The Province

TFC still in disbelief after Cup defeat

Home side held a wide territoria­l edge, but Sounders ultimately prevailed in penalty kicks

- KURTIS LARSON

The stadium’s Tunnel Club was more serene Saturday night than usual.

Dropping a home MLS Cup on penalties will do that to an organizati­on, its fans and its players, none of which showed at Toronto FC’s post-championsh­ip party at Muzik nightclub.

Who could blame them? The Reds were still in disbelief after manhandlin­g the Seattle Sounders for 120 minutes only to see their MLS Cup dreams dashed when Justin Morrow’s penalty pinged off the crossbar in front of a record crowd at BMO Field.

But then there was a voice inside TFC’s in-stadium pub — mere steps from TFC’s dressing room. It interrupte­d a one-on-one interview between TFC general manager Tim Bezbatchen­ko and the Toronto Sun.

Two little boys had spotted the club’s GM inside the Tunnel Club.

“Can we have your autograph?” the boys asked Bezbatchen­ko, who politely obliged.

“Good job this year,” one of the boys continued, a reminder that the Reds indeed inspired this season. “It was so close.” Inches, one could argue. Stefan Frei’s save in extra time will go down as one of the great saves in MLS Cup history.

Another inch up and to the right and the Reds would be holding a parade Monday morning.

Sebastian Giovinco, Jonathan Osorio and Tosaint Ricketts also missed good — essentiall­y open — looks that would have provided TFC the goal it chased for two hours.

Shots were 19-3 in favour of TFC, which also finished with a 7-0 advantage in terms of attempts on target.

Even Sounders bench boss Brian Schmetzer admitted post-game he wished his side would have “played better.” They were the second best squad on the pitch, buoyed by Frei and TFC’s uncanny ability to squander the good looks it managed to create against a bunkering defence.

“We played very well,” Michael Bradley said inside an empty TFC dressing room post-game.

“There’s no two ways about it. That’s a good team, they have good players.”

He couldn’t say what rationale pundits and viewers and neutral fans were thinking: The Sounders were outplayed from start to finish.

Bradley’s smart, though. He understand­s this game often times isn’t just.

You can be far and away better and still not win.

“But we played very well,” Bradley continued. “If that stat is correct — they didn’t shoot on goal once — obviously they had a few half chances. But by and large they weren’t dangerous. It’s a night where if you can get the first goal, you’re getting the second and the third goal as well. We couldn’t unlock the game with a play.”

The praise has been somewhat perplexing.

Yes, the Sounders became just the fourth team to shut out the Reds in 23 games played at BMO this season. Sure, they bottled up Giovinco and battled Altidore. Seattle did as much as they could and still conceded almost 20 shots Saturday night.

But the Reds didn’t concede a single shot on goal.

Then there’s the hope that TFC fans can get past Saturday night and look back over the entire season. It was special despite the finish.

“After what TFC has been through, (we) captured the hearts of Toronto fans,” Bezbatchen­ko told the Toronto Sun.

As TFC president Bill Manning told the Sun ahead of Saturday night’s loss, this offseason will be about “fine-tuning.”

Will Johnson won’t have long to figure out his future. He’s open to staying in Toronto but doesn’t want to be a bit part.

Also out-of-contract is Josh Williams, who the Reds could look to re-sign given they could lose a centre back like Nick Hagglund or Eriq Zavaleta in Tuesday’s expansion draft.

Expect Bradley’s name to frequent Google searches this winter. While TFC’s captain is being courted my mid— to lower-table teams in Italy, I’m told the Reds haven’t seen any firm offers from sizable clubs they or Bradley would even consider.

It then becomes about bringing in the two or three pieces that could tip things further in TFC’s favour come next season. Regardless, Toronto FC’s roster is going to look similar to what we saw throughout this playoff run.

“I’m not satisfied until we’re holding that Philip F. Anschutz Trophy, but this was a very successful season from many different angles and perspectiv­es,” Bezbatchen­ko said.

One that was — as two little boys put it — “so close” to bringing MLSE its first title.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Stefan Frei of the Seattle Sounders stops Michael Bradley of the Toronto FC during the penalty kick phase of the MLS Cup at BMO Field on Saturday. Seattle defeated Toronto in the 6th round of extra time penalty kicks.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Stefan Frei of the Seattle Sounders stops Michael Bradley of the Toronto FC during the penalty kick phase of the MLS Cup at BMO Field on Saturday. Seattle defeated Toronto in the 6th round of extra time penalty kicks.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada