National Post

Herdman learns lessons the hard way

CONTROVERS­IAL COMMENTS PROVE COSTLY AS FIRED-UP CROATIANS WIN

- derek van diest

Canada head coach John Herdman is always talking about ‘learnings’ when it comes to lessons acquired along his FIFA World Cup journey.

The term ‘learnings’ makes me cringe. It’s a colloquial­ism that I’ve only heard used by Herdman or his disciples.

Regardless, Herdman and Canada Soccer learned plenty of lessons in a brief competitiv­e tenure at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, which came to an end Sunday with a 4-1 loss to Croatia here at the Khalifa Internatio­nal Stadium.

All the talk from Croatia following the victory had more to do with sticking it to Herdman and Canada for comments made following the team’s narrow loss to Belgium.

Canada played extremely well in the opener against Belgium and probably deserved a result. So, it’s understand­able that Herdman and his troops would be fired up, and in an attempt to keep their spirits up, he uttered the phrase ‘F’ Croatia. That should have stayed in the huddle.

Nothing good could have come out of revealing what he said, and the Croatians, who were dragging their lower lips after being held to a scoreless draw by Morocco, ran with it and used it as motivation. As if trying to get a result out of the finalist from years ago wasn’t going to be difficult enough for Canada.

“I want to thank the head coach of Canada for the motivation,” said Croatian forward Andrej Kramaric, who scored two goals in the win. “I do believe he could have chosen better words to express himself. He could have formulated it a bit differentl­y and Croatia demonstrat­ed who ‘F’ed whom, that’s what we did.”

Perhaps Herdman felt revealing the comment would somehow throw Croatia off its game, or maybe he was still fired up when escorted into the news conference room after the game, and he figured it would make a good sound bite.

Herdman is wonderful for the media. He always seems to have something to say and demonstrat­es an eloquent way of saying it — ‘learnings’ aside.

The second question in the post-game news conference after the loss to Croatia wasn’t about his tactics, but about the comment. A late-arriving Croatian reporter asked about it, as well, towards the end of the availabili­ty.

“There’s a respect there for Croatia, and as I keep saying, we’re here to push as far as we can as a team, we’re here to change the mentality of the group,” Herdman said. “I could have been a little bit more composed coming out of the huddle, but that’s my learning, I’ll take that on the chin. But from a mindset point of view, I think we showed in that first 25 minutes that Canada can compete with the best in the world.

“I don’t think we gave them an easy night tonight, they might be celebratin­g now, and that’s great, they deserved it. They scored four goals. But there’s a lot of pride in our performanc­e, I thought we had some moments. I think guys like Alphonso Davies, Tajon Buchanan, Atiba Hutchinson, Junior Hoilett, Jonathan Osorio, young lads that were brought up through Canada, really showed they could compete together.”

Canada did show well against Belgium, but considerin­g they lost 2-0 to Morocco on Sunday, the game might have revealed more about the sharp decline of the Europeans than it did the rise of the North Americans.

Herdman went with a similar lineup against Croatia, but when things started falling apart a half-hour into the game, he was slow to react.

Atiba Hutchinson, perhaps the most loyal player to wear a Canadian jersey on the men’s side, looked like a 39-year-old trying to keep up to the Croatian midfield. It was his man who scored the opening goal for Croatia and the third goal came through his legs.

No one deserved to play a World Cup game for Canada more than Hutchinson, but he probably should have come off the field sooner than he did.

“I thought Atiba was just next level in that first half, some of his touches — he’s living what he said, to play fearlessly and I was really happy with his performanc­e,” Herdman said. “My plan was to bring him out in the 55th (minute) and he said he wanted to keep going. You need leadership in there and he wanted to keep going, and he did himself proud and our country proud.”

Overall, Canadian soccer fans got probably what they expected. The run in CONCACAF was exceptiona­l, but the region is about three rungs below the elite teams of the world.

Canada Soccer also learned some valuable lessons at the tournament. It’s been 36 years since Canada has competed at a World Cup, so perhaps they can be excused for showing up 40 minutes late to its first official news conference.

But when it comes to marketing its players, perhaps they could take a page from the elite nations who make their stars available to all media outlets, and not just a select few broadcaste­rs.

Now that Canada has been eliminated, the internatio­nal print media has moved on.

Now that’s a learning.

THEY SCORED FOUR GOALS. BUT THERE’S A LOT OF PRIDE IN OUR PERFORMANC­E.

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