The Hamilton Spectator

McLeod’s back, with no guarantees

Veteran ’keeper savours return to Canada roster after long layoff

- NEIL DAVIDSON

It’s been 21 months and 27 matches since Erin McLeod was last in the Canadian goal.

Back from her third knee surgery, the 34-year-old from St. Albert, Alta., is savouring her return to the national soccer team ahead of Tuesday’s soccer friendly with 14thranked Norway in Marbella, Spain.

“This environmen­t, it’s not like any other environmen­t in the world,” McLeod said in an interview from Spain. “It’s so high-performanc­e, high-class. People are wonderful. I was saying yesterday it’s impossible not to grow in this environmen­t and. I feel so honoured to be invited in.”

McLeod spent some time with Canada in April in Europe ahead of games against Sweden and Germany. But while she trained with the squad, she was not one of the three ‘keepers on the roster.

Stephanie Labbe played the full 90 minutes against Sweden and came on for Kailen Sheridan at the half against Germany. Labbe has played all but 45 minutes of the four matches since.

Sabrina D’Angelo has also been in the goalkeeper mix in McLeod’s absence. But coach John Herdman called in just McLeod and Labbe for the Norway game.

While it’s not McLeod’s first rodeo, she acknowledg­es she has had to learn some hard lessons recently — “No guarantee I was going to be able to come back, there’s no guarantee that I’d be able to play for my club or my country. And while I’m back at the camp, there’s still no guarantees.

“But for me I’m very proud to be here. I am really grateful for the last few years. They’ve been two of the hardest of my career and I’ve learned a lot about myself.”

McLeod says she has been hard on herself in the past. She plans to change that in the years she has left playing.

“I just want to enjoy it. That’s my goal coming in here,” she said.

That includes a less-is-more approach to training, to protect her knee.

On the plus side, she does not feel the injury during day-do-day life, perhaps with the exception of long plane rides.

“I actually think that this rehab has really given the rest of my body an opportunit­y to heal,” she said. “I feel pretty good actually.”

McLeod’s most recent injury dates back to December 2015 when she suffered ligament damage playing for Canada at a tournament in Brazil. Things got worse two months later in the CONCACAF Olympic qualifier in Houston.

The knee finally gave out March 23, 2016, kicking a ball in FC Rosengard’s Champions League quarterfin­al game against FFC Frankfurt.

The latest surgery saw a part of her kneecap inserted into a hole in her tibia from a previous surgery and a small strip of quadriceps used as her new anterior cruciate ligament. An extra ligament, from a cadaver, was also inserted. “Genius surgery,” said McLeod. “I call it my ‘Terminator’ knee now,” she added with a laugh.

The long recovery road included sitting out the Rio Olympics, where Canada won bronze.

McLeod is acknowledg­ed as one of the finest female goalkeeper­s in the world, with 43 clean sheets in 115 appearance­s for Canada. She is one of the most respected players in Herdman’s squad. An artist, musician, entreprene­ur and LGBT spokeswoma­n, she is also a role model off the field.

“This has been a real journey for Erin,” Herdman said of McLeod’s comeback in his roster announceme­nt. “She did a great job for the team in qualifying us for the 2016 Rio Olympics and we were all heartbroke­n when she couldn’t make the trip with us to Rio, but we told her it was important for her to take her time and not to force anything and that we would slowly bring her back at the right time, and I think now is the right time.”

Christine Sinclair will captain the fifth-ranked Canadians, who are 6-3-2 in 2017.

The Canadian women have never beaten the Norwegians in 11 tries (08-3), although their last two meetings (in 2010 and ‘13) resulted in ties.

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? It’s been 20 months and 27 matches since Erin McLeod was last in the Canadian goal.
CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO It’s been 20 months and 27 matches since Erin McLeod was last in the Canadian goal.

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