Waterloo Region Record

TFC brass welcomes Bradley’s brutal honesty

- NEIL DAVIDSON

TORONTO — When Michael Bradley speaks, people listen — even if they are his bosses.

So the Toronto FC brain trust was both diplomatic and attentive Tuesday when asked about their captain’s pointed weekend comments that the underperfo­rming Major League Soccer club had come up short — from top to bottom — in understand­ing the challenges of its 2018 post-championsh­ip campaign.

General manager Tim Bezbatchen­ko called his captain’s comments an “honest assessment from his point of view.”

“As Michael said, from top down there are certainly things that we could have done better and we need to do better,” Bezbatchen­ko said. “I think Michael’s right. And I think (coach) Greg (Vanney), myself and (team president) Bill (Manning) and the whole team will examine our operations to see how we can manage multiple competitio­ns.”

Saturday’s 4-2 loss to visiting Los Angeles FC left ninth-place Toronto nine points out of the Eastern Conference playoff picture with seven games remaining. It is 7-14-6 with 27 points. At the same time last season, TFC was 16-3-8 and had 56 points.

After the latest setback, a measured Bradley questioned the mentality of a team that has failed to perform with a target on its back this season. And he doubled-down Tuesday, shaking his head at the team’s league-worst 0-13-1 record when giving up the first goal.

“That’s ridiculous and it speaks to a mentality that in too many cases is too fragile,” he said.

Without directly disputing his skipper’s weekend take, Vanney seemed less convinced.

“First off I would say Michael is entitled to his opinion and sharing it with you,” he said. “However, what I would say is we’ve learned a lot of things through the course of this season . ... From me and everybody I spoke to, we knew this season was going to be everybody gunning for us and it was going to be a real challenge.

“So I think that’s up for you to ask Michael if he wants to be more specific. But other than that, for me, I think we obviously haven’t met the challenges ... what those shortcomin­gs were I think is for us to really look into the mirror as each of us — and try to be better for it as we move forward.”

Vanney said TFC proved it can rise to the occasion in turning the franchise from league doormat to record-breaking champion.

“This year was a new set of challenges and we’re going to learn a lot from them and we’ll be better for it when we move into next year.”

Both Vanney and Bezbatchen­ko pointed to the long list of injuries that followed the gruelling eight-game CONCACAF Champions League campaign right out of the gate.

“It’s easier to be mentally strong when you can put out your best 11 players ... It’s easier when you know a player is returning next game and not 10 games from now,” Bezbatchen­ko said.

“I think mental strength is something that we need to certainly improve and figure out whether or not it’s the character of the guys or something that we believe you can learn how to be mentally strong,” he said.

“But it’s also the situation you put people in. And if for a prolonged period of time you’re without the players that can be difference-makers, then that’s going to wear on you mentally.”

Vanney said the team’s crowded game and travel schedule has meant some 60 to 70 fewer training sessions to date this season. The physical demands on the players this season are one reason the team has conceded more goals late in the game, he added.

“We as a group are definitely not as durable right now at this point this year as we were last year,” Vanney said.

“I really think we got off to a really challengin­g start and have been trying to manage our way back into it since,” he added. “That’s the fact of the situation. Again lessons learned. No excuses. We need as a sports science department, as a coaching staff, as a club to understand what those things are and try to be better at them in the future.”

One thing that should improve is the playing surface.

Bezbatchen­ko says, when the calendar permits, the club plans to resod the playing surface with a hybrid surface that has natural grass attached to artificial roots. While more expensive, the hybrid surface is said to be sturdier.

Due to an internatio­nal break, Toronto is off until Sept. 15 when it hosts the Los Angeles Galaxy.

“We’ve done an awful lot of talking this year among ourselves,” Bradley said. “So at this point there isn’t anything that hasn’t been said. Everybody knows the situation we’re in. Everybody knows that our margin for error is gone. We’ve got to run the table here.”

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Michael Bradley

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