Montreal Gazette

Impact drawing on Canadian content

Tissot, Ouimette, Lefevre perform well under pressure

- BILL BEACON THE CANADIAN PRESS

When the injury-depleted Impact took the field in Vancouver this week, there were four Canadians in the starting 11.

That would not have been a big deal in the past when the Impact played in the United Soccer League or the North American Soccer League and locals like Mauro Biello and Nevio Pizzolitto were key players, but it was a first since they joined Major League Soccer in 2012.

More importantl­y, the Canadians did well on the field.

Left back Karl Ouimette and midfielder­s Patrice Bernier, Issey Nakajima-Ferran and Maxim Tissot helped the Impact pick up a valuable point on the road in the 0-0 draw that saw Tissot miss the best chance of the match when his shot from the edge of the penalty area struck the bar.

“For young players, when you get a chance, you’ve got to take it,” Tissot said Friday. “Karl played a great game and when Wandrille Lefevre and (American rookie) Erik Miller went in, they played well.

“That’s what we have to do, us young players. Bring a lot of energy when we go in.”

First-year coach Frank Klopas, a Greek-American, has not been shy to use the team’s Canadian content.

Bernier, of Brossard, is the team captain and has been a starter since he joined the Impact for its MLS debut three seasons ago. Calgary native Nakajima-Ferran was an experience­d MLS player when he arrived last month in a trade with Toronto FC for midfielder Collen Warner.

But Tissot and Ouimette are graduates of the team’s academy who are still establishi­ng themselves in North America’s top league.

Tissot, of Gatineau, has played in six of the team’s 14 league games and started three this season. Ouimette, of Repentigny, has started seven and went in as a substitute in another. French-born Lefevre, whose family moved to Montreal when he was 14, has started in five of six appearance­s.

“It’s nice to see that the academy kids can come in and perform and that they’re trusted in a game that wasn’t easy,” said Bernier, who started his pro career with the Impact in 2000, then went to Europe for a decade. “Especially in Vancouver, against a team that has a lot of offensive power.

“To come out of that with a zero and a solid performanc­e, it’s great. It shows the developmen­t of Canadian players is going in the right direction.”

Two other academy grads, goalkeeper Maxime Crépeau, of Candiac, and midfielder Zakaria Messoudi, of Montreal, have yet to play this season. Messoudi has been on loan to Ottawa of the NASL.

Montreal was missing some key players in Vancouver, as striker Marco Di Vaio and midfielder­s Justin Mapp and Sanna Nyassi were injured, while midfielder Felipe stayed home while his wife gave birth to a son.

Felipe, Mapp and possibly Di Vaio may return when the Impact play host to the Houston Dynamo on Sunday night (7:30 p.m., TVA Sports, TSN Radio 690), which could put Tissot back on the bench. Nakajima-Ferran injured a hamstring and will miss the match.

Tissot is listed as a defender, but played left midfield in Vancouver. He lost a couple of balls needlessly, but also looped some useful passes into the area, as well as getting one clear crack at a goal.

“At the back, we’re working on him to get better defensivel­y, but in the midfield, he has the ability to make runs on the weak side and join in the attack,” Klopas said of Tissot. “In the games we put him in, he always seems to create chances.

“We feel in the midfield he can bring more, so we put him in a situation where he can be successful.”

Klopas got his first look at Tissot when he was coaching the Chicago Fire last season. The Fire was leading 2-1 at home on Sept. 28 when Tissot’s first MLS goal in the 87th minute gave the visiting Impact a draw.

“I remember,” Klopas said. “I’m glad I’m here now and I have a chance to coach these young players.

“It’s good for the club. It shows that if you work hard and are committed, you’ll get opportunit­ies. When you invest in an academy, you’ve got to produce players because these guys, they get it. They’re from here and they know what it is to put that jersey on. We have to build the nucleus from that and then add pieces from the outside that can make the team better.”

The 2-7-5 Impact, which has made a flurry of moves in the past two months, made another this week when it cut defender Meshack Jerome and added Polish left back Krzyztof Krol, who once played for Klopas in Chicago.

Krol is due to arrive on Sunday, but will not officially join the team until the transfer window opens on July 8.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Whitecaps’ Gershon Koffie, left, and Impact’s Maxim Tissot vie for the ball during first-half action in Vancouver on Wednesday.
DARRYL DYCK/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Whitecaps’ Gershon Koffie, left, and Impact’s Maxim Tissot vie for the ball during first-half action in Vancouver on Wednesday.

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