The Hamilton Spectator

Forge FC tries to break pattern in Montreal

Hamilton club set to face CF Montréal in semifinal of Canadian Championsh­ip on Wednesday

- STEVE MILTON STEVE MILTON IS A HAMILTON-BASED SPORTS COLUMNIST AT THE SPECTATOR. REACH HIM VIA EMAIL: SMILTON@THESPEC.COM.

In smaller leagues and competitiv­e environmen­ts, like the ones in which Hamilton’s three pro sports teams find themselves, there are bound to be recurring themes.

Forge FC is the latest of that generally successful local trio to encounter a sharp sense of déjà vu, and hopes to do a better job of rectifying things than did the Rock, the Tiger-Cats and even the Forge itself.

The Hamilton Tiger-Cats were absolutely thumped in the 2019 Grey Cup game by Winnipeg and found themselves facing the Blue Bombers again in Grey Cup 2021, right on Tim Hortons Field, but could only manage a field goal rather than a touchdown on their final drive and eventually lost in overtime.

The Hamilton-based Toronto Rock recently had a double beenthere-done-that when, for the second year in a row, they met, and beat, the Halifax Thunderbir­ds in the one-game National Lacrosse League East Conference semifinal, then followed up by being swept by the Buffalo Bandits in the best-ofthree final. The only difference was that both Buffalo games in 2022 essentiall­y came down to the last shot and both games in 2023 came down, essentiall­y, to the first shot.

Now here is Forge, heading to Montreal on Wednesday for yet another Canadian men’s soccer championsh­ip loser-is-out appointmen­t with CF Montréal. The Major League Soccer club has a payroll about seven times that of Hamilton’s $1.125 million Canadian Premier League cap, but it’s just one game and anything can happen, and so far in the brief head-to-head resumé of these two clubs, it has.

In the 2021 national semifinal at Tim Hortons Field, Forge delivered one of the best games in its short history, outplaying Montreal and more than doubling the number of shots at the net, but it was unable to take advantage of that in the 0-0 draw that necessitat­ed penalty kicks. Bizarrely, the shootout lingered to an unheard-of 11th round with the goalies being forced to go to the line against each other. Hamilton’s Triston Henry couldn’t beat Sebastian Breza but Breza then put one past Henry for the unpreceden­ted victory as Montréal advanced to the final, which it won against Toronto FC.

Last year, Forge had arguably the worst outing in its short history in a 3-0 national championsh­ip quarterfin­al loss at Saputo Stadium, giving up a hat trick to Sunusi Ibrahim — he scored twice in the first half and once early in the second — and allowing Matko Miljevic far too much attacking space in the middle of the field.

So Hamilton has a trio of wounds to patch over here: two losses against a more-internatio­nal side that is again favoured to win, and an uncharacte­ristically weak performanc­e in the confines of Montréal’s scenic stadium.

While Breza has moved on from Montréal to Italy, Henry, Ibrahim and Miljevic are still prominent for their respective teams, and, for the second spring in a row, two brothers will start opposite each other. Mathieu Choinière of Montréal and David Choinière, a big-goal specialist for Forge, each opened last year’s quarterfin­al at midfield. Mathieu did not play in the 2021 semi.

Montréal is treading water with five wins and six losses in league play this year, while Forge hadn’t lost in its opening seven games heading into Friday night’s home match against CPL expansion team Vancouver FC.

Hamilton’s next home game after the Canadian semifinal is a week later, Wednesday, May 31, in another instalment of the 905 Derby against York United FC. Hamilton crowds have been growing — the club reported around 4,800 on hand for last week’s win against Winnipeg’s Valour FC — but aren’t as big as they should be for a team that plays an entertaini­ng brand of soccer and that has a stunning 72 wins, 36 losses and 25 draws across all competitio­ns since it began play in 2019.

 ?? THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO ?? This goal, scored by CF Montréal goalkeeper Sebastien Breza against Forge FC’s Triston Henry in the 2021 Canadian Championsh­ip semifinal, gives Forge something to avenge Wednesday in Montreal.
THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO This goal, scored by CF Montréal goalkeeper Sebastien Breza against Forge FC’s Triston Henry in the 2021 Canadian Championsh­ip semifinal, gives Forge something to avenge Wednesday in Montreal.
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