This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2016, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.

http://www.sltrib.com/sports/4200015-155/real-salt-lake-goalie-nick-rimando"; target="_blank">Nick Rimando made history and http://www.sltrib.com/sports/4204555-155/real-salt-lake-morales-delivers-another"; target="_blank">Javier Morales proved that, even at age 36, he still has a little bit left in the tank. But here are three other quick takeaways from Real Salt Lake's 3-1 win over the Chicago Fire on Saturday night.

1. Olmes Garcia, as Jason Kreis, the man who first brought him to Real Salt Lake three years ago, would probably say, finally got off the schneid.
It had been 405 days since Garcia scored a league goal last June 27 against the Columbus Crew.
But you can click your stopwatches now.
In the 14th minute Saturday night, Garcia took a pass from Morales at the top of the box, picked out a spot low and to the keeper's left and finally found the back of the net.
" I asked for the ball and thank you God I was able to finish it," said Garcia, who celebrated by revealing a shirt underneath his jersey with "Mom & Dad I love you" printed on it.
Three years ago, it was a magnificent, curling shot from distance that brought Garcia his first goal in Major League Soccer. This time, however, Garcia's strike was notable for just how simple it was.
"We talked about choices," head coach Jeff Cassar said. "Everybody wants to rip the back of the net or have it come off the post and come in and have a fantastic goal, but that was the right choice by him in that situation. It wrong-footed the goalkeeper. It doesn't take a blast in the back of the net in that situation. It takes a smart choice and good placement, and I couldn't be more happy that he chose that type of shot from there and recognized what needed to be done."
Outside of the goal, Garcia worked hard in other places Saturday. He battled to hold up a ball and create a chance for Joao Plata in the first half. In the second, his speed and an excellent pass into the center of the field created another chance for RSL.
"How about this work rate from this guy?" Cassar said. "It's been off the charts these last three games, and I can tell you every one of the players has been feeding off that energy."
If Garcia is really going to turn the corner in his MLS career—forget the spectacular—hard work and smart decisions make up as good a formula for success as there is.

2. Yura Movsisyan was back in the 18, but it doesn't sound like he has fully recovered from the strain that kept him out of the lineup entirely against Philadelphia and Toronto.
"We had a plan all along, it was going to be a must-need thing," Cassar said. "I went down and talked to Yura (when the score was 2-1) and I needed an honest answer. Could he chase down, could he run down every single play? To his credit, he said, 'Let's err on the side of caution.' It was the right choice. It was really want I wanted to do all along anyway. But if were into a situation where we needed it and had to have it, I'm sure he would have come through and been fantastic."
Movsisyan injured himself late last month against San Jose and Cassar was complimentary of his work to get himself fit enough to be back in the 18 just 10 days later.
"He was doing double sessions every day on our road trip, came back and put himself in a great position and that's the kind of man he is," the coach said.

3. RSL finally got back into winning form at home.
The team hadn't won at Rio Tinto Stadium since beating the New York Red Bulls on June 22.
"As a coach, as a staff we try to put these guys in as many situations as possible for them to be successful," Cassar said. "Sometimes, it happens, sometimes it doesn't, sometimes I make some bad choices, sometimes they miss the frame, or a goalkeeper makes a good save, but you have to keep believing. The stats don't lie that we're doing a ton of things right. We're creating more chances than we ever have, we're denying less opportunities than we ever have. It's continuing to try and get better at the little things and keep believing and putting our players, our special, special players into situations for them to succeed, and I told the guys the other day that I believe in every single one of them that they will. Do we do it every time? No, but you know that's soccer. It could be a great save like I said, or whatever, but you have to believe. This isn't a false belief. This is a belief in exactly what we're trying to accomplish and tonight beautiful plays and beautiful goals, and it takes that to score goals in this league. Sometimes it takes a little bit of luck, sometimes a little bit of brilliance and tonight it wasn't luck, it was brilliance."
How much of that brilliance was able to shine through simply because RSL was hosting cellar-dwelling Chicago?
With five of their next seven games at home, we'll find out.

— Aaron Falk