Sherbrooke Record

Rhian Wilkinson to lead Canada's entry at FIFA U 17 Women's World Cup in Uruguay

- By Neil Davidson THE CANADIAN PRESS

Former Canada fullback Rhian Wilkinson takes another step on her young coaching career in November at the FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup in Uruguay.

The 36-year-old native of Baie-d'urfe, Que., who now calls North Vancouver home, is seen as a future Canadian women's national coach. She was on Bev Priestman's coaching staff at the CONCACAF Women's Under-17 Championsh­ip, where Canada finished third to book its ticket to the World Cup.

But Priestman subsequent­ly left the Canadian Soccer Associatio­n to become an assistant coach with the English women's team, with Wilkinson taking over the team for the 16-team Uruguay tournament that runs Nov. 13 to Dec. 1.

Canada opens Group D play against Colombia on Nov. 14 in Montevideo's Estadio Charrua before taking on South Korea on Nov. 17 and Spain on Nov. 21. It's a tough group, with Spain having done well recently in the age group. Altitude will also be a factor.

The 21-player Canadian roster features four players who have already been called up by the senior side: Jordyn Huitema, Jayde Riviere, Maya Antoine and Ariel Young. Huitema is a regular while the other three have been called into different camps.

Wilkinson wants the four not to feel the pressure of their senior credential­s.

Wilkinson, whose first name is pronounced Ree-in, has also served as an assistant to senior women's coach Kenneth Heiner-moller, as a youth assistant coach and coached Canada at the recent CONCACAF Girls''under-15 Championsh­ip.

“It's been crazy, a lot of it,'' she said. “But so much experience. (It's) amazing, actually.''

She started worked on her coaching badges while still playing, paying out of her pocket to get her UEFA B licence in Wales. Then-senior coach John Herdman, looking to use veteran players as mentors, made her an assistant coach with the Canada entry at the 2014 FIFA U-20 World Cup.

With the help of Canada Soccer, she is currently working on her UEFA A coaching licence.

Interestin­gly, Wilkinson had no interest in coaching for a long time.

Canada earned its spot at the U-17 World Cup after a dramatic 2-1 win over Haiti in the match for third place at the CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championsh­ip in Florida. Calgary striker Andersen Williams scored the winning goal in the 89th minute in the match for third place.

The competitio­n lasted six games in April in Nicaragua before CONCACAF, the governing body of soccer in North and Central America and the Caribbean, pulled the plug due to violence in the capital city Managua. Play resumed some 45 days later in Florida.

Wilkinson has never shied away from a challenge.

After winning bronze at the Rio Olympics, she ran the Montreal marathon and crewed a yacht in the Mediterran­ean. After the 2015 Women's World Cup, she walked part of the famed Camino de Santiago trail in Spain with her mother.

Wilkinson stepped on the field for the last time for Canada in a February 2017 friendly against Mexico at B.C. Place Stadium, capping a 14-year career that saw her win 181 caps and make 150 starts.

Wilkinson played under three vastly different national team coaches in Norway's Even Pellerud, Italy's Carolina Morace and England's Herdman.

“I've had really good mentors but they're all very very different,'' said Wilkinson, including her club coaches and Heiner-moller.

Wilkinson has a BA in communicat­ions from the University of Tennessee and a degree in anatomy and physiology from Athabasca University. She has served as a member of the FIFA Strategic Committee, tasked with dealing with “global strategies for football and its political, economic and social status.''

Canada is one of only six countries to have qualified for every edition of the FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup since its launch in 2008, alongside Germany, Ghana, Japan, New Zealand and North Korea.

Canada reached the quarterfin­als in 2008, 2012 and 2014.

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