Vancouver Sun

ROBBO’S LAST STAND

Loss sealed fate, but Caps blame selves

- J.J. ADAMS jadams@postmedia.com

There was plenty of finger-pointing after Carl Robinson’s dismissal, but most people involved were pointing right at themselves.

“Carl was someone who brought me in to this club, he believed in me, believed in how I could play, believed I could fit the system, and I respect him so much as a coach,” Vancouver Whitecaps striker Kei Kamara said Tuesday.

“When I heard the news, I took it personally . ... I feel like we did that to him as players; or I did that to him. If I would have been better on those crosses on the weekend, and those corner kicks didn’t go in, he still would have been here. So I feel responsibl­e for part of it.”

Robinson readily shouldered the entirety of the blame following his Major League Soccer team’s 2-1 loss to FC Dallas on the weekend, a result that poured water on the team’s already-sputtering playoff hopes. Two days later, he and his three assistant coaches were fired.

“I know Robbo blamed himself when we lost (Sunday’s) game,” said centreback Kendall Waston. “But we are the ones on the pitch. He’s not there. He’s not running, he’s not tackling, he’s not heading. It’s our responsibi­lity as well.”

Five games remain in the regular season, and the team isn’t out of the playoff hunt, trailing sixthplace Seattle by only four points. But the teams they ’re chasing have easier schedules, and throw in the little matter of the Caps possibly missing up to six potential starters for a showdown with Sporting Kansas City because of internatio­nal call-ups in October, and the chances of snagging that final berth seem grim.

While the players are accepting their part in Robinson’s terminatio­n, there’s plenty of blame to share.

The departed coach had a clear philosophy of the type of team he favoured: a deep squad that allowed for frequent rotation, one that played a defensivel­y stout, counter-attacking style.

But he had only one playoff victory in the four-plus seasons he was in charge, and never recorded more than 16 wins in a season.

His record of player acquisitio­n was inconsiste­nt and seemingly without clear focus, with issues like the need for a creative, attacking midfielder left unfilled since Camilo’s departure.

And imagine if Fredy Montero, on the books for $1.8 million in 2017 but one of the off-season departures, was paired with Kamara as a striking tandem. The Caps have the same amount of money tied up in Brek Shea, Efrain Juarez, Anthony Blondell and the now-departed Bernie Ibini, all of whom saw limited playing time this season.

Kamara has 13 MLS goals this season, the same as Montero in 2017, both the second-highest total in team history since Camilo’s 22 in 2013.

While Robinson could have spent money better, he also didn’t have much to spend, constraine­d by a team salary cap that lagged far behind the quickly expanding league’s rate of inflation. In his first season in 2014, Vancouver was the fifth-highest spending team in MLS, with a $5.4-million payroll. This season, they’re 16th at $8.2 million.

It’s true a massive salary doesn’t guarantee success — Toronto FC, L.A. Galaxy and Chicago, three of the four highest-salaried teams in the league, might miss the playoffs — but it does make it easier over the long term.

Apart from 2015, when the Portland Timbers and their ninthranke­d payroll won the MLS Cup (Vancouver was eighth in team pay), every champion has had a vastly higher payroll than the Caps.

And in his first four seasons, Robinson was the loyal soldier, deflecting criticism of the front office’s penny-pinching ways. But his tone changed notably this year as more teams began shelling out for big-name players.

Robinson began to chafe under the financial restrictio­ns, his public comments a precursor to him being pushed out as head coach as his bosses in the team’s Water Street office took notice.

And as the team began to hemorrhage goals at a team-record pace, leading to dropped points and making the playoffs a diminishin­g prospect, the front-office machinatio­ns of moving to a new coach began to stir. Stagnation also played a part. While the team has scored more goals this season than it ever had under Robinson, the underlying numbers and issues are still the same.

The Caps ranked 22nd out of 23 teams this season in possession (45.9 per cent), and never matched Robinson’s first season (49.7, fifth overall) again, ranking in the bottom three every year since. Playing largely without the ball, they logically ranked near the bottom in passes attempted — they’re deadlast this year — and in the bottom third in per-game averages in shots (12.6) and shots on target (4.5).

The new coach, whomever it may be, will likely overhaul the roster. The team will have a huge shift in player philosophy and team tactics, and it could mean the departure of some fan favourites.

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 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Vancouver Whitecaps player Ali Ghazal, front, and FC Dallas’ Cristian Colman, right, vie for the ball as Vancouver’s Kendall Waston backs his teammate up during Saturday’s deflating Whitecaps loss, a defeat that ultimately cost head coach Carl Robinson his job.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Vancouver Whitecaps player Ali Ghazal, front, and FC Dallas’ Cristian Colman, right, vie for the ball as Vancouver’s Kendall Waston backs his teammate up during Saturday’s deflating Whitecaps loss, a defeat that ultimately cost head coach Carl Robinson his job.
 ??  ?? Carl Robinson
Carl Robinson

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