The Province

Corbin-Ong gets started with Canada

FULLBACK: Friendly game against Scotland in Edinburgh will be his first with the national team

- NEIL DAVIDSON

It is a name to remember — La’Vere Lawrence Corbin-Ong.

And with any luck Wednesday, the London-born, North Vancouver-raised left fullback will be able to put Canadian internatio­nal before it.

His friends back home call him Lav, for short. In Germany, where he plays for FSV Frankfurt in the third division, his teammates call him Dante after the Brazilian who use to patrol the defence for Bayern Munich.

“Because no one can say La’Vere,” Corbin-Ong said. “And he also has curly hair (read Afro) and we kind of look similar.”

The 25-year-old Corbin-Ong received his first national team callup in advance of Canada’s friendly on Wednesday against Scotland in Edinburgh.

The Canadian Soccer Associatio­n website has no photo for CorbinOng and the only entry on his player timeline is the current Canada camp. His Canadian resume is essentiall­y a blank piece of paper.

Corbin-Ong is just happy to be here. And he is no stranger to extending a stay after arriving unheralded.

Victor Oppong, a former Canadian under-20 and under-23 defender who played in Germany, apparently pointed the CSA in Corbin-Ong’s direction. Oppong, put in touch with Corbin-Ong upon his arrival in Germany via mutual contacts, helped him find an apartment and him get settled.

Corbin-Ong was born in London to a Barbadian father and Malaysian mother, who were in England for school/work. He was one when they moved to Edmonton and four when they settled in North Vancouver.

After high school, he played one season at Capilano University before joining the Vancouver Whitecaps residency program.

He was headed to UBC after that but its season had already started. So with five months to kill before he could join the Thunderbir­ds, he went to Europe in 2012.

“It just ended up being a bit longer than I thought it would be,” he said with a chuckle.

“Definitely overall a happy experience,” he added. “And one I’m happy I made it through.”

He got a tryout with FC Pommern Greifswald, an amateur fifth-division team, through a high-school coach who had a link to an agent.

“It was an experience, I can say that,” said Corbin-Ong. “It was part of (the former) East Germany and when you don’t know any German and you kid of look a little different, I wouldn’t say it was the easiest place to start.”

He was enrolled in a school for newcomers to the country, studying for three to four hours a day for some two months to learn language basics.

After two years, he moved to Berliner AK 07, a fourth-division side.

“Berlin’s a great city to live in,” he said. “I met a lot of people I still talk to on that team.”

He spent two years in the German capital, becoming more acclimatiz­ed to the language and culture. He moved last summer to Frankfurt, which had just been relegated from the second division.

“Frankfurt’s a beautiful city,” he said. “The club, I’m enjoying playing at a higher level, and being able to play the game I live.”

Frankfurt (6-12-10) stands 18th in the 20-team league but its defensive record has been good, with 31 goals conceded in 28 games. It has only scored 30 goals, however. “Goals for, we’re working for it,” he said.

At No. 67, Scotland is ranked 50 places above the Canadian men. Canada is 0-5-0 against the Scots, outscored 13-2.

Scotland won 3-1 the last time they met in 2002 at Easter Road Stadium, the same venue as Wednesday’s game.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? La’Vere Lawrence Corbin-Ong, left, celebrates alongside Massimo Ornatelli after scoring for FSV Frankfurt in October in Frankfurt, Germany.
— GETTY IMAGES La’Vere Lawrence Corbin-Ong, left, celebrates alongside Massimo Ornatelli after scoring for FSV Frankfurt in October in Frankfurt, Germany.
 ?? NICK PROCAYLO/PNG FILES ?? Back when he was younger and had less hair, La’Vere Corbin-Ong was part of the Whitecaps in 2011 before heading overseas to Germany.
NICK PROCAYLO/PNG FILES Back when he was younger and had less hair, La’Vere Corbin-Ong was part of the Whitecaps in 2011 before heading overseas to Germany.

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