Toronto Star

No end in sight for Sinclair

Canadian team captain will appear in her fourth Olympics this summer

- JIM MORRIS

Ahead of her fourth Olympics, captain still has more to give,

VANCOUVER— She has scored more goals than anybody else in soccer and played more games than any other active player, but retirement isn’t on the immediate horizon for Christine Sinclair.

The Canadian national soccer team captain will appear in her fourth Olympics this summer in Tokyo and talks like someone planning to play longer.

“All along I have given myself to Tokyo, then we’ll re-evaluate things,” the 36-year-old Burnaby, B.C., native said Tuesday. “As it has got closer, I realize that if the passion and the desire to keep playing is there, I will keep going.

“You can definitely only do this for a certain amount of time, and I’m going to try to do it as long as I can.”

Asked directly if she will keep playing after the Games, Sinclair laughed and said it’s up to national team head coach Kenneth Heiner-Moller.

“Maybe, if Kenneth wants me around,” she said. “We’ll see.”

Sinclair’s 186 goals makes her the all-time scoring leader in internatio­nal soccer. She broke the old mark of 184, held by American Abby Wambach, by scoring twice in a Jan. 29 game against St. Kitts and Nevis during the CONCACAF Olympic qualifiers.

The 293 games Sinclair has played are more than any active internatio­nal player. She is also the second player of either gender to score at five World Cups.

The night she broke the old scoring record Sinclair was flooded with congratula­tions. Hearing from former tennis great Billie Jean King was “pretty special, I’m not going to lie.”

Of her goals, Sinclair said three stood out the most.

There was the first one in her second internatio­nal game on March 4, 2000 against Norway. She thinks her prettiest was a left-footed one-timer to the far post during a tournament in Brazil in 2011. The most important was the one she scored against Brazil during the 2016

Summer Games to give Canada its second consecutiv­e Olympic bronze medal.

During a news conference at the B.C. Sports Hall of Fame, Sinclair showed off the ball she scored the record-breaking goal with. She also took questions from members of a 13year-old girls soccer team.

In one answer, Sinclair explained she wears the No. 12 because growing up she loved baseball and her favourite player was former Blue Jay Roberto Alomar.

Alomar, who also wore No. 12, was one of the people who reached out to Sinclair when she set the record.

Being a role model to young women is something Sinclair takes very seriously.

“It’s one of the most important roles I have to inspire the next generation,” she said.

Looking toward Tokyo, Sinclair said the United States women’s team remains the biggest obstacle to Canadian success. The World Cup champions beat Canada, ranked No. 8 in the world, 3-0 in last weekend’s final of the CONCACAF qualifying tournament.

The teams have met 60 times in all competitio­ns with the U.S. holding a 50-3-7 record. Canada’s last win over the Americans was at the 2001 Algarve Cup, where Sinclair scored a goal. Canada has been 0-29-6 since, but tied two of the last six meetings. “They are the number one team in the world for a reason. That being said, they are not untouchabl­e,” Sinclair said.

Sweden upset the U.S. in the quarterfin­als of the 2016 Olympics, sending the Americans home empty-handed.

“To beat them you have to be your absolute best for 90 minutes,” said Sinclair. “In the CONCACAF final we were at our best for about 60 minutes, then some individual mistakes and you’re down 3-0. That’s how quick it can happen.

“Just the depth they have, the players they were forced to leave off their roster could probably start on most other national teams. We just have to be at our best this summer to able to take them on.”

“You can definitely only do this for a certain amount of time, and I’m going to try to do it as long as I can.”

CHRISTINE SINCLAIR

CANADIAN SOCCER CAPTAIN

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 ?? JOEL MARTINEZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Canada’s Christine Sinclair, left, isn’t contemplat­ing retirement any time soon. The 293 games Sinclair has played are more than any active internatio­nal player.
JOEL MARTINEZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Canada’s Christine Sinclair, left, isn’t contemplat­ing retirement any time soon. The 293 games Sinclair has played are more than any active internatio­nal player.

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