Toronto Star

Reds can’t let shake-up Impact them

New coach aims to help Montreal regain ‘rhythm’ during crucial 401 derby Wilmer Cabrera makes his Montreal Impact coaching debut today.

- DAVID ALTER THE CANADIAN PRESS

Toronto FC coach Greg Vanney doesn’t anticipate the Montreal Impact making a ton of changes on Saturday in the aftermath of an abrupt coaching shuffle.

Wilmer Cabrera makes his debut as Impact coach in the latest edition of the 401 Derby at BMO Field, mere days after replacing the fired Rémi Garde.

“This is something that happened on Wednesday and they have a game on Saturday. You can’t change the world in two days,” Vanney said. “My perception of things is they won’t change a lot, especially in the short term.”

A blown three-goal lead in a 3-3 tie to FC Dallas last weekend was the last straw for Garde.

Despite leaving points on the table, Montreal retained the seventh and final playoff spot in the MLS Eastern Conference, ahead by virtue of tiebreaker on Orlando and Toronto. All three teams have 34 points.

“The idea for me, at this point, is not adapting the players to my philosophy,” said Cabrera. “It’s trying to help them with the rhythm that they have to be successful while making some adjustment­s.”

Toronto FC defender Omar Gonzalez knows what to expect from a group of players going through a coaching adjustment.

Before arriving via transfer to Toronto FC in June, his Mexican club, Atlas FC, fired its coach following a five-game losing streak.

“I know that guys who were on the outside looking in now see they have a chance to show this new coach that they can be a starter,” Gonzalez said. “I know they are going to be gunning for us, new coach and all, so we have to be smart and just worry about ourselves.” Garde was the sixth MLS coach to be replaced in 2019.

Cabrera was one of those casualties when he was replaced as coach two weeks ago by the Dynamo following a two-anda-half year stint.

Although Toronto has a game in hand on Montreal and Orlando City SC, it has just three games left at BMO Field.

Toronto has only three wins on the road this season.

“I think anxiety is a good thing in soccer because it raises your level of focus,” TFC goalkeeper Quentin Westberg said. “If you can shift that frustratio­n into concentrat­ion and determinat­ion, then anxiety is good, in my mind.”

Toronto earned a point on the road last week with a 2-2 draw against the Columbus Crew.

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