The Province

Canadian women prep for Costa Rica rematch

- Neil Davidson

TORONTO — John Herdman is looking for some more clinical finishing in front of goal. But off the field, his Canadian women’s soccer team is as sharp as ever.

Herdman lost track of his soccer boots after Canada’s 3-1 victory Thursday over Costa Rica in Winnipeg. When his boot bag was returned to him, his beloved black Copa Mundial boots had been spray-painted pink.

“It could be any one of this group,” Herdman said with resignatio­n when asked who the culprit might be. “It’s sacrilege to touch a man’s Copas,” he said with mock indignatio­n.

On the plus side, the as-yet unidentifi­ed prankster(s) left the Canadian coach a brand new pair of Copa Mundials — a classic Adidas shoe first released in 1979 — to ease his pain.

Too smart to contemplat­e payback — any retaliator­y move would only be returned three-fold, he said — Herdman just put on his new shoes Saturday and led practice.

Joking aside, Herdman hopes his players have their scoring boots on for Sunday’s rematch with the Costa Ricans after failing to put the Central Americans away early in Winnipeg.

Canada got goals from Jessie Fleming (third minute), captain Christine Sinclair (52nd, penalty) and Adriana Leon (92nd). Sinclair’s goal was her 168th in 258 national team appearance­s. The Canadians could have had a lot more. They fired 48 crosses and shots against Costa Rica.

“Needs work,” Herdman said of the finishing.

It’s been an issue this year. The Canadian women created plenty of scoring chances at the Algarve Cup but produced just three goals in four games and finished runner-up.

“That ruthlessne­ss in front of goal” has been missing. But Herdman likes the number of scoring chances his team is creating.

Against Costa Rica, Canada also dropped off for about 15 minutes while leading 2-0. That allowed the Costa Ricans to get back into the game.

Fullback Allysha Chapman will sit out Sunday’s game after tweaking a hamstring in Winnipeg. Goalkeeper Sabrina D’Angelo remains sidelined with a twisted ankle after a freak training accident.

Thursday’s win improved Canada’s all-time record against Costa Rica to 11-0-0 with a 36-5 edge in goals.

But the Central Americans, who at No. 30 stand fourth in the CONCACAF rankings, are seen as a team on the rise in the region.

The Winnipeg game, which drew an announced crowd of 14,434 to Investors Group Field, was Canada’s eighth since winning bronze in Rio last summer. The Canadian women are 5-2-1 over that stretch with the lone losses to 13th-ranked Spain in the Algarve Cup final in March and top-ranked Germany in an April friendly. Sunday marks Canada’s first game in Toronto since a pre-Olympic friendly loss to Brazil in June 2016. Organizers expect a crowd in excess of 20,000.

It sounds like Herdman will leave his lineup largely untouched. He said he plans to “keep playing my best team.”

 ?? — CP ?? From left, team Canada soccer players Desiree Scott, Christine Sinclair and coach John Herdman hope to capitalize more on their chances in their rematch against Costa Rica on Sunday in Toronto.
— CP From left, team Canada soccer players Desiree Scott, Christine Sinclair and coach John Herdman hope to capitalize more on their chances in their rematch against Costa Rica on Sunday in Toronto.

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