Fire's Johnson mostly pleased with debut vs. PSG

Sean Johnson made his Fire debut Wednesday night against PSG.

BRIDGEVIEW, Ill. ā€“ Fire rookie goalkeeper Sean Johnson may not have gotten the result he wanted Wednesday night, but heā€™s still happy that he has his first game behind him.


Johnson, a Generation Adidas signee selected with the 51st pick of the 2010 MLS SuperDraft, made his first professional appearance and went all 90 minutes for the Fire in Wednesday nightā€™s 1-0 loss to Paris Saint-Germain in the Chicago Sister Cities International Cup.


ā€œIt was a good opportunity,ā€ Johnson said. ā€œI think you learn from playing and this being my first game I think I did alright.ā€


Johnson, a product of the University of Central Florida, made three saves against PSG. Taking away from his three stops was PSGā€™s goal.


ā€œI take full responsibility,ā€ Johnson said. ā€œI was in good position, the ball hit a little divot and I shouldā€™ve gotten a little bit of a better push forward and parried it away to be safe. At the end of the day, my defense knows Iā€™ll take the goal on me.ā€


The 20-year-old Johnson also had some issues with the ball on his feet. He didnā€™t look confident with the ball ā€“ particularly when it was on his left foot ā€“ and it almost cost the Fire a goal in the 40th minute.


Fire center back C.J. Brown played a ball back to Johnson and the keeper appeared to get caught in between coming out to play it and letting the ball roll to him. Johnsonā€™s resulting kick failed to clear the box and PSG midfielder Chistophe Jallet pounced on the loose ball ā€“ with only an offside call preventing the Ligue 1 side from scoring.


ā€œI tried to just put it out of danger and tried to put it wide and it ended up at [Jalletā€™s] feet,ā€ Johnson said. ā€œI thought if he would have taken a shot I was in a good enough position to deal with it.ā€


Though Johnson feels like his game has room for improvement, on the whole, he was happy with his first appearance.


ā€œTheyā€™re all minor improvements, technical stuff,ā€ Johnson said. ā€œPlaying different games and getting the experience is what I need. The games are good, you only learn from your mistakes by playing. Iā€™ve got a lot to improve on, but itā€™s a good start.ā€


Sam Stejskal covers the Chicago Fire for MLSsoccer.com. He can be reached at sam.h.stejskal@gmail.com.