National Post

Giovanco nets 2 as TFC powers past Montreal

- Rob Longley rlongley@ postmedia. com

• The ribald side of the rivalry began early Sunday afternoon at a sold-out Saputo Stadium.

The 300 or so vocal TFC supporters took residence in the north end stands and in between chants unfurled a banner proclaimin­g: “Today’s forecast, 17 points clear … still.”

Nothing like rubbing it in for the first of three regularsea­son renewals of the 401 Derby between the Reds and the Montreal Impact.

Yes, Toronto was t hat much better coming into this — and improved the margin to 20 points after a 3-1 win over an Impact team battling for its playoff life.

Sebastien Giovanco led the way for Toronto with a pair of goals — opening the scoring in the 41st minute with a beauty of a free kick — and putting the Impact away in the 93rd, a minute after the rivals had pulled to within one.

With the win, Toronto improved to a franchise-record 56 points and a runaway leader to win the Supporter’s Shield honouring the best regular- season team in the MLS for the first time in club history. Given they haven’t lost in nine games, with seven contests remaining, the MLS single-season record of 68 is also well within reach.

“Obviously we’re giving everything to try to win the Supporters’ Shield and do it as quickly and as dominantly as possible,” TFC captain Michael Bradley said. “But obviously games against Montreal always carry a little bit of extra weight, there’s no two ways about it.

“The rivalry has really grown over the last year-anda- half or so. When you play big games against your rival, with so much on the line, it’s only going to go one way. It’s exciting for the league and exciting for football in North America and in Canada … Some of the spectacle that the people have been treated to over the past year-and-a-half have been incredible.”

The standings normally mean very little when the two meet. The past performanc­es — regular season, Canadian championsh­ips or playoff meetings — have been fuelled by the great equalizer of emotion. Well, the emotion was definitely in place in front of a sellout crowd of 20,801 on Sunday, but perhaps the class advantage for Toronto is a little too steep this year.

TFC coach Greg Vanney sees a driven group that insists on getting better by the week. And their dominant play over the summer months has proven it to be so.

“The accomplish­ment that I’m most proud of is the one nobody sees and is where our group is in terms of our locker-room and in terms of how they show up to work every day,” Vanney said. “Their attention to wanting to get better and wanting to continue to win.”

The Reds are now nine points clear of NYC FC in the race for the Supporter’s Shield while they kept Montreal just outside of the playoff race by snapping their four- game winning streak. With a bye week for an internatio­nal break, it’s time to re-charge for the stretch run.

The atmosphere at Saputo Stadium was electric from the outset, complete with the occasional scrap in the stands. After taking the 1- 0 lead into the halftime break, Toronto seized the opportunit­y with Jozy Altidore delivering nice tap- in goal in the 52nd minute, easily burying a clever cross from Marky Delgado.

The Impact’s lone goal came from Ignacio Piatti in added time.

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Montreal Impact’s Blerim Dzemaili, in blue, challenges Toronto FC’s Eriq Zavaleta during first-half MLS soccer action in Montreal on Sunday.
GRAHAM HUGHES / THE CANADIAN PRESS Montreal Impact’s Blerim Dzemaili, in blue, challenges Toronto FC’s Eriq Zavaleta during first-half MLS soccer action in Montreal on Sunday.

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