murphy joins Schofield on U.S. women’s hockey team

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Correspondent Abbey Murphy lists Kendall Coyne Schofield as her sports role model. Now, she will be a teammate of Schofield on the biggest stage for women’s hockey. Team USA Hockey announced its Olympic roster over the weekend and two-time medal winner Schofield, a native of Palos Heights and a Sandburg…

Richards High School Principal Dr. Mike Jacobson and several staff members at the high school, 10601 Central Ave., Oak Lawn, walked for 24 hours on a treadmill to raise money for student scholarships starting bright and early on New Year's Day. (Supplied photos)

Richards principal walks 24 hours for a cause

Spread the love

Spread the loveRaises $20,000 for student scholarships By Kelly White Most people spend New Year’s Day relaxing. Richards High School Principal Dr. Mike Jacobson spent it on the treadmill. For the second year in a row, Jacobson inspired generous donations of more than $20,000 on New Year’s Day by walking 24 hours on a treadmill…

Ben Jealous

Praise Biden for naming blacks to the bench

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Ben Jealous One of the most important reasons to vote Donald Trump out of the White House was to stop him from packing our federal courts with even more anti-voting-rights, anti-equality, pro-corporate judges. Stopping the flood of bad Trump judges was a huge accomplishment for every organizer and voter who helped elect Joe Biden as…

William O. Lipinski

Our youth need to learn patriotism

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy William O. Lipinski Back in the 1960s, long before I ran for alderman of the 23rd Ward or the U.S. Congress, I was working in the recreation department of the Chicago Park District. It was the time of the Vietnam War. I had just completed my six years in the Army reserves and…

A fast-food restaurant worker affixes a Fight for $15 sign to a window at a McDonald’s in the city. --Photo courtesy of FightFor15.org

New laws taking effect

Spread the love

Spread the loveStatewide jump in minimum wage ‘just a start’  By Bob Bong and Peter Hancock Capitol News Illinois   Minimum-wage workers across Illinois will see a boost in their hourly pay to $12 per hour starting Jan. 1, while tenants in affordable housing units will be allowed to keep pets. Those are just some…

GSWNH_OLSThreeKings_123121

Three Wise Men at Snows

Spread the love

Spread the love Portraying the Three Wise Men at the Christmas pageant at Our Lady of the Snows School this year were Yarely Garibay, Noah Rosas and Amira Cepeda. The three eighth graders were part of “Las Posadas” a nine-night depiction of Mary and Joseph’s search for a place to stay and where Jesus Christ…

Ray Hanania

Pekau’s COVID-19 stance harms seniors

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Ray Hanania Nearly 75 percent of the 800,000 Americans who died from COVID-19 were 65 years of age or older. That number jumps to almost 90 percent when you include those 55 years of age and older. The virus affects people differently. The younger and healthier more easily survive. For seniors, it is a…

Neighbors

After 9 months, state data begins to detail new pretrial detention system

After 9 months, state data begins to detail new pretrial detention system

By JERRY NOWICKI Capitol News Illinois jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com Nine months after cash bail ended in Illinois, the state is taking its first steps in publishing the data that crafters of the bail reform law saw as essential to judging its effectiveness. The data shows that judges in the 75 counties served by the Illinois Supreme Court’s…

ILLINOIS LAWMAKERS: Pritzker keeps economic development at forefront in exclusive interview

ILLINOIS LAWMAKERS: Pritzker keeps economic development at forefront in exclusive interview

By JERRY NOWICKI Capitol News Illinois jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com With fiscal year 2025 slated to begin Monday, Gov. JB Pritzker continues to tout available state tax incentives and promote Illinois as a site for business development. On the season finale of “Illinois Lawmakers” this week, Pritzker pointed to a pair of developments in East Alton and Normal…

Pritzker calls SCOTUS emergency abortion ruling ‘small respite’ as state protections await his signature

Pritzker calls SCOTUS emergency abortion ruling ‘small respite’ as state protections await his signature

By ANDREW ADAMS  Capitol News Illinois aadams@capitolnewsillinois.com Abortion remains legal as an emergency medical procedure in Idaho, for now, after a Thursday U.S. Supreme Court ruling, while a bill that would cement those protections in Illinois law awaits Gov. JB Pritzker’s signature.  The 6-3 decision saw the three liberal justices concur with the order. Three…

‘We don’t really know what we’re voting on,’ top Dem says of Pritzker’s prison plan

‘We don’t really know what we’re voting on,’ top Dem says of Pritzker’s prison plan

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com LINCOLN – On the eve of a scheduled vote to advise Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration on plans to close and rebuild a pair of dilapidated state prisons, hundreds filed into a junior high school gymnasium Thursday evening clad in matching green T-shirts. Printed on the shirts was a…

SCOTUS ruling could upend federal corruption cases for Madigan, allies

SCOTUS ruling could upend federal corruption cases for Madigan, allies

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday narrowed the scope of a federal bribery law prosecutors have relied on in their cases against former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan and several of his allies convicted of bribing him. A jury last spring found those allies – former lobbyists and…

Quantum technology companies set for big tax incentives under new law

Quantum technology companies set for big tax incentives under new law

By ANDREW ADAMS  Capitol News Illinois aadams@capitolnewsillinois.com CHICAGO – Gov. JB Pritzker on Wednesday gave final approval to a plan to bolster the state’s tech industry, including an incentives package – backed by $500 million in the state budget – aimed at making Illinois the nation’s leader in quantum computing.  The package also expands tax…

Illinois child tax credit: who gets it, how much is it?

Illinois child tax credit: who gets it, how much is it?

By ANDREW ADAMS Capitol News Illinois aadams@capitolnewsillinois.com In the final hours of their spring legislative session, Illinois lawmakers approved a tax credit of up to about $300 for families with young children.  The credit is available to Illinoisans with children under age 12 who qualify for the federal Earned Income Tax Credit, or EITC. Although…

Illinois’ ban on ‘bump stocks’ remains in place despite U.S. Supreme Court decision

Illinois’ ban on ‘bump stocks’ remains in place despite U.S. Supreme Court decision

By PETER HANCOCK Capitol News Illinois phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – An Illinois law banning the sale and use of “bump stocks” and other devices that increase the firing power of semiautomatic weapons remains in place, at least for now, despite a U.S. Supreme Court decision Friday striking down a federal ban on such items. “Illinois law…

Another Choate Mental Health Center employee indicted for abuse of resident

Another Choate Mental Health Center employee indicted for abuse of resident

By BETH HUNDSDORFER Capitol News Illinois bhundsdorfer@capitolnewsillinois.com Another caregiver at Choate Mental Health and Developmental Center in Anna is facing charges for abusing a patient. A grand jury indicted Joseph A. Clark, 24, of Grand Chain, on a felony charge of aggravated battery and a misdemeanor charge of battery. Clark pinned a Choate resident to…

State highway shootings decline as critics sue over ‘dragnet surveillance’

State highway shootings decline as critics sue over ‘dragnet surveillance’

By JERRY NOWICKI Capitol News Illinois jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com Illinois State Police say an automated license plate reader program has helped the agency identify witnesses or suspects in 82 percent of highway shooting cases this year, including all eight that resulted in a death.  But as the state looks to further expand its network of more than…