Cape Breton Post

Ready for challenge

Canadian women’s internatio­nal Labbe looks to win job with men’s club team

- BY NEIL DAVIDSON

Goalkeeper Stephanie Labbe, who has earned 49 caps for Canada and helped the women’s team claim Olympic bronze in Rio, is looking to win a job with the Calgary Foothills FC men’s soccer team.

The 31-year-old from Stony Plain, Alta., has been Canada’s No. 1 since veteran Erin McLeod was sidelined with a knee injury prior to the 2016 Olympics.

With McLeod’s return at the recent Algarve Cup, Canadian coach Kenneth Heiner-Moller used all three of his goalies but chose Labbe for the first and last matches.

Labbe has been looking for a club since parting ways with the NWSL Washington Spirit in February. No other NWSL club picked her up and Labbe elected not to go overseas, having already played six seasons there.

So she looked for alternativ­es.

“The place I am in my career right now I just feel like I’m ready for something completely different and ready to challenge myself in ways that I’ve never been challenged before,” she said in an interview. “This (the men’s game) is where all the arrows were pointing and I started reaching out to different coaches of different clubs.

“At first I got a lot of resistance ... I kept pushing because I knew that I would end up coming across somebody who was

kind of the same open mind as myself.”

That turned out to be Tommy Wheeldon Jr., head coach and technical director of Calgary Foothills.

“His first message to me was ‘If you want to come and give it a shot then we’ll give you the opportunit­y just as we’ll give anyone else the opportunit­y and we’re going to judge you based on your ability to play football, not on your gender.’

“As soon as he said that, it almost gave me goosebumps because for someone to look at me as a football player and not as a female football player was huge.”

The Foothills play in the

Premier Developmen­t League, a feeder league sponsored by United Soccer Leagues in the United States and Canada.

Wheeldon calls it a pro-am league. “It’s run profession­ally with amateur players.”

The league has been home to a lot of MLS players, who augmented their college career with PDL play prior to making it to the top North American league.

With the Canadian Premier League set to kick off in 2019, the Calgary PDL club will soon have a new circuit to feed.

Wheeldon said he was won over by Labbe’s profession­alism when she started training with his team.

“She’s a super-strong personalit­y and the players have taken to her,” he said. “All I said to her is we’re a forward-thinking club, we’re always openminded and players are based on ability. And if she can come in and perform at the level that we need her, then yeah we’re open-minded to put her into the action, no problem.”

The Calgary club is currently in training camp, leaving for pre-season tour to the United Kingdom on March 20.Labbe is set to play in an exhibition game this weekend against Lethbridge before heading off to join Canada ahead of an April 9 game in France.

Wheeldon said he will giver

her some more game action when she returns to see if she is a good fit.

“All I can say is she’s come in with an unbelievab­le attitude and looks good in training,” he said.

Labbe said the biggest adjustment so far has been going up for a cross “and getting hit by someone that’s 15 kilos heavier than anyone I’ve ever faced before.”

But she says, after a few days practice, she is already adjusting to that and the power and speed of men’s shots.

The Calgary club is set to kick off its regular season on May 11 against the Victoria Highlander­s.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Canadian goalkeeper Stephanie Labbe in action against the United States during a friendly soccer match in Vancouver on Nov. 9, 2017.
CP PHOTO Canadian goalkeeper Stephanie Labbe in action against the United States during a friendly soccer match in Vancouver on Nov. 9, 2017.

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