Lethbridge Herald

Alphonso Davies named top male athlete

- Neil Davidson

Bayern Munich star Alphonso Davies, who shone on soccer’s biggest stages in 2020, has been voted winner of the Lionel Conacher Award as The Canadian Press male athlete of the year.

Davies, who turned 20 on Nov. 2, won worldwide praise for his pace and athleticis­m at left fullback while helping Bayern fill its trophy case. Davies and the German powerhouse captured the Champions League,

Bundesliga title, DFB Cup and UEFA Super Cup in 2020.

Individual­ly the Canadian was named Bundesliga rookie of the season for 2019-20 and was voted to the FIFPRO Best 11 by his peers, becoming the first North American to make the men’s all-star squad. He is the third-youngest player to earn men’s World 11 status behind Dutch defender Matthijs de Ligt and French forward Kylian Mbappe.

“It’s been a fantastic year for Alphonso,” said Canada coach John Herdman. “He’s flown the flag for Canada, he’s been a real bright spot on the sporting landscape in a time where we really needed some bright spots.

“And the awards are thoroughly deserved. He’s doing things at the highest level in the world game. And he’s Canadian, he’s from Edmonton. I think for all of us, it’s just something we can be proud of. And for those young players, it’s that reminder that anything’s possible, anything’s possible for a Canadian.”

Davies received 35 of 67 votes by sports editors, writers, broadcaste­rs across the country.

“A Canadian at the pinnacle of world soccer? It doesn’t get much easier (of a pick) than that,” said Hamilton Spectator sports editor Jeff Day.

“Less than two years after last suiting up for the Vancouver Whitecaps, Alphonso Davies showed his talents on the global stage in the world’s most popular sport, eviscerati­ng the Barcelona defence at one point in the quarterfin­al as Bayern Munich stormed to a Champions League victory to complete a historic treble,” said Paul Attfield, sports reporter for the Globe and Mail.

Davies is the first soccer player to win the Conacher Award, joining such Canadian sporting icons as Wayne Gretzky, Mario Lemieux, Gordie Howe, Donovan Bailey and Ferguson Jenkins.

“A lot of great Canadian athletes have won it, so it’s an honour to be the first soccer player to do so,” Davies told The Canadian Press via email.

Kansas City Chiefs lineman Laurent Duvernay-Tardif, who won the Super Bowl in February before opting out of the 2020 NFL season after working in a long-term care facility in his home province at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic’s first wave, was second with 25 votes. Denver Nuggets guard Jamal Murray was the only other with multiple votes (three).

The choice of Davies completed a soccer sweep among the CP individual sports awards. On Monday, Canada captain Christine Sinclair won the Bobbie Rosenfeld Award as the top Canadian female athlete. She also won in 2012, after leading Canada to Olympic bronze at the London Games.

The team of the year will be unveiled today.

Sinclair, a 37-year-old from Burnaby, B.C., has long been the face of Canadian soccer. Davies has joined her in rapidfire fashion.

Herdman says Davies and Sinclair share more than just soccer skills.

“The one character trait that I’ve seen from both of them is a level of humility,” said Herdman. “But when they’re on the field, they are fierce, fierce custodians of this shirt and patriots of this country.

You see that in their effort, in their desire to win and the passion they play with.”

It is to Davies’ credit that he has reached such heights on the field during such a difficult year.

“It hasn’t always been easy this year, not just for me, but for many people out there,” Davies said. “A lot of people are in much tougher situations than me and I am very fortunate to be where I am, so I try to remember that and stay humble whenever things feel tough.

“Playing soccer has always been an outlet for me, so being able to train and compete really helped, and I hope everything we accomplish­ed at Bayern helped bring some joy into people’s lives.”

Davies was also voted Canada Soccer’s Men’s Player of the Year and was co-winner with Duvernay-Tardif of the

Lou Marsh Trophy, presented by the Toronto Star to the Canadian athlete of the year.

Davies turned heads in late February in Champions League action at Chelsea when he set up Bayern’s third goal with a lightning run down the left flank and cross to Robert Lewandowsk­i for a tap-in in the 76th minute and a 3-0 win in the first leg of a round-of-16 showdown.

“Alphonso Davies is a worldclass left back,” former U.S. internatio­nal and current TV pundit Stuart Holden said on social media. “Top five in world soccer right now easy.”

In June, Davies was clocked at 36.51 km/h in the first half of a win over Werder Bremen, according to the Bundesliga. That erased the fastest recorded speed in league history (36.19 km/h by Dortmund’s Achraf Hakimi) since detailed data collection began in 2011.

Veteran Bayern forward Thomas Mueller dubbed Davies “the FC Bayern Road Runner,” referencin­g the speedy cartoon character.

 ?? Canadian Press photo ?? Alphonso Davies is Canada’s male athlete of the year.
Canadian Press photo Alphonso Davies is Canada’s male athlete of the year.

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