Times Colonist

Whitecaps look for boost from new signings

- JIM MORRIS

VANCOUVER — As the Vancouver Whitecaps prepared for their Major League Soccer seasonopen­ing game today against the Philadelph­ia Union, head coach Carl Robinson was asked how his team will be better this year than last year’s disappoint­ing showing.

“It’s a difficult question to answer prior to the season,” said the former Welsh internatio­nal.

“If you ask me at the end of the season, I will be able to give you an answer.”

Perhaps Robinson was hesitant to answer, given the way last season played out. At one point last year the Whitecaps were 8-8-6 and still in the playoff hunt. But they managed just two wins in the final 14 games and finished with a 10-15-9 record. That left them eighth in the 10-team Western Conference, seven points out of the playoffs.

The Whitecaps struggled to score goals last season while conceding the second most in the conference. There also were questions about the harmony in the locker-room.

“We had plenty of opportunit­ies to pick up wins along the way,” team president Bob Lenarduzzi said. “For one reason or another, we just didn’t get it done.

“I have been around teams and players where things start to unravel. I don’t know if it was a real indictment of the chemistry of the team.”

The Whitecaps will field their new-look team in MLS action for the first time today. In a bid to boost their attack, Vancouver was busy in the off-season, acquiring players such as Colombian striker Fredy Montero, a three-time MLS all-star; American forward Brek Shea; and Peruvian midfielder Yordy Reyna, who is sidelined with a foot injury. The Whitecaps also brought in defenders, including Americans Jake Nerwinski and Sheanon Williams.

They will join a team that has goalkeeper David Ousted, hardnosed Costa Rican defender Kendall Waston; Uruguayan winger Cristian Techera; forward Kekuta Manneh; and 16-year-old Canadian Alphonso Davies.

Montero showed his value by scoring a goal in Vancouver’s 2-0 win over the New York Red Bulls in Thursday’s CONCACAF Championsh­ips League quarter-final. The Whitecaps won the two-game series 3-1 on aggregate and will play Tigres UANL of Monterrey, Mexico, in the Champions League semifinal.

Montero and Shea bring veteran experience to the Whitecaps’ attack. They also appear to have developed a chemistry with Davies. “We have a good pedigree in the league,” said Montero, 29. “We want to jump into the field with the same energy, the same hunger as the young kids.”

Shea has been with the team for only a few days, but likes what he sees. “It seems like everyone has good camaraderi­e,” said the 27-year-old, who has played 34 games and scored four goals for the United States. “Everyone is on the same path and want to do well and have each others back.”

The Whitecaps had a breakthrou­gh season in 2015. In the MLS, they had a 16-13-5 record to finish second in the Western Conference and earn their first home playoff match. Vancouver also won the Amway Canadian Championsh­ip to qualify for the Champions League. The Whitecaps scored 45 goals that year, but let in only 36.

Lenarduzzi said Vancouver must be better defensivel­y in 2017. “That’s just not your defenders,” he said.

“That’s your whole unit that isn’t putting a premium on not conceding goals. We gave them up at bad times.”

Last year, the Whitecaps made costly mental mistakes during games and committed too many fouls, which led to players missing games through suspension.

“I think we need to cut out the silly mistakes,” Robinson said. “We made too many elementary mistakes last year, individual­ly and collective­ly.”

The Union finished sixth in the Eastern Conference last year with a 11-14-9 record. They lost in the opening round of the playoffs to Toronto. Union coach Jim Curtin said opening the season on the road at B.C. Place Stadium will be a challenge.

“We know Vancouver has a ton of speed out wide,” Curtin told the Union website.

“We’ll have to deal with that and be smart in transition.”

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