Toronto Star

Reds fighting fires on and off the field

While injury-ravaged team sinks like a stone, Bernardesc­hi has plenty of unhappy words to say

- NEIL DAVIDSON

It looked like business as usual at Toronto FC on Tuesday with Italian stars Lorenzo Insigne and Federico Bernardesc­hi both training.

But there was likely plenty of action behind closed doors as the beleaguere­d franchise fought fires on and off the field, dealing with rumours about Insigne’s state of mind and a frustrated outburst from Bernardesc­hi after Saturday’s night’s 1-0 loss in Austin dropped Toronto to 2-5-7 in last place in Major League Soccer’s Eastern Conference.

Insigne was a surprise omission Saturday. Coach Bob Bradley explained after the match the 31-yearold had landed awkwardly on a play during the mid-week scoreless draw with the visiting Red Bulls.

“He was still struggling (Friday). He was out on the field hoping that it would be OK but in the end he was not able to work (Friday) so we didn’t bring him here,” Bradley said. “Hopefully that’s not a big thing.”

An emotional Bernardesc­hi raised eyebrows in a post-game virtual availabili­ty in Austin with a frustrated outburst that seemed directed at his coach.

“We don’t play,” the Italian, the fourth-highest-paid player in the league at $6.295 million (U.S.) this season, said in English. “We play long pass. We don’t have any idea to play.

“I think this city, the fans, everybody, don’t deserve this,” he added. “And I think maybe we need to change something. We need a little bit more tactics. We need an idea how we play, because this is the real problem for me. It’s impossible to play like this when we play without (an) idea.”

Asked whether the problem was in executing the game plan or the game plan itself, Bernardesc­hi replied: “We don’t have a constructi­on in the game. When the player has the ball, we don’t know how to pass the ball. This is the real problem. Because we don’t train about that.

“We lose every game. We tie, we lose, we tie, we lose. Sometimes we win. But I can’t believe this, sincerely. This is no good for the young players. They need to get better and grow up with an idea of football … We need the idea of football.”

Bernardesc­hi, who always wears his heart on his sleeve, was substitute­d in the 67th minute with Bradley saying later he had been suffering from a stomach bug during the week.

Former Canadian internatio­nal Kaylyn Kyle, a co-host of “MLS 360” on Apple TV, added fuel to the fire on Monday’s MLS Extratime podcast by saying Insigne did not want to work with Bradley, citing “a source close to the situation in Toronto.”

There were also suggestion­s on social media that Insigne had indeed made the trip to Austin only to have a disagreeme­nt with Bradley.

“He never travelled,” midfielder Mark-Anthony Kaye said of Insigne. “Before we were even on the bus going to the airport (to fly to Austin), it was already confirmed that he was not travelling.” Kaye added. “I don’t know where there rumours come from. I don’t know where people get their informatio­n about this situation because there was no dispute between Lorenzo and the coach. It was very clear to the whole team that he thought it was best for him to stay back and be assessed. And we supported that and respected that and we just moved forward as a team and took the guys who were ready to play to Austin.”

TFC was missing 10 players through injury or suspension for the Austin match.

The walking wounded included four key starters in captain Michel Bradley, Insigne, centre back Sigurd Rosted and Canadian midfielder Jonathan Osorio.

Centre back Matt Hedges and midfielder Mark-Anthony Kaye returned to the starting lineup on the weekend after injury absences. But the TFC injury list also included defender Shane O’Neill, midfielder­s Alonso Coello and Victor Vazquez and forwards Adama Diomande and Deandre Kerr.

After serving a two-game ban, midfielder/forward Jahkeele Marshall Rutty will be available Saturday against visiting D.C. United (55-4). Vazquez is scheduled to return to Canada on Wednesday after undergoing a procedure on his foot in his native Spain.

 ?? ?? Toronto FC’s Federico Bernardesc­hi raised eyebrows in a post-game virtual availabili­ty in Austin, Texas, with a frustrated outburst that seemed directed at his coach.
Toronto FC’s Federico Bernardesc­hi raised eyebrows in a post-game virtual availabili­ty in Austin, Texas, with a frustrated outburst that seemed directed at his coach.

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