Chicago Fire FC: Difference between revisions

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{{About|use1=current [[Major League Soccer]] team|use2=former [[World Football League]] team|art1=[[Chicago Fire (WFL)]]}}
{{Infobox MLS team
{{Infobox MLS team
| name = Chicago Fire FC
| name = Chicago Fire FC
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| [[1998 MLS season|1998]]
| [[1998 MLS season|1998]]
| [https://www.sportspaper.info/soccer/mls/seasons/1998/mls-cup-program_1998.html MLS Cup]
| [https://www.sportspaper.info/soccer/mls/seasons/1998/mls-cup-program_1998.html MLS Cup]
| [[Chicago Fire]]
| [[D.C. United]]
| [[Rose Bowl]]
| [[Rose Bowl]]
|-
|-
! colspan="4"| 2000s
! colspan="4"| 2000s
|-
|-
| October 1, 2008
| [[2006 MLS season|June 25, 2006]]
| [[D.C. United vs. Cruz Azul (October 1, 2008)|CONCACAF Champions League]]
| [https://www.sportspaper.info/soccer/mls/seasons/2006/chicago-fire-program_2006.html Regular Season]
| Cruz Azul
| [[New York Red Bulls]]
| [[RFK Stadium]]
| [[Toyota Park]]
|-
! colspan="4"| 2010s
|-
| March 4, 2015
| [[D.C. United vs. Alajuelense (March 4, 2015)|CONCACAF Champions League]]
| Alajuelense
| [[RFK Stadium]]
|-
| July 15, 2016
| [[D.C. United vs. Southampton (July 15, 2016)|Friendly]]
| [[Southampton]]
| [[RFK Stadium]]
|-
| [[2018 MLS season|2018]]
| [[2018 D.C. United program|Regular Season]]
| n/a
| [[Audi Field]]
|}
|}


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====Media guides====
====Media guides====
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: left"
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: left"
|-
! 1990s
| [https://www.sportspaper.info/soccer/mls/seasons/1996/dc-united-media-guide_1996.html 1996]
|-
! 2000s
| [https://www.sportspaper.info/soccer/mls/seasons/2004/dc-united-media-guide_2004.html 2004]
|-
|-
! 2010s
! 2010s
| [https://www.sportspaper.info/soccer/mls/seasons/2018/dc-united-media-guide_2018.html 2018]
| [https://www.sportspaper.info/soccer/mls/seasons/2011/chicago-fire-media-guide_2011.html 2011]
|-
! 2020s
| [[2020 D.C. United media guide|2020]]
|}
|}


{{MLS}}
{{Infobox portal franchise}}
{{Infobox portal franchise}}
{{MLS}}


[[Category: Chicago Fire FC| ]]
[[Category: Chicago Fire FC| ]]

Latest revision as of 10:26, 28 February 2024

This article is about the current Major League Soccer team. For the former World Football League team, see Chicago Fire (WFL).
Chicago Fire FC
First Season
1998
Team History
Chicago Fire FC (1998-present)
League/Conference
Major League Soccer (2002-present)
Western Conference (1998-2001)
  • Eastern Conference (1998-present)
Venue
Soldier Field (1998-2005, 2020-present)
SeatGeek Stadium (2006-19)
Cardinal Stadium (2002-03)
Key People
Players • Head Coaches • Executives


Chicago Fire Football Club is an American professional soccer franchise 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.

Publications

Home programs by season

Season/Date Type Opponent Venue
1990s
1998 MLS Cup D.C. United Rose Bowl
2000s
June 25, 2006 Regular Season New York Red Bulls Toyota Park

Media guides and yearbooks by season

Media guides

2010s 2011
Major League Soccer
Eastern Conference Atlanta United FC • Charlotte FC • Chicago Fire FC • FC Cincinnati • Columbus Crew • D.C. United • Inter Miami CF • CF Montréal • Nashville SC • New England Revolution • New York City FC • New York Red Bulls • Orlando City SC • Philadelphia Union • Toronto FC
Western Conference Austin FC • Colorado Rapids • FC Dallas • Houston Dynamo FC • LA Galaxy • Los Angeles FC • Minnesota United FC • Portland Timbers • Real Salt Lake • San Jose Earthquakes • Seattle Sounders FC • Sporting Kansas City • Vancouver Whitecaps FC
Defunct Teams Tampa Bay Mutiny (1996-2001) • Miami Fusion (1998-2001) • Chivas USA (2005-14)
Current Venues Audi Field • BC Place • BMO Field • Dick's Sporting Goods Park • Dignity Health Sports Park • Gillette Stadium • Lumen Field • Mapfre Stadium • Mercedes-Benz Stadium • Olympic Stadium • PayPal Park • PNC Stadium • Providence Park • Soldier Field • Subaru Park • Toyota Stadium • Yankee Stadium
Related Seasons • Stadiums • League publications • All-Star Games


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