Toronto Star

Reds set to welcome Rovers to Canadian Championsh­ip

- NEIL DAVIDSON

Growing up in England, John Herdman saw plenty of cup competitio­n. He knows the pitfalls that can come with it.

“What you always know is that there’s a few banana skins in the opening rounds,” said the Toronto FC coach. “There’s always some upsets and surprises.”

The semi-pro Simcoe County Rovers hope to do just that at BMO Field on Wednesday in the League1 Ontario champion’s first taste of the Canadian Championsh­ip.

“If I’m sitting in the Simcoe camp, they’ll be pretty excited and, I think, hoping for one of the biggest upsets in Canadian football history,” Herdman said.

Simcoe County, based in Barrie, has wasted little time making news on and off the field.

Its ownership group incudes former Canada captains Julian de Guzman and Atiba Hutchinson and current Canadian Internatio­nals Janine Beckie, Doneil Henry and Cyle Larin. And it has made it to the Canadian Championsh­ip after just two seasons in existence.

Simcoe qualified by winning the League 1 Ontario title last year. The club finished runner-up in the 2023 regular season at 15-4-1 and defeated league-leading Scrosoppi FC 4-2 in the championsh­ip game last September.

The 14-team Canadian Championsh­ip, featuring the three Canadian MLS clubs plus the eight Canadian Premier League franchises and the Ontario, Quebec and B.C. champions, kicked off Tuesday with Vancouver FC at Cavalry FC in an all-CPL matchup. After the Toronto-Simcoe tie, the four other preliminar­y-round matches go May 1 or 2.

Simcoe covers gas mileage and other expenses for some players but the team is amateur. Some players have day jobs, from working in a chemical plant to serving as deliveryme­n, while other are students.

In contrast, 20 Toronto players made six-figure salaries or better last season with 12 earning in excess of $500,000 (U.S.) including Italian stars Lorenzo Insigne (the secondhigh­est-paid player in MLS last season at $15.4 million) and Federico Bernardesc­hi (fifth-highest at $6.295 million).

Toronto, coming off a leaguewors­t 4-20-10 season in MLS, currently stands fifth in the MLS’s Eastern Conference at 4-4-1. TFC has lifted the Voyageurs Cup eight times, most recently in 2020, and finished runner-up five times.

“Winning the cup is on the agenda for this group of players,” said Herdman.

Toronto exited in the Canadian championsh­ip quarterfin­al last year, beaten 2-1 by CF Montreal.

With the midweek game sandwiched between Saturday’s 1-0 win over visiting New England and a date in Orlando on Saturday, Herdman plans to rotate his roster.

“There have been some players that haven’t seen the field and I’m anticipati­ng they’ll get a lot of minutes, to again feel part of the group and to take a step forward in a big competitio­n,” he said.

TFC will be without the injured Insigne, Richie Laryea, Shane O’Neill, Brandon Servania and Deandre Kerr. Midfielder Alonso Coello is available after going though concussion protocols.

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