Times Colonist

TFC rolls over ’Caps for another Canadian title

- TORONTO 5 VANCOUVER 2 (TFC wins 7-4 on aggregate) NEIL DAVIDSON

TORONTO — In a season that has gone south since losing the CONCACAF Champions League final in a penalty shootout, Toronto FC finally had something to celebrate Wednesday.

With a rampant Jozy Altidore firing in three goals, the MLS champions turned back the clock in a commanding 5-2 second-leg win over the Vancouver Whitecaps in the Canadian Championsh­ip final. Toronto won 7-4 on aggregate to raise the Voyageurs Trophy for a seventh time and earn its ticket back into CONCACAF’s elite club competitio­n.

But with a morning flight to San Jose looming for a game Saturday, there was little time to party after the cloud of confetti was cleaned up and the last beat of the drum in front of the south stand fans. At 6-12-5, seven points out of the playoffs with 11 games remaining, Toronto knows there is more work to do.

“Tonight was important for a lot of reasons,” said Toronto coach Greg Vanney. “Because if you come into tonight and there’s a trophy on the line and you don’t win it, that’s another kick in the gut to this group that’s had a lot of challenges to deal with this year.”

Sebastian Giovinco contribute­d a goal and two assists with substitute Tosaint Ricketts adding a goal. Kei Kamara and Brek Shea scored late goals for Vancouver to make things interestin­g. Jonathan Osorio, a local boy playing in his 200th game in all competitio­ns for TFC, won the George Gross Memorial Trophy as tournament MVP after scoring three goals in four games.

Altidore’s goal spree helped the big man win his way back into TFC fans’ hearts after being sent off early for lashing out with his boot in a 3-2 league loss to New York City FC on the weekend. He is just the fourth player in club history to record a hat trick.

Altidore did not speak to the media after with club officials citing an undisclose­d ailment. But his “Cometh the hour, cometh the man” performanc­e drew plaudits.

“For me, the bigger the game, the bigger the Jozy a lot of times,” said Vanney.

In winning the Canadian Championsh­ip for a third straight year, TFC consigned Vancouver to a seventh runner-up finish. The Whitecaps have won once — in 2015 — since the tournament’s inception in 2008.

While he lamented not being able to score the first goal and the long trip from the West Coast, Whitecaps manager Carl Robinson said the better team won.

“On the day we knew if their big players turned up, it was going to be difficult,” he said.

“We’ve been in the final a couple of times and we’ve come up a little bit short. We came up a little bit short again today, but sometimes you’ve to give the opposition credit,” he added.

The Canadian Championsh­ip final has a history of being decided late, but there was little drama Wednesday. Toronto led 2-0 at the half and 4-0 after 53 minutes.

Robinson praised his team’s character for mounting a comeback at 4-0. But normal TFC service resumed with Ricketts’ goal, allowing the 14,994 on hand at BMO Field to return to celebratio­ns.

The win was worth a $50,000 US team bonus and entry into the CONCACAF Champions League, the elite club competitio­n covering North and Central America and the Caribbean.

“It keeps us playing important games,” said captain Michael Bradley.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Toronto FC captain Michael Bradley hoists the Voyageurs Cup after beating the Whitecaps 5-2 on Wednesday.
CHRIS YOUNG, THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto FC captain Michael Bradley hoists the Voyageurs Cup after beating the Whitecaps 5-2 on Wednesday.

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