National Post (National Edition)

Canada setting table for `massive' year

MEN'S NATIONAL HEAD COACH HERDMAN HAS WORLD CUP QUALIFYING, OLYMPICS ON AGENDA

- DEREK VAN DIEST dvandiest@postmedia.com Twitter: @DerekVanDi­est

It has been a year since the Canadian men's national team last assembled, which is unpreceden­ted layoff for the program. Yet, despite the COVID-19 pandemic still wreaking havoc around the globe, head coach John Herdman felt it was imperative to gather his troops in Florida and begin laying the ground work for a busy internatio­nal calendar on the horizon with huge prizes at stake.

Herdman invited nearly 30 players to the Jan. 9-24 camp in Bradenton, Fla., most of them members of North American clubs, who are idle at the moment.

The most notable exception is Alphonso Davies, who is still playing with Bayern Munich in the German Bundesliga.

“This is a massive year for football in Canada, it's probably the biggest year in our history in a long time with the Gold Cup, World Cup qualificat­ion, and Olympic Games,” Herdman said. “This January camp was about setting the foundation, setting the tone, showing how serious we are, about taking the risk and going into a COVID environmen­t to understand and learn about the realities to get ourselves ready for March.”

Canada has not played a game since losing 1-0 to Iceland in an exhibition contest in Irvine, Calif., a year ago.

The last meaningful contest took place on Nov. 15, 2019, when the Canadians lost 4-1 to the United States in Orlando, Fla., in a CONCACAF Nations League game. A month prior, Canada shut out the U.S. 2-0 in Toronto in the same competitio­n — the first win over the Americans in 34 years.

“For us as players, we're really happy to be back on the pitch together,” midfielder Samuel Piette of Club de Foot Montréal said. “There are a lot of guys here that are teammates when we wear the red (Canada) jersey, but throughout the year with my club, I just played against these guys.

“It was weird not to be able to play with them every month, or every two months with the national team. I think 2021 is a massive year for the program and for the country.”

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, changes were made to the FIFA 2022 World Cup qualifying format in the region, which benefited Canada.

Instead of depending on a ranking system for a realistic opportunit­y to qualify for Qatar, Canada will now get a chance to play its way into the event, scheduled to start in November 2022.

While the qualificat­ion road is long and difficult, it still allows Canada's fortunes to be determined on the field as opposed to a complicate­d ranking algorithm.

The qualifying campaign begins in March against Bermuda and the Cayman Islands, followed by games in June against Aruba and Suriname.

Canada's Under-23 team also will take part in an Olympic qualifying tournament for the upcoming Summer Games in Tokyo, which were pushed back a year due to the pandemic. There's also the 2021 CONCACAF Gold Cup tournament taking place in July.

“The opportunit­ies that are in front of us are like nothing we've ever seen before,” Herdman said. “Starting with this camp in January, moving into March into Olympic qualificat­ions where our young U-23, which might be on the cusp of the men's national team, those young players can show themselves in a really meaningful competitio­n, but also qualify the country for the Olympics.”

Herdman is taking over the men's program after leading the women's team to unpreceden­ted success. His mandate is to qualify for the World Cup in Qatar.

Canada has not come close to qualifying out of the region since competing in its only World Cup tournament in 1986 in Mexico.

In order to succeed, Herdman needs talented players and fortunatel­y for him, he's inherited arguably the most talented and deepest pool of male players Canada has ever produced, led by Davies, who has blossomed into an internatio­nal superstar.

“I'm fortunate to be coming in at a time when the MLS academy system is starting to come to fruition now,” Herdman said. “It's been up and running five or six years with some of the major clubs in Canada and you are starting to see the fruits of their labour.

“I do feel that's the benefit of work gone by. Add the CPL to this now and the fact now there are layers to this now. In this country there seems to be a non-linear pathway to the national team and there are so many different ways of coming here.”

Now it's just a matter of finding the right combinatio­n capable of competing against the U.S. and Mexico, who traditiona­lly breeze through World Cup qualifying in the region, with the exception of the Americans' humiliatin­g failure in its Russia 2018 campaign.

Mexico and the U.S. also have alternated winning the Gold Cup, claiming 15 of the 16 editions of the tournament.

Canada's greatest internatio­nal achievemen­t was winning the Gold Cup in 2000. There has not been much to cheer about since.

“This camp sets the tone for the year and it set the tone as well for the fans to show how serious we are and how serious our team is taking this year,” Piette said. “It's been too long since we wore that red jersey, and hopefully, with the year that we will have with many important games in competitio­n, we'll be able to give back to the fans.”

 ?? DEREK VAN DIEST / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Canada's Alphonso Davies, left, and Samuel Piette warm up at a training session in Florida in 2019. Both players are expected to be key contributo­rs to the 2021 national men's soccer team. Davies is still overseas with Bayern Munich.
DEREK VAN DIEST / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Canada's Alphonso Davies, left, and Samuel Piette warm up at a training session in Florida in 2019. Both players are expected to be key contributo­rs to the 2021 national men's soccer team. Davies is still overseas with Bayern Munich.

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