The Province

Whitecaps and Earthquake­s settle for draw

Side is disappoint­ed after momentary lapse in the second half let visitors score the equalizer

- Patrick Johnston pjohnston@postmedia.com Twitter.com/risingacti­on

The final picture of Major League Soccer’s Western Conference standings is going down to the wire after the Vancouver Whitecaps drew 1-1 at home with the San Jose Earthquake­s Sunday afternoon at B.C. Place.

The result is one that’s left a bitter taste in the mouths of both players and fans, but in many ways this was a game that showed everything that this Whitecaps season has been about.

There was lots of stout defensive work, there was a brilliant goal and a good collection of quality scoring chances.

Against one of the West’s weakest defences, you really do get the feeling the Caps should have done better. Between a couple fine strikes from Fredy Montero and an early close-in shot by Brek Shea, there was more than one golden chance for the Whitecaps, which were denied by strong goalkeepin­g on the part of San Jose’s Andrew Tarbell.

After going out to a 1-0 lead midway through the first half on a brilliant passing sequence that Yordy Reyna finished off on the San Jose doorstep, the Whitecaps looked on their way to clinching first place in the west and a first-round bye.

But a 77th minute goal from Quakes winger Valeri Qazaishvil­i changed the story, drawing San Jose level and leaving the Caps thinking about what should have been.

They didn’t deserve to win, but on the quality of their chances, the Caps really should have left with the three points.

“I thought we were in total control,” Carl Robinson said. “(But) I thought a little mistake or loss of control might cost us and certainly it did.”

“Disappoint­ed,” was the postmatch mood in the Caps dressing room, Robinson said.

The equalizing goal came on a moment or two of inattentio­n, with the Quakes allowed too much space in midfield, before a ball played through Tim Parker’s legs by Quakes veteran Chris Wondolowsk­i.

Qazaishvil­i was the recipient and was able to fire a shot past Whitecaps keeper Stefan Marinovic, who was a surprise starter over David Ousted.

“It was a quick one, sometime you make decisions and they have quality as well and they take their chance,” Kendall Waston said of the goal.

The first half goal from Reyna was the Caps’ attacking strategy in a nut shell.

First, there was the quickly throw in by Fredy Montero to an open Brek Shea.

Then, there was a deft touch of patience from Tony Tchani — a moment of calm coming after a handful of rushed wayward passes — to spring Cristian Techera.

Then there was Jake Nerwinski’s perfect overlappin­g run, and the Techera pass to put him in a spot to put a cross over to, who else, Yordy Reyna.

It was quick, thrilling sequence in the middle of a half where the Caps had looked less than spectacula­r. Sounds like the season, doesn’t it?

But it’s a strategy that’s worked this year. They’re in the race to the top of the MLS Western Conference because of it. Will it work against Portland a week from now? The Caps are banking on it.

Portland won 4-0 on Sunday to keep themselves two points behind the Caps — Seattle are also still in the hunt after a 4-0 win of their own — setting up next week’s showdown in the Rose City.

The measure is simple. If the Caps win or draw against Portland, they’ll be champs. Nothing Seattle does against Colorado next Sunday can change that.

“There’s no pressure on us,” Robinson claimed, insisting it would be hard were they fighting for their playoff lives.

The West has been a turtle derby all season, so it really seems fitting it’s come to this.

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 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Whitecaps goalkeeper Stefan Marinovic dives to make a save against the San Jose Earthquake­s during Sunday’s game at B.C. Place Stadium.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS Whitecaps goalkeeper Stefan Marinovic dives to make a save against the San Jose Earthquake­s during Sunday’s game at B.C. Place Stadium.
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