The Province

Robinson praises young Whitecaps

With regulars resting at home, lesser lights show resilience in loss to Montreal

- J.J. Adams jadams@postmedia.com

Down 3-0 at halftime to the Montreal Impact in Tuesday’s second leg of the Canadian Championsh­ip semifinal, Whitecaps head coach Carl Robinson was faced with a teachable moment.

“It’s easy to go under, but let’s not go under,” he told his charges in the locker-room, a group of players short nine Major League Soccer regulars left at home to rest.

“Let’s show who we are and who we can be, and let’s try and win that second half. We kept fighting, which was really positive for these young players, because a lot of them haven’t played too many games.” Consider it lesson learned. The Caps battled back to within 4-2 — Alphonso Davies and Kyle Grieg scored for Vancouver — and came within a last-second save from Impact keeper Maxime Crépeau from going through on away goals.

It was a remarkable display of resilience after Montreal took the lead on two penalty kicks — one of them questionab­le, a common occurrence for the Whitecaps — but Vancouver absorbed those gut-punches to close the gap, and again after the Impact went up 3-1 on Anthony Jackson-Hamel’s 61st-minute goal.

The Canadian Championsh­ip provided a chance for the younger players to showcase their skills in hostile territory on a meaningful stage.

“They all want to play ... but they rarely get opportunit­ies,” Robinson said after the game.

“I used this tournament as a platform to give them opportunit­ies. I have to make decisions on players, and it’s easier to make decisions when they’ve played in big, big games, and it certainly was today.

“It was a great game. Both games have been really enjoyable. From my side we got some valuable minutes for players who haven’t been playing regularly in Major League Soccer. The travel this week has been difficult which is why I left nine firstteam boys at home.”

Davies was a star yet again, his 59th-minute unassisted goal sparking the visitors’ second-half surge, coming after at the break. He played 45 minutes, though Robinson’s plan to limit his playing time was scrapped when Nicholas Mezquida picked up a high ankle sprain on a heavy, two-footed challenge.

“The kid’s got huge upside ... we know that,” said Robinson. “It’s important that we just take our time with him. He’s been in and out of the team. I leave him out for certain reasons and the press asks me why?

“He’s 16. He still plays PlayStatio­n, he still goes to malls, he still does all these things. But his curfew’s 10 o’clock. His mom and dad say it’s important he does his schoolwork or he doesn’t play. So it’s important I manage him. When he came on he’s exciting. He’s dangerous. He’s an exciting prospect.”

The Whitecaps now look ahead to Saturday’s game against Atlanta United FC, the surprising expansion squad that leads MLS with 27 goals, and has the third-best road record (2-2-3) in the Eastern Conference.

Montreal will now face either Toronto or Ottawa, with the Fury taking a surprise lead into their second-leg game, which went Wednesday afternoon.

“I wish Montreal all the best in the final, but there’s always a few twists and turns in this tournament and I’ve seen a lot of them,” said Robinson. “It’s football. Doesn’t surprise me.”

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Vancouver defender Jake Nerwinski and Impact midfielder Ignacio Piatti battle for the ball during the Canadian Championsh­ip semifinal Tuesday in Montreal. The Whitecaps lost but their coach was encouraged by the play of his younger players.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Vancouver defender Jake Nerwinski and Impact midfielder Ignacio Piatti battle for the ball during the Canadian Championsh­ip semifinal Tuesday in Montreal. The Whitecaps lost but their coach was encouraged by the play of his younger players.
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