Waterloo Region Record

Toronto FC is ready to take on the Red Bulls

- Neil Davidson The Canadian Press

Toronto FC posed for its team photo Thursday, with the Voyageurs Cup and Supporters’ Shield proudly displayed in front.

The battle for a third trophy, the MLS Cup, starts for real early next week against the New York Red Bulls in the opening leg of the two-game Major League Soccer Eastern Conference semifinal.

“The big one that we want to try and get to is the one that is in front of us now,” coach Greg Vanney said after training Thursday. “But the only thing that matters for the MLS Cup that we’re trying to get is the next game and it’s in New York and it’s going to be a tough one and we need to be prepared for that.

“It’s one game at a time, one play at a time. And trying to be really focused and engaged in the moment,” Vanney said.

“That’s the most important thing as you play in the playoffs because one mistake either way can turn a game and turn a series upside down.”

That might sound like a cliché but Toronto (20-5-9) really has approached its record-breaking season one step at time. There were goals — like winning the hardware that comes with the Canadian Championsh­ip and finishing atop the regular-season standings — but the team has been careful not to get ahead of itself.

If you’re juggling five balls, it’s a lot easier to focus on catching the next one than all five.

Unfinished business has been the TFC mindset since losing the MLS Cup via penalty shootout last December to Seattle at BMO Field. The players are reminded of that painful loss every day at the club’s well-appointed training centre, where an empty trophy case awaits the Philip F. Anschutz Trophy in their lounge. Vanney says his team is ready. “In the last week and today in particular, I think there’s just a different level of engagement,” he said. “There’s just another little notch of intensity. The group is very much aware of what’s behind us is behind us and what’s in front of us is what we need to prepare for and what we can try to affect.”

The sixth-seeded Red Bulls (14-12-8 during the regular season) upset third-seeded Chicago 4-0 on the road Wednesday, advancing to face top-seeded Toronto. The series will start Monday or Tuesday at Red Bull Arena before switching to BMO Field on Nov. 5.

Toronto has been idle since rallying for a 2-2 tie in Atlanta last Sunday in the regular-season finale. TFC finished 19 points ahead of the Red Bulls this season. The two teams tied 1-1 at Red Bull Arena in May, with Toronto winning 4-2 at home in September.

“You can make an argument that having the home game first sets the tone for the series,” Red Bulls coach Jesse Marsch said after the Chicago win. “So it’s time to put our money where our mouth is. Toronto is a very good team and the reason why we haven’t beaten them is because they’re a very good team.”

But the Red Bulls come into the Toronto series with momentum. They are unbeaten in four (3-0-1) and having lost just once in their last six outings (3-1-2), with the lone setback the Sept. 30 defeat in Toronto. Prior to that loss, the New Yorkers had gone winless in eight in all competitio­ns (0-3-5).

But they went 9-2-6 at Red Bull Arena this season, outscoring the opposition 30-14. Vanney says a visit to the stadium in suburban Harrison, N.J., always means a competitiv­e game.

“I think that’s just New York in general,” he said of the Red Bulls. The Red Bulls, who entered the league 11 years before Toronto arrived in 2007, have 47 playoff games under their franchise belt, compared to seven for Toronto (4-3-0).

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