The Citizen (Gauteng)

Canadian coach believes calmness will be crucial

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Los Angeles – Canada coach John Herdman (right) believes calmness will be crucial as his team attempts to clinch a first World Cup place in 36 years with victory over Costa Rica today.

The unbeaten Canadians have been the revelation of the Concacaf region’s qualifying tournament, surging four points clear at the top of the standings with 25 points from 11 games heading into this week’s final round of three fixtures.

After taking a maximum nine points from three games in the last window, with wins over Honduras, the United States and El Salvador, Herdman’s side need only two points from their remaining three games to be certain of qualifying for the World Cup.

That means a win over Costa Rica at Estadio Nacional in San Jose today would secure Canada’s first World Cup appearance since the 1986 finals in Mexico.

A draw could even be enough to qualify if Panama, currently fourth in the rankings with 17 points from 11 games, fail to beat Honduras.

Herdman said he has prepared his squad for this week’s final round of fixtures by encouragin­g his players to have the “humility to start again”.

“There’s a lot of things we can gain in this window and a lot of things we can lose, and ultimately that opportunit­y to go to Qatar,” Herdman told Canada Soccer.

“So it’s an intense focus on that one game against Costa Rica as a starting point. That’s our opportunit­y to finally put this team into a World Cup where it belongs.”

Herdman however has every confidence in his team’s ability to prevail. Canada’s away form has been a cornerston­e of their qualifying campaign to date.

“In every game, we’ve adapted to the climate, the altitude, the crowd, the conditions, the suspension­s, the players not there through Covid,” he said. “The mentality is to win every match. To push this team to new levels. But do it in a way that respects the conditions.

“This will be a tough environmen­t and this game will be one of our toughest tests.”

Although it would require a freak sequence of results to deny Canada a World Cup berth, Herdman says there will be no drop-off in intensity this week despite his team’s comfortabl­e points advantage.

“You have to show that being one point away is as important as a team thats maybe seven points away. It doesn’t change our mentality coming in,” he said.

“They’re in our way. We want to get to Qatar. That one team stands in our way from doing it. And we’ll be bringing a passion and an intensity to that match like all of our matches.

“We’ve got to bring that fight and that passion and be adaptable like we’ve been, but just be calm.”

Sealing a World Cup place would complete a remarkable transforma­tion for Canada that began when Herdman was appointed to take over the men’s team in 2018. –

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