The Welland Tribune

Impact desperate for turnaround

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KURTIS LARSON Look down. Look way down in the standings. Look down as far as you can in the Eastern Conference.

There rests the Montreal Impact, a last-place club sitting behind lowly DC United on goal-differenti­al.

Toronto FC’s bitter rival enters Tuesday night’s Canadian Championsh­ip final desperate to turn around its season.

“Things aren’t going as smoothly as they’d like between results and injuries and things like that,” TFC coach Greg Vanney said.

“This kind of championsh­ip game becomes a pivotal moment.”

There’s no question the Impact have underperfo­rmed following an appearance in last year’s Eastern Conference championsh­ip.

They’ve lost a key player to a season-ending injury and felt aggrieved last week after TFC earned a 1-1 draw at Saputo Stadium.

“This could be one of those results that makes the season feel a lot longer,” Vanney added.

“Last year we were able to snatch a result at the end from Vancouver and I think they had a hard time recovering from that.”

Perhaps the Impact haven’t yet recovered from last year’s playoff loss – a series that caused hatred to fester on and off the pitch.

At the start of Wednesday night’s opening leg, Impact supporters unveiled a cheap-looking banner that read “F--- Toronto” across it.

It didn’t take long for TFC to return the sentiment. Jozy Altidore stepped past an injured Daniel Lovtiz minutes later to score the equalizer.

The Impact cried foul. The Reds wouldn’t admit to any wrongdoing.

Welcome to one of Major League Soccer’s top rivalries.

“It’s a huge game,” Michael Bradley told reporters. “You can’t overstate how big a game it is against Montreal.

“It’s a chance to win a trophy and be the best Canadian team and secure our spot in Champions League next year.

“It’s a really big night. We hear it’s going to be a great crowd. It’s exciting.”

The Reds will look to feed off that energy to reverse the affects of their hellish schedule.

A bizarre Saturday-WednesdayF­riday-Tuesday run of games means Toronto FC is set to compete in its fourth match in 12 days.

“It’s fun to play games that are meaningful – especially ones that are for championsh­ips,” Vanney added

“I think we’re still recovering physically from the last two games a little bit but we have 24 hours to regroup and get ready to go.

“My sense is everyone will be very excited to play in front of our home fans and for another trophy.”

Tactically, look for the Reds to go in search of an early tally.

Vanney hinted Monday his side has no plans to sit back and protect its first-leg lead (away goals will serve as a tie-breaker).

“If we do things the right way with the right amount of attention and urgency then we give ourselves the best chance to win,” Vanney said.

“We’re going to play this game like we have to win this game – and in a smart way with the right amount of urgency.”

Thank United States bench boss Bruce Arena for granting TFC something of a reprieve.

Arenaselec­tedJustinM­orrow,who will miss Tuesday night’s match, as a partofhisG­oldCupsqua­dbutallowe­d veterans Altidore and Bradley to remain with their club team.

“It’s massive,” Vanney responded. “We appreciate­d U.S. Soccer’s understand­ing of the value to those guys to our team

“(Arena) is taking the time to look at some other players who maybe don’t play as regularly. It’s mutually beneficial, as these situations usually are.”

Expect Bradley to be inserted back into TFC’s lineup for arguably the biggest match so far this season.

It’s unclear if Altidore will start for the third time in less than a full week given the Reds are required to start three Canadians.

“The good news is we are, by and large, healthy,” Vanney explained. “We’ve got a full compliment of guys who can step in.

“We can’t judge where guys are today. It’s a matter of where we think they’ll be tomorrow, heading into the game.”

The Reds have made all the right decisions so far this season.

A few more good choices could see Montreal’s campaign go from bad to worse – not that it can drop any further in the standings.

 ?? PAUL CHIASSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Toronto FC forward Sebastian Giovinco, left, and Montreal Impact’s Blerim Dzemaili battle for the ball during second half of the first leg of the Canadian Championsh­ip soccer final action, in Montreal last Wednesday.
PAUL CHIASSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto FC forward Sebastian Giovinco, left, and Montreal Impact’s Blerim Dzemaili battle for the ball during second half of the first leg of the Canadian Championsh­ip soccer final action, in Montreal last Wednesday.

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