The Peterborough Examiner

Priestman to lead Canuck women

After stint as England’s No. 2, she takes over Canadian soccer team

- NEIL DAVIDSON

TORONTO — Bev Priestman, who spent five years developing talent for the Canadian women’s soccer program and served as an assistant coach to John Herdman, is returning to take over the Canada women’s team.

The English native succeeds head coach Kenneth HeinerMoll­er, who announced in June he was stepping down at summer’s end to return to the Danish Football Associatio­n as head of coach education.

At 34, Priestman is three years younger than captain Christine Sinclair, the world’s all-time internatio­nal goal scorer.

Priestman starts Sunday, with a contract that covers the next quadrennia­l, but is not expected to make the move to Canada with her family until the first quarter of 2021.

She left Canada Soccer in the summer of 2018 to serve as Phil Neville’s No. 2 with the English women’s team. Neville and Priestman guided the Lionesses, currently ranked sixth in the world, to fourth place at last summer’s World Cup in France. England was beaten in the third-place playoff by Sweden, which had eliminated Canada in the round of 16.

Neville is stepping down as England coach next year, with Sarina Wiegman set to take over after leading the Dutch women at the reschedule­d Tokyo Olympics.

For Priestman, the Canada job is an opportunit­y to return to a place full of good memories on and off the field — she got married in Canada and her twoyear-old son was born here — and to run her own show.

“When I went to England, I always said from Day 1 that I wanted to be a No. 1,” she told The Canadian Press. “And so this is part of that jigsaw piece.

“For me, it’s a top-10 nation, two (Olympic) bronze medals, the scrutiny and expectatio­ns you get with that. What I’ve learned about myself is probably you get the best out of me in those moments.”

Canada Soccer president Steven Reed said Priestman’s first stint with the organizati­on, from 2013 to ’18, “set a solid foundation for success across all levels of the women’s national team program and we are excited to have her bring her recent experience, vision and leadership to her new role.”

Priestman made the move to England, nine weeks after her son was born, to further forge her own path.

“In my opinion I’ve worked under two to three world-class coaches now,” she said. “I’ve had the best seat in the house really. ... All those highs and then the lows. You take something from every coach and every moment and then you start to become clearer about what you believe in and what you think it takes to win.”

Most recently, Priestman served as coach of England’s women’s under-18 team slated to compete at the FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup in India, reschedule­d for next year due to the global pandemic.

She said that move had “sharpened myself up again to whatever may come in the future.”

“For me, the timing was actually perfect. ... I definitely feel now is the right time,” she said of the Canadian job.

Priestman faces a short runway, with the Tokyo Games set to start in July. The Canadian women, ranked eighth in the world, have been inactive since March 10 when they wrapped up play at a tourney in France with a 2-2 tie with Brazil.

A Canadian camp scheduled for this month in England was scrapped on the advice of health experts.

Looking at the current Canadian roster, Priestman sees a “brilliant blend of experience and youth.”

She knows there is little room to manoeuvre short-term with COVID-19 restrictio­ns, not to mention the limitation­s of an 18-woman Olympic roster.

“You have a short-term focus due to COVID and the Olympics and hopefully change the colour of the medal. And then you have a longer-term focus,” she said.

That includes a changing of the guard.

“My job is to make that transition really easy with the young players and get that blend right at the right time,” Priestman said.

Priestman has been following the Canadian women, including the growing number playing in Europe.

Janine Beckie, Jessie Fleming, Shelina Zadorsky, Adriana Leon and Rylee Foster are currently playing in England in the Barclays FA Super Women’s League.

Meanwhile, Kadeisha Buchanan, Ashley Lawrence, Jordyn Huitema and Quinn (who goes by one name) are among those playing in France and other European leagues.

“There’s some benefits to being based in Europe shortterm,” said Priestman.

Priestman grew up southwest of Newcastle in Consett, which is also Herdman’s hometown. Priestman was 12 or 13 when first coached by Herdman.

She started helping out at Herdman’s Brazilian soccer school, kicking off a coaching relationsh­ip that eventually took both to New Zealand and then Canada.

In her first stint with Canada Soccer, Priestman served as national EXCEL director from under-15 to under-23 and coached Canadian teams at two FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cups, three CONCACAF Women’s Under-17 Championsh­ips as well as the CONCACAF Under-15 and Under-20 Championsh­ips.

Under Priestman’s tutelage, Canadian players such as Fleming, Huitema and Deanne Rose have made their mark on the internatio­nal scene.

 ?? NEIL DAVIDSON THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? John Herdman, left, prepares for practice with Bev Priestman, a member of his coaching staff, ahead of a soccer game against the United States in the final of the CONCACAF Women’s Olympic Qualifying Championsh­ip in Houston on Feb. 20, 2016.
NEIL DAVIDSON THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO John Herdman, left, prepares for practice with Bev Priestman, a member of his coaching staff, ahead of a soccer game against the United States in the final of the CONCACAF Women’s Olympic Qualifying Championsh­ip in Houston on Feb. 20, 2016.

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