The Standard (St. Catharines)

Canada looks to add to valuable FIFA ranking points

Started the year off 15 points back of El Salvador

- NEIL DAVIDSON

Two wins, eight goals but just 2.26 ranking points.

A pair of comfortabl­e 4-1 victories over No. 162 Barbados has given Canada confidence but done little to move the needle when it comes to the FIFA rankings. Canada remains in El Salvador’s rear-view mirror in the race for position in CONCACAF World Cup soccer qualifying.

The 73rd-ranked Canadian men hope to further top up their FIFA rankings point total Wednesday when they face No. 39 Iceland in an internatio­nal friendly in Irvine, Calif.

Iceland, coincident­ally, takes on No. 69 El Salvador on Sunday, although it was not immediatel­y clear Tuesday if that game was considered an internatio­nal friendly or training match (which does not involve ranking points).

The top six CONCACAF teams after the June internatio­nal window will qualify for the Hex, the most direct route of World Cup qualifying out of the region that covers North and Central America and the Caribbean.

The top three finishers in the Hex round qualify for Qatar 2022.

Canada started the year with 1,331.2 points in seventh spot in CONCACAF, 15 points behind sixth-place El Salvador. Canada’s total after Barbados wins is 1,333.456370, according to the Canadian Soccer Associatio­n. Failure to make the Hex means a more convoluted qualifying schedule for teams ranked seventh through 35th in the confederat­ion. The last team standing will meet the fourth-place Hex finisher to determine who represents CONCACAF in an interconti­nental playoff for a berth in the World Cup.

The CSA is loading up Canada’s schedule in a search for points. John Herdman’s team will look to play as often as it can in March and June internatio­nal windows.

The three games in January are worth fewer ranking points since they fall outside a FIFA internatio­nal window. Club teams do not have to release their players outside those windows, so Canada and Iceland will both be missing top talent Wednesday.

Herdman, a glass-half-fulltype of coach, sees positives in his team’s quest.

“When we get to October this year, one way or the other we’re going to be playing in World Cup qualificat­ion,’’ he said in an interview earlier this month.

And Herdman calls the secondary qualifying route “very doable for Canada.”

“It was always going to be a challenge to qualify for the Hex,” he said. “The World Cup dream is still alive because we do have another opportunit­y if we don’t make the Hex.”

Toronto FC midfielder Jonathan Osorio, who captained Canada for the first time in Friday’s win over Barbados, expects a tougher night against Iceland.

“This is a team that has been to the last World Cup, been to the last Euro (Championsh­ip) and made pushes at those tournament­s,” he told a media conference call Tuesday. “A team with a lot of confidence, that has an identity that has worked for them in the last few years.

“It’s going to be a great test for us, a really good test for us. At the same time, I think this game means a little bit more to us because of the way the ranking system works and qualifying to the World Cup works.”

Eight different players scored for Canada in the wins over Barbados. Charles-Andreas Brym, Amer Didic, Theo Bair and 17-year-old Jayden Nelson all scored their first senior goals for Canada.

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