The Province

No rest for Wilkinson in retirement

WOMEN’S TEAM VETERAN: After three Olympics, 34-year-old Canadian star up for new sporting challenges

- NEIL DAVIDSON

In the wake of winning soccer bronze at the Rio Olympics, Rhian Wilkinson ran a marathon and crewed a yacht in the Mediterran­ean.

After the 2015 Women’s World Cup, she walked part of the famed Camino de Santiago trail in Spain with her mother.

The 34-year-old fullback, who says goodbye to her playing career Saturday with her 181st appearance for Canada, will likely never stop challengin­g herself.

So rather than a post-Olympic holiday on a beach, Wilkinson ran the Montreal marathon. “Just wanted to get that out the way,” she said breezily. “Check it off the bucket list.”

There was a little more to it than that, however.

“A lot of times when I do public speaking I talk to people about living in that uncomforta­ble space and pushing their boundaries. I hadn’t done that for a while,” said Wilkinson, who ran her first marathon 10 years ago.

“At the end of my soccer career I personally wasn’t pushing any boundaries. I had this opportunit­y to run the marathon. Why sign up for a 10K if I’m telling other people to push boundaries? So I went for it. I jumped in.”

Next was crewing a 50-foot yacht for nine days from Majorca to Malaga, Spain, with nine Germans.

“It sounds huge until you have nine other people in it. It was pretty tight,” she said dryly.

Wilkinson, a native of Baie-D’Urfe, Que., who now calls North Vancouver home, saw it as an adventure.

“I’ve never been on a sailing boat before. I was violently ill,” she said with a laugh. “But I’ve done it.”

It was also a chance to do something she knew nothing about with people who had no idea she was an elite athlete whose playing career has stretched across 14 years, four World Cups, three Olympics and three Pan-American Games.

Wilkinson will step on the field one last time along with retiring teammates Melissa Tancredi and MarieEve Nault Saturday in a friendly against Mexico at B.C. Place in a so-called celebratio­n of the 2016 Olympic squad.

Not one to live in the past, Wilkinson was working on her coaching badges as a player and, along with former internatio­nal Carmelina Moscato, is already involved as a youth coach with the Canadian Soccer Associatio­n.

Wilkinson’s hope is to learn from national team coach John Herdman along the way. She was wearing a coaching hat with Herdman and the Canadian team at its recent camp in Los Angeles before jumping back onto the field for the Mexico match.

Wilkinson is already marvelling at the next wave of young Canadian talent coming through and how well they understand the game already.

“Everybody’s just been blown away by them,” she said.

But while she hopes coaching will be her next career, she is open to anything.

“Who knows? So many roads to take and so many things to explore. I don’t want to narrow my focus yet.”

Wilkinson expected the Olympics to be her farewell, so Saturday’s game is a “wonderful bonus.” As such, she’s just enjoying the chance to be back among friends.

It’s been a long and distinguis­hed run. She debuted for Canada in April 2003 in a 6-1 loss to the United States in Washington, D.C.

“I remember fouling Shannon MacMillan, who was one of my heroes,” she recalled with a giggle.

“I can’t remember much of the game other than fouling her. The score line seemed so irrelevant because I played against the U.S. and they were the reigning World Cup champion. I never thought I would have the chance to play for Canada and I thought I was oneand-done.” Far from it. She scored in her next game in July 2003, a 2-1 win over Brazil in her hometown of Montreal.

Her hometown is understand­ably proud of Wilkinson. Last June, Dorset Park was renamed Rhian-Wilkinson Park in her honour.

Wilkinson played under three vastly different national team coaches in Norway’s Even Pellerud, Italy’s Carolina Morace and England’s Herdman.

“All three were such important steps along my journey,” she said.

Pellerud gave her first opportunit­ies, pushing her to meet his high standards. “He gave you the opportunit­y to succeed in that environmen­t. It was hard work.”

Morace changed the way the Canadian women played the game, “from very direct soccer to controlled tactics.

“If she hadn’t been that middle step between Even and John, we wouldn’t have won the (bronze) medal in London (at the 2012 Olympics). I truly believe that. The work she did with us was a very important step on the journey.”

Morace stepped down after the team finished last at the 2011 World Cup. Not one to shift blame, Wilkinson says she is still embarrasse­d by the way that journey ended.

“Finger pointing is a horrible thing to do and I was culprit of that. And I didn’t take too much of the heat when I should have. We disappoint­ed ourselves and her and Canada in the World Cup in 2011. And from that broken place emerged John.”

Wilkinson credits Herdman for giving the team the confidence to succeed — “and built us from scratch, because we really were broken after the World Cup experience.”

 ?? —THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? North Vancouver’s Rhian Wilkinson, right, makes her 181st and final appearance wearing Canadian colours on the soccer pitch Saturday during a senior women’s team friendly against Mexico at B.C. Place.
—THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES North Vancouver’s Rhian Wilkinson, right, makes her 181st and final appearance wearing Canadian colours on the soccer pitch Saturday during a senior women’s team friendly against Mexico at B.C. Place.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada