The Province

Chill out, angst-ridden Whitecaps fans

Sure, the team has lost 18 players and added only four, but the transfer window isn’t open yet

- J.J. ADAMS Email: jadams@postmedia.com — With files from Patrick Johnston

The new year begins with many a blown resolution by Vancouver Whitecaps fans.

They go into 2019 suffering hand-wringing angst, bouts of stress eating and trepidatio­n-triggered tipple, no doubt blowing their newly-started keto and kumquat diets apart in the same spectacula­r manner their MLS team’s roster was.

Not only was the demolition of the team’s player pool complete and unpreceden­ted — the 18 players the team parted with was the most in MLS this year and most in team history — but included their top three scorers. In fact, just four of the 13 players who scored a goal last year remain: Yordy Reyna (six goals, fourth on WFC), Russell Teibert (1), Felipe (1) and Anthony Blondell (1).

Kei Kamara, who produced the second-most single-season goals in team history (14), wasn’t offered a new contract and is now partnering with Chilean internatio­nal Diego Rubio in Colorado. The gregarious striker and fan favourite was surprised his second-highest single-season total wasn’t enough to earn a spot going forward.

“All the energy I spent playing, trying to help the team grow, help the younger players around me, I felt good that I was going to stay in Vancouver for a little longer,” Kamara told MLSsoccer.com. “Even after the head coach was let go, even though he was the head coach that brought me there. Maybe I was reading the energy wrong. When I got the news that they weren’t interested in keeping me and I was being traded, I was shocked.”

Four of the five centreback­s from last year’s team, including team captain Kendall Waston, are gone. The two longest-tenured players on the team — forwards Erik Hurtado and Nico Mezquida — were traded away.

And it’s not just the roiling anxiety over who’s gone; it’s the gaping holes they’ve left which haven’t been filled. The Caps have signed only four new players — two goalkeeper­s (Zac MacMath and Maxime Crepeau) and two depth players in D/M Victor (PC) Giro and M. Andy Rose, with all but Rose coming during the mid-December half-day trade window. The seeming lack of player acquisitio­n is in stark contrast to the amount of activity going on across MLS, with even the much-maligned Brek Shea finding a home with defending champion Atlanta United.

But Whitecaps casuals need to put down that crave satiating, stress-relieving KFC double-down or Estrella tall boy, eat a salad, hit the gym and relax.

First, the MLS transfer window doesn’t open until Feb. 7. And even then, there might not be any big-name signings. Dos Santos said he’d happily hold off from signing a 6/10 player if it meant he could get a 9/10 player, and one who’d stay with the club for three years, in the June transfer window.

For comparison, in 2014, Carl Robinson’s first year in charge, he signed 12 new players after Jan. 1 and before the close of the first transfer window — including three DP’s in Pedro Morales, Matias Laba and Waston. So it’s not like the team is in uncharted waters.

“It is almost like (we’re an expansion team). It wasn’t the plan, it’s just the direction the club was going. It’s going to be a new era,” said head coach Marc Dos Santos, who admitted he thought there were going to be a few more holdo- vers from last season.

“First we have to do what I would call the ugly work, the work that seems uncomforta­ble … the ‘suffering’ part of the work, but always with a vision of what you want to be as a club.

“The important thing is for us to stay calm and to bring in the right guys, and not be ‘Oh, we need to fill up the roster’ and then make a bunch of mistakes.”

The coaching staff and

scouts have been busy traversing the globe, and this week are in Orlando for the 2019 combine and ensuing MLS SuperDraft, though quality players are hard to unearth there — doubly so for Vancouver this year, as the team only has the 35th and 83rd picks, having previously traded away their first- and third-round spots.

The aforementi­oned demolition of the team also means it has a great deal of flexibilit­y with cap space and internatio­nal roster spots, and with Alphonso Davies’ transfer to Bayern Munich now complete, they have around $15 million burning a hole in their pockets.

But don’t expect any impulse buys from Dos Santos. While he said he does have some targets he’s been watching for a long time, the next step is getting to know them personally to see if they’d fit in his plan for the club’s long-term identity.

“We have the ambition of making our recruitmen­t process the best in North America. We want to do that. It’s our dream,” said Dos Santos, who wouldn’t commit to maxing out the team’s allotment of three DPs, but vowed to bring in difference-making players.

“If you’re a club that’s not, for now, going to spend what Atlanta spends, at least have a recruitmen­t process where you bring in players that could make a difference and be special.”

 ?? GERRY KAHRMANN/PNG FILES ?? Yordy Reyna is the only returning Whitecap to have scored more than one goal last year.
GERRY KAHRMANN/PNG FILES Yordy Reyna is the only returning Whitecap to have scored more than one goal last year.

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